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Q. What's likely to happen now? A. Investors don't expect much to change, because everybody saw the Fed's move coming. Economists estimated "Operation Twist" would knock roughly 0.2 percentage points off long-term interest rates. But much of that has already been priced into stocks, says Guy LeBas, fixed income strategist at Janney Montgomery Scott. The Fed's actions may have even less of an impact on other markets, says David Kelly, chief market strategist at J.P. Morgan Funds. Q. So investors don't think Operation Twist will do much good. Do they have any better ideas? A. Kelly said the Fed should threaten to raise rates instead of promising to keep short-term rates near zero until the middle of 2013. Why? It would be an incentive to borrow and spend, he says. People looking to buy a house may rush to lock in current record low mortgage rates before they start rising. "Right now they have zero incentive," Kelly said. Higher interest rates also drive down bond prices. So the threat of an interest rate hike would likely "kick people out of Treasurys," he said, and coerce them into the stocks or other investments. "It's like a patient that's been in the sick bay too long," Kelly said. "The Fed really needs to tell the economy to get out of bed and walk around. Unfortunately, they keep giving it more and more doses of morphine."
[Associated
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