President-elect Joe Bidenâs choice of Janet Yellen as Treasury Secretary was seen as a win for markets, since the former Federal Reserve chair should focus on fixing the economy rather than the progressive Democratic agenda feared by some investors.
The first woman Fed chief would also be the first woman Treasury Secretary and faces unprecedented challenges of massive unemployment and a record level of debt, as the government spends even more to reverse the impact of the pandemic during the Biden administration.
âTo me it shows Biden is taking stuff pretty seriously and definitely not pandering to the left. Sheâs a very serious economic thinker, and they have some very serious problems to deal with,â said Barry Knapp, director research for Ironsides Macroeconomics.
The stock market rallied and financial stocks moved to the highs of the day as news of her pending nomination leaked out. Sources familiar with the matter told CNBC Monday afternoon that the president-elect had chosen Yellen, who was believed to be under consideration along with Fed Governor Lael Brainard and former Fed Vice Chair Roger Ferguson.
âThereâs so many outcomes that could have been worse for the banking sector. For me that was the real risk of that Treasury secretary appointment was you could get someone that was hawkish on the banking sector,â said Knapp. One market fear was that Biden could have nominated someone like Sen. Elizabeth Warren, D-Mass., who is outspoken about regulating banks.
âYellen talked a lot about higher bank capital levels early in the [financial] crisis, but I think sheâs a pretty benign outcome for the banking sector. When weâve had problems with that position in the past, in both Republican and Democratic administrations, itâs been when there were people who didnât understand economics and taxes,â Knapp said.
Ed Mills, Raymond James Washington policy analyst, said Yellen does have credentials that show she can be tough on enforcement. She conducted bank stress tests while on the Fed and took enforcement action against Wells Fargo.
Yellen, a labor economist, will likely be a strong advocate for fiscal support, rather than someone seen as partisan. âSo overall, if the result is less partisan, more focused on economic recovery, and someone the market is comfortable with â I would say that is a positive development for the market, but more importantly for the economy as a whole,â Mills wrote.
Yellen served one term as Fed chair until President Donald Trump replaced her with Fed Chairman Jerome Powell.
Strategists expect the Treasury and Fed to work collaboratively, and some even suggest Yellen could be too cozy with her former Fed colleagues. But Knapp does not agree. âI donât think she has that kind of personality to meddle,â said Knapp.
Strategists do expect Yellen to be sympathetic to the Fed and likely reverse Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchinâs decision to let Fed emergency program expire at the end of the year. Powell objected to the move.
âEven though the lending facilities werenât all being used, it didnât seem like it was very wise to let them expire,â said Chris Rupkey, chief financial economist at MUFG Union Bank.
Knapp said the Fed and the Treasury will have to able to work closely together long into the future and this should bridge relations. âWe have so much debt now thereâs going to be some level of coordination that didnât exist prior to this. I think she will be respectful of the Fed. Bottom line, it didnât matter who was sitting in that seat. You were going to end up with complicity between the Fed and Treasury,â said Knapp.
He likened the debt level to be similar to the challenge facing the U.S. after World War II. âAt the end of World War II, 70% of bank credit was invested in Treasury securities. It took 30 years for it to get to 20%,â he said. The current deficit is over $3 trillion.
Rupkey said Yellen should do a good job, though the skill sets for the job are very different than those used at the Fed.
âThe Federal Reserve is kind of an isolated position in a fortress down in Washington. You can spend a lot of time in your office but the Treasury Secretary is a very public position and political skills and savvy are needed, so it will be an interesting change,â he said.
Rupkey said Yellen is also uniquely suited to deal with an economy facing such high unemployment. âSheâs the one who brought the issue of income inequality to the central bank,â he said. âShe does have some political skills. One of the things she started the Fed down the road to was more inclusiveness and income inequality. It started under her watch.â