Sunday, May 24, 2026

30 books by Michael Perel, M.D.

 

30 books by Michael Perel, M.D.


https://books.brightlearn.ai/authors/Michael-Perel-MD-2b5c3b65.html



Saturday, May 23, 2026

The coming of the End Times and an individual's response to Israel

 Here’s a single, integrated overview of the end times drawing on Scripture as summarized in Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible (classic dispensational):

Big picture

  • The end times feature multiple escalating conflicts between good and evil, culminating in Christ’s visible return and, after His 1,000‑year reign, the final defeat of Satan.
  • Israel is central after the Church is raptured: the 70th week of Daniel focuses on Israel and Jerusalem, leading to national repentance and restoration under Messiah in the Millennium.

Integrated timeline and key events

  1. Rapture and the shift back to Israel
  • The Church is caught up before the Tribulation (pre‑trib view): 1 Thessalonians 4:16–17; 1 Corinthians 15:51–52; Revelation 3:10.
  • God’s prophetic clock resumes for “your people and your holy city” (Israel and Jerusalem) in Daniel’s 70th week (Daniel 9:24–27). Dake treats the covenants with Abraham and David as literal and irrevocable (Genesis 12; 15; 17; 2 Samuel 7; Romans 11:1–2, 28–29).
  1. First half of the Tribulation (years 1–3.5)
  • A political “prince” (Antichrist) confirms a 7‑year covenant impacting Israel and temple worship, implying a rebuilt temple (Daniel 9:27).
  • God raises a witness in Israel:
    • Two witnesses prophesy in Jerusalem for 1,260 days (Revelation 11:1–13).
    • 144,000 Israelites are sealed as firstfruits and protected (Revelation 7:1–8; 14:1–5).
  1. Midpoint crisis and great tribulation (years 3.5–7)
  • War in heaven: Michael casts Satan to the earth (Revelation 12:7–9).
  • The Antichrist breaks the covenant, sets up the abomination of desolation in the temple, and claims divine honors (Daniel 9:27; 11:31; 12:11; Matthew 24:15; 2 Thessalonians 2:3–4).
  • He is “given to make war with the saints” (Revelation 13:7; cf. Daniel 7:21, 25).
  • Faithful Jews flee and are protected in the wilderness (Revelation 12:6, 14; Matthew 24:16–22).
  1. End‑time wars climaxing at Christ’s return
  • Campaign of Armageddon: demonic deception gathers the kings of the earth against the Lord and against Jerusalem (Revelation 16:13–16; Joel 3:1–2; Zechariah 12; 14:1–3).
  • The Second Coming: Christ descends, stands on the Mount of Olives, delivers Israel, destroys the Beast and False Prophet, and annihilates their armies (Zechariah 14:4–5; Revelation 19:11–21). “The Lamb will overcome” (Revelation 17:14).
  • Distinct Gog–Magog of Ezekiel 38–39: Dake treats this invasion against Israel as separate from Armageddon and from Revelation 20’s revolt, placing it in connection with the Tribulation era and focused on Israel’s land and vindication.
  1. Israel’s national repentance and salvation
  • God pours “the spirit of grace and supplications” on the house of David; they look on the One they pierced. A refined remnant survives and believes; thus “all Israel” (the surviving remnant) is saved at Messiah’s appearing (Zechariah 12:10–13:1; 13:8–9; Romans 11:25–27; Matthew 23:39).
  1. The Millennial Kingdom
  • Satan is bound for 1,000 years (Revelation 20:1–3).
  • Messiah reigns from Jerusalem; Israel is regathered, restored, and exalted among the nations. Tribal allotments and temple worship are described in detail (Isaiah 2:1–4; 11; Micah 4:1–8; Ezekiel 36–37; 40–48). The apostles judge the twelve tribes (Matthew 19:28). Nations go up to worship the King (Zechariah 14:16–19).
  1. Final revolt and eternal state
  • After the Millennium, Satan is released, deceives the nations (“Gog and Magog,” distinct from Ezekiel 38–39 in Dake’s view), and surrounds the camp of the saints; fire from God ends the rebellion. Satan is cast into the lake of fire forever (Revelation 20:7–10).
  • Great White Throne judgment, then new heavens and new earth with the New Jerusalem (Revelation 20:11–15; 21–22).

How Israel fits throughout

  • Center stage of Daniel’s 70th week; the covenant and temple focus the crisis.
  • Special protection and witness (two witnesses; 144,000).
  • Object of end‑time invasions and deliverance at Armageddon.
  • The nation that turns to Messiah at His appearing and becomes the leading people under His earthly reign.

Core takeaway

  • There are several end‑time “wars,” not just one, and they converge on Israel and Jerusalem. Christ’s return ends the Tribulation’s campaign, inaugurates the Millennium with Israel restored, and ultimate victory is secured when the final post‑Millennial revolt is crushed.

In addition:

Drawing from Scripture as summarized in Dake’s Annotated Reference Bible (classic dispensational), a Christian’s posture toward Israel today should be marked by love, prayer, gospel witness, justice, humility, and hope:

  • Honor God’s covenant faithfulness to Israel

    • Israel remains “beloved for the fathers’ sakes,” and God’s gifts and calling are irrevocable (Romans 11:1–2, 28–29). Avoid arrogance; Gentile believers are grafted into Israel’s olive tree by grace (Romans 11:17–21). Dake emphasizes a literal future for Israel and rejects “replacement” ideas.
    • Bless rather than curse: “I will bless those who bless you” (Genesis 12:3).
  • Pray earnestly for Israel and Jerusalem

    • Pray for the peace of Jerusalem and for God’s purposes to be fulfilled (Psalm 122:6; Isaiah 62:6–7).
    • Pray for Israel’s salvation in Messiah, echoing Paul’s longing (Romans 10:1; Zechariah 12:10; 13:1).
  • Share the gospel with love and respect

    • Proclaim Jesus the Messiah “to the Jew first and also to the Greek” (Romans 1:16; Luke 24:47), with gentleness and mercy (Romans 11:31).
  • Stand against antisemitism and all hatred

    • Oppose violence, prejudice, and dehumanization of Jewish people (Zechariah 2:8; Micah 6:8). Defend the vulnerable and seek the good of your Jewish neighbors (Proverbs 24:11–12).
  • Seek peace and righteousness for everyone in the region

    • Pray for leaders and for conditions that allow quiet, godly lives (1 Timothy 2:1–2).
    • Be a peacemaker who loves all neighbors—including Arabs/Palestinians—mourning every innocent life lost and rejecting terror and retaliation that targets civilians (Matthew 5:9, 44; Luke 10:25–37).
  • Distinguish God’s promises from any government’s policies

    • Dake upholds Israel’s prophetic future, yet Scripture reminds us Christ’s kingdom is ultimate and not of this world (John 18:36; Hebrews 13:14). Support what advances justice, truth, and human dignity without uncritical endorsement of any state.
  • Live watchfully, not anxiously

    • In light of end‑time hopes involving Israel, be sober, holy, and ready—avoid speculation and date‑setting (Matthew 24:42; 2 Peter 3:11–12; Titus 2:11–13).
  • Practice tangible blessing

    • Serve and give where possible (Romans 15:27), build friendships with Jewish communities, learn Israel’s scriptural story, and reflect Messiah’s kindness in word and deed (Ephesians 2:14–16).

Summary: In Dake’s reading, God is not finished with Israel. So bless Israel and the Jewish people; pray for Jerusalem’s peace and Israel’s salvation in Messiah; oppose antisemitism; pursue justice and peace for all; and keep your deepest hope in Christ’s coming kingdom.

Friday, May 22, 2026

Using AI, algorithms, and free market principles to help the Fed set interest rates

 

Below is a minimal, sufficient, market‑first design that lets AI support (not replace) the FOMC in setting the policy rate in a non‑partisan, non‑political, and transparently rules‑based way.

Summary

  • Approach: Treat market prices as the decentralized prior and use AI only to adjust that prior when timely, statistically robust evidence warrants it. Convert the evidence into a distribution over policy paths and a transparent rule that trades off inflation, employment, the estimated natural real rate, and financial‑conditions tightening already delivered by markets.
  • Expected guarantees: Calibration to market odds; explicit uncertainty; guardrails against overfitting and bias; auditable end‑to‑end pipeline; human sign‑off.

Formal problem

  • State: Growth, inflation, labor slack, credit conditions, term premium, profit/capex signals, global spillovers; market curves (fed funds futures, SOFR/OIS, 2y/10y Treasury), TIPS real yields and breakevens.
  • Action: Set current policy rate and publish a distribution over the path.
  • Dynamics/uncertainty: Mixed‑frequency macro data releases; regime shifts; shocks (energy, fiscal, banking).
  • Objective: Minimize expected social loss over a 1–3 year horizon with transparency and stability.
  • Loss function (illustrative): L=wπ(πt+hπ)2+wu(ut+hu)2+wr(itrt)2+wc(Δit)2L = w_\pi(\pi_{t+h}-\pi^*)^2 + w_u(u_{t+h}-u^*)^2 + w_r(i_t - r^*_t)^2 + w_c(\Delta i_t)^2.
  • Constraints: Legal dual mandate; operational bounds on move size per meeting; ZLB/ELB; financial‑stability guardrails.

Algorithms (necessary and sufficient set)

  1. Market‑implied prior extractor
  • Purpose: Start from decentralized price signals.
  • Method: Infer a probability distribution for the policy path from fed funds futures/SOFR, plus options‑implied densities; decompose curve moves into real vs. breakeven vs. term premium using TIPS and an arbitrage‑free term‑structure model.
  • Key assumptions: Market liquidity is adequate; prices aggregate dispersed information.
  1. Macro nowcasting and releases engine
  • Purpose: Update the prior as data arrive.
  • Method: Mixed‑frequency dynamic factor model + BVAR/FAVAR for growth, core inflation, wages, and labor slack; high‑frequency event‑study regressions around CPI/payrolls/FOMC to map surprises into curve shifts.
  • Assumptions: Stable short‑run elasticities with regime‑switching detection.
  1. Profit‑aware natural‑rate estimator (Wicksellian r*)
  • Purpose: Tie policy to real returns on capital.
  • Method: State‑space model with Kalman filter for rtr^*_t, augmented with ROIC/earnings, capex intentions (PMIs/ISM), and productivity; distributionally‑robust variant to handle misspecification.
  • Link: Use itrt+πte+term premiumti_t \approx r^*_t + \pi^e_t + \text{term premium}_t. Rising average profit rate pushes rtr^*_t up; falling profits pull it down.
  1. Financial‑conditions and term‑premium module
  • Purpose: Recognize “market‑did‑the‑tightening” episodes.
  • Method: Kim‑Wright/AFNS‑style term‑premium estimate; credit spread factors; Treasury issuance mix; translate a rise in term premium into an equivalent policy‑rate offset.
  1. Policy optimizer (Bayesian, market‑respecting rule)
  • Purpose: Turn signals into an action and path distribution.
  • Method: Bayesian model averaging over components 2–4, anchored to component 1 as prior. Output: e.g., “70% hold, 25% −25 bp, 5% +25 bp,” plus a path.
  • Decision rule: Choose iti_t that minimizes expected LL subject to constraints, with inertia and guardrails when models disagree with market odds beyond a confidence threshold.
  1. Scenario engine and stress tests
  • Purpose: Explore tails transparently.
  • Method: Small NK/DSGE or semi‑structural model to propagate oil/deficit/banking shocks; report how distributions and recommended iti_t shift.
  1. Explanation and accountability layer
  • Purpose: Non‑partisan transparency.
  • Method: Shapley‑style attribution of the recommendation to inputs: 2y vs. funds rate, breakevens vs. real yields, profit/r* signal, term premium, labor slack; publish calibration/error bands and how next CPI/payrolls would move advice.

Moral/ethical embedding

  • Hard constraints/invariants
    • Obey the dual mandate and legal bounds; enforce max per‑meeting move; respect ELB/ZLB and balance‑sheet operational limits.
    • Prohibit the use of protected‑class or partisan features; require model versioning, audit logs, and human veto.
  • Externalities and multi‑objective handling
    • Make financial‑stability costs explicit: add a penalty term for stress metrics; if term premium or stress widens beyond thresholds, allow slower moves.
  • Risk and robustness
    • Chance constraints on tail inflation/unemployment: e.g., ensure Pr(πt+12>π+1%)α\Pr(\pi_{t+12} > \pi^*+1\%) \leq \alpha.
    • Regime‑switching and distributionally robust estimation for rr^*.
  • Fairness
    • Macro policy is aggregate; nonetheless, monitor distributional impacts across regions/sectors with disclosure, not targeting; forbid micro‑level disparate‑treatment logic in rate setting.
  • Privacy plan
    • If ingesting firm‑level data/text, apply differential privacy to aggregates and secure enclaves for raw access; publish privacy budgets.
  • Human‑in‑the‑loop and governance
    • FOMC retains decision right; pre‑meeting checklist; red‑team reviews; public model cards; periodic external audits.

Data and tooling

  • Data: Treasury and TIPS curves (levels/real/breakevens), fed funds futures/SOFR and options, CPI/PCE, wages/unit labor costs, payrolls/JOLTS, productivity, PMIs/ISM, corporate profits/ROIC, credit spreads, Treasury issuance, bank‑lending surveys, global yields/FX, energy/commodity prices.
  • Cadence: Intraday for markets; daily/weekly for surveys/credit; monthly/quarterly for macro.
  • Libraries/infra: Time‑series/term‑structure toolkits, Bayesian estimation, Kalman/particle filters, gradient boosting/trees; reproducible pipelines with immutable data snapshots.

Validation plan

  • Backtests: Multi‑cycle, pseudo‑out‑of‑sample; compare to a market‑only benchmark and simple rules (Taylor variants).
  • Metrics: Brier score and CRPS for decision/path probabilities; calibration and sharpness; Diebold‑Mariano tests vs. benchmarks; outlier control on attribution stability.
  • Stress: Oil shock, supply‑chain relapse, deficit/issuance surge, banking stress; confirm guardrails behave as designed.
  • Pass/fail: Must beat market‑only prior on probabilistic accuracy without frequent large deviations; zero violations of hard constraints in sim.

Deployment, monitoring, governance

  • Real‑time dashboards: 2y‑vs‑funds spread, TIPS real vs. breakevens, term premium, r* band, credit spreads; show model disagreement index and confidence.
  • Rollback triggers: Model disagreement beyond set thresholds; calibration drift; regime‑shift alarms; data integrity anomalies.
  • Cadence: Pre‑FOMC lock, interim “listening mode” only (no automatic re‑optimization) to avoid whipsaws.

Assumptions, limitations, and fallbacks

  • Assumptions: Markets are usually informative; macro elasticities are piecewise stable; r* is estimable within bands.
  • Limitations: Regime shifts, fiscal dominance, or liquidity fractures can degrade priors; r* estimates are uncertain; Goodhart effects if guidance changes behavior.
  • Fallbacks: Revert to market‑only prior plus simple inertial rule; widen uncertainty bands; prioritize financial‑stability constraints temporarily.

How the design honors free‑market principles and your notes

  • Start from prices: Futures/OIS, the 2‑year vs. funds rate, and TIPS decompose moves into real vs. inflation‑expectations vs. term‑premium components.
  • Respect Wicksell/profit link: The r* module uses ROIC/profit and capex proxies so that higher profit opportunities push the natural real rate up, and vice versa.
  • Recognize “market‑did‑the‑tightening”: A higher term premium tightens financial conditions even without hotter inflation; the optimizer offsets accordingly.
  • Produce distributions, not certainties: Communicate odds, sensitivities, and what would update the recommendation.

Status of claims

  • Established practice: Market‑implied priors, term‑structure no‑arbitrage, mixed‑frequency nowcasting, Kalman r* estimation, Bayesian model averaging.
  • Current best practice: Attribution via Shapley values; distributionally robust variants; regime‑switching detection.
  • Speculative elements: Exact weights in the loss function and thresholds for market‑model disagreement; these should be learned and then fixed by policy.

In addition:

here’s more concrete, “market‑first AI” detail you can use right away, plus pointers to the underlying research and Fed sources.

A. A lightweight, operational signal stack (daily)

  • Market‑implied policy prior
    • Extract meeting‑by‑meeting probabilities from 30‑Day Fed Funds futures (ZQ) using the CME FedWatch methodology; use OIS as a cross‑check. Treat this as the efficient prior. (cmegroup.com)
  • Yield decomposition
    • Decompose moves into real rate vs. inflation compensation with TIPS curves; adjust breakevens for liquidity and inflation risk premia using a TIPS no‑arbitrage model so you don’t over‑read raw breakevens. Output: Δnominal = Δreal + Δbreakeven + Δliquidity/risk premia. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Term premium channel (“market did the tightening/loosening”)
    • Track ACM and Kim‑Wright term‑premium estimates. If the 10‑year term premium rises materially without hotter inflation expectations, map part of that to an “equivalent” front‑end tightening offset. Start with a conservative mapping (e.g., 25–50% of the move) and calibrate in backtests. (sciencedirect.com)
  • Near‑term policy path proxy
    • Monitor the 2‑year decomposition (expected path + 2‑year term premium). A persistent 2‑year above the current EFFR typically means the market is leaning tighter ahead; below means easier—confirm with the FRBSF 2‑year short‑rate‑path estimate and the “near‑term forward spread.” (frbsf.org)
  • Profit‑aware r* band
    • Maintain an r* estimate from a state‑space/Kalman filter (HLW‑style) and widen it into a band; augment the state with economy‑wide ROIC/earnings and capex‑intentions factors so rising profit opportunities push rr^* up and vice versa. Use the band (not a point) in decisions. (newyorkfed.org)

B. Turning signals into a decision distribution (meeting cadence)

  • Objective and guardrails (illustrative)
    • Minimize E[wπ(ππ)2+wu(uu)2+wr(ir)2+wc(Δi)2]\mathbb{E}[\,w_\pi(\pi-\pi^*)^2 + w_u(u-u^*)^2 + w_r(i - r^*)^2 + w_c(\Delta i)^2\,] subject to dual‑mandate bounds, ELB/ZLB, max move per meeting, and a financial‑stability penalty that scales with stress/term‑premium spikes. Status: structure is standard; exact weights must be fixed via policy choice. [Probable]
  • Bayesian update
    • Posterior = market prior × likelihood from nowcasts (inflation, wages, slack) + r* band + term‑premium module. Only deviate materially from the prior when the posterior odds cross a pre‑set confidence threshold. [Probable]
  • Output
    • Publish calibrated probabilities for next 1–3 meetings (e.g., 70% hold, 25% −25 bp, 5% +25 bp) and a 1‑year path fan chart, plus an attribution: share of the recommendation due to 2‑year vs. EFFR, TIPS real vs. breakeven, r* band, and term premium. Use SHAP‑style attribution for transparency. (arxiv.org)

C. Concrete “equivalency” logic for term‑premium shocks

  • If ACM 10‑year term premium rises ≥40–60 bp over 4–8 weeks while liquidity‑adjusted breakevens are flat and growth nowcasts are unchanged, count 10–25 bp of “equivalent tightening” at the front end and bias against additional hikes unless inflation risks rise. Calibrate the mapping in backtests against historical episodes (e.g., 2013–14, 2018, QT periods). [Possible; design choice, to be validated] (sciencedirect.com)

D. Nowcasting and event engines (ingredients and why)

  • Mixed‑frequency macro nowcasts
    • Use FAVAR/MF‑BVAR or MIDAS for CPI/PCE core services, wages/unit labor costs, productivity, slack (JOLTS/payrolls/UR). These absorb large cross‑sections of monthly/weekly data and update between releases. [Certain for method; parameters need local validation] (academic.oup.com)
  • High‑frequency event models
    • Map CPI/payrolls/FOMC surprises into curve components to produce “what‑if”s for the next data print and to separate “action” vs. “communication” effects. [Certain for approach] (ideas.repec.org)
  • Structural scenario engine
    • Small NK/DSGE (e.g., Smets‑Wouters) to propagate oil/fiscal/banking shocks into inflation/growth and then into itrt+πte+term premiumti_t \approx r^*_t + \pi^e_t + \text{term premium}_t. Use only for scenario sensitivity, not point forecasts. [Probable] (aeaweb.org)

E. Daily dashboard the FOMC can see at a glance

  • Front end: ZQ‑implied meeting odds; 2‑year vs. EFFR spread and the FRBSF 2‑year expected short‑rate path. (cmegroup.com)
  • Inflation vs. real: 10‑year TIPS real yield and liquidity‑adjusted 5y/10y breakevens. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Term premium: ACM and Kim‑Wright estimates; show 4‑week change and attribution. (newyorkfed.org)
  • r* band: HLW median and interquartile range with profit/capex overlays. (newyorkfed.org)
  • Model disagreement index: distance between market prior and AI posterior in basis points of “equivalent rate”; beyond a threshold, escalate to human review. [Design control]

F. Validation and accountability (what “good” looks like)

  • Backtests vs. market prior and simple Taylor‑type benchmarks: your system should improve probabilistic accuracy (Brier/CRPS) and pass Diebold‑Mariano tests on path forecasts; require well‑calibrated probabilities (reliability plots) across cycles. [Certain for methodology] (tandfonline.com)
  • Regime detection/drift
    • Detect breaks where futures or the 2‑year stop reacting “normally” to news (e.g., ELB/QE/QT regimes); in those windows down‑weight historical mappings and lean more on market priors. [Probable] (clevelandfed.org)
  • Red‑team scenarios
    • Shock oil, issuance/term premium, and a bank‑funding squeeze; confirm guardrails (max meeting move, stability penalty, transparency) behave as designed. [Probable]

G. Governance, ethics, and “non‑partisan by design”

  • Hard constraints/invariants
    • Encode the dual mandate, rate‑move limits, and ELB/ZLB. Publish the rule form and the data dictionary; forbid partisan or protected‑class features. [Certain]
  • Privacy
    • If you ingest firm‑level text or microdata (earnings calls, loan tapes), aggregate with differential privacy or secure enclaves; publish the privacy budget ϵ\epsilon per release. [Certain for DP concept] (dwork.seas.harvard.edu)
  • Transparency
    • Release a plain‑English note each meeting: market prior, data that moved the posterior, decomposition (real vs. breakeven vs. term premium), the r* band, and how the next CPI/payrolls would update odds. [Probable]

H. Minimal pseudocode (decision support, not auto‑pilot)

  • Inputs: market_prior(meeting_probs, OIS_path), tips_decomp, term_premium, rstar_band, nowcasts, event_surprises
  • Posterior = BayesianUpdate(market_prior, likelihood(nowcasts, tips_decomp, rstar_band, term_premium))
  • If Distance(Posterior, market_prior) < threshold: recommend “follow market with inertia”
  • Else: optimize i_t to minimize expected loss with guardrails; emit distribution and SHAP‑style attribution. [Probable]

Key caveats and what’s “known”

  • Certain
    • TIPS‑nominal spreads reflect inflation compensation but contain liquidity and risk premia; adjust before interpreting as expectations. (federalreserve.gov)
    • Term premia vary over time and materially move long rates independently of policy‑path changes. (sciencedirect.com)
    • Fed funds futures encode meeting odds and are widely used for extracting the policy path. (cmegroup.com)
  • Probable
    • A profit‑aware rr^* (HLW + ROIC/capex signals) improves policy alignment with free‑market returns on capital. (newyorkfed.org)
    • The 2‑year (and near‑term forward spread) is a reliable proxy for the expected policy path over the next few quarters. (papers.ssrn.com)
  • Possible (to validate in your data)
    • A rules‑based “term‑premium offset” reduces unnecessary hikes when markets already tightened via higher term premia. (sciencedirect.com)

Primary sources you can rely on

  • Natural rate r*: NY Fed r* program; HLW/LW models. (newyorkfed.org)
  • TIPS and breakevens: Federal Reserve Board TIPS curve and Notes; D’Amico‑Kim‑Wei decomposition of liquidity/risk premia. (federalreserve.gov)
  • Term premium: ACM (JFE 2013) and Kim‑Wright (FEDS 2005); NY Fed ACM series. (sciencedirect.com)
  • Market‑implied priors: CME FedWatch methodology and FEDS on fed funds futures. (cmegroup.com)
  • Methods for nowcasting/scenarios/validation: FAVAR (Bernanke‑Boivin‑Eliasz), dynamic factor models (Stock‑Watson), DSGE (Smets‑Wouters), Diebold‑Mariano tests; model interpretability via SHAP. (academic.oup.com)

Learn more:

  1. Understanding the CME Group FedWatch Tool Methodology - CME Group
  2. The Fed - The TIPS Yield Curve and Inflation Compensation
  3. Pricing the term structure with linear regressions - ScienceDirect
  4. Treasury Yield Premiums - San Francisco Fed
  5. Measuring the Natural Rate of Interest - FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK
  6. A Unified Approach to Interpreting Model Predictions
  7. Measuring the Effects of Monetary Policy: A Factor-Augmented Vector Autoregressive (FAVAR) Approach* | The Quarterly Journal of Economics | Oxford Academic
  8. Do Actions Speak Louder Than Words? The Response of Asset Prices to Monetary Policy Actions and Statements
  9. Shocks and Frictions in US Business Cycles: A Bayesian DSGE Approach - American Economic Association
  10. Treasury Term Premia - FEDERAL RESERVE BANK of NEW YORK
  11. Comparing Predictive Accuracy: Journal of Business & Economic Statistics: Vol 13, No 3
  12. Financial Markets’ Perceptions of the FOMC’s Data-Dependent Monetary Policy
  13. Differential privacy | Cynthia Dwork
  14. The Fed - Tips from TIPS: Update and Discussions
  15. The Near-Term Forward Yield Spread as a Leading Indicator: A Less Distorted Mirror by Eric Engstrom, Steven A. Sharpe :: SSRN


In addition:

Using AI and Free-Market Principles to Support (Not Replace) the Fed’s Interest Rate Decisions

This is a simplified, clearer version of the original proposal. It outlines a practical, transparent system where AI assists the FOMC by starting with real-world market prices and only suggesting adjustments when strong, fresh data justifies it. The goal is a rules-based, non-political approach that respects decentralized market signals.

Core Idea (Summary)

  • Start with markets: Treat prices from futures, bonds, and related instruments as the best available summary of what millions of investors collectively expect. This is the “prior” or baseline.
  • AI’s limited role: AI updates this baseline only when new economic data provides clear, statistically reliable evidence. It produces probability distributions (e.g., “70% chance of no change, 25% chance of a small cut”) instead of pretending to know one exact number.
  • Key benefits: More transparency, explicit uncertainty, better handling of risks like inflation or unemployment, and guardrails against overconfidence or bias.
  • Free-market alignment: Markets aggregate dispersed knowledge. AI adds speed and data-processing power without overriding that wisdom.

The Problem It Solves

The Fed must set the policy interest rate while considering:

  • Economic growth, inflation, jobs, credit conditions, and global factors.
  • Market signals (e.g., Treasury yields, inflation expectations from TIPS bonds).
  • Uncertainty from shocks like energy prices or fiscal changes.

Objective: Make decisions that minimize long-term economic harm (balancing inflation and employment) while being transparent and stable.

It uses a loss function that penalizes deviations from target inflation, full employment, the natural real interest rate (r*), and big sudden rate changes.

Main Components of the System

  1. Market-Implied Prior Extract what markets are pricing using Fed funds futures, SOFR/OIS curves, and options. This gives probabilities for the next meetings (e.g., via CME FedWatch methodology). Decompose yields into real rates, expected inflation (via TIPS breakevens), and term premium.
  2. Nowcasting Engine Update expectations as data arrives (CPI, payrolls, wages, etc.) using statistical models like mixed-frequency BVARs or factor models.
  3. Natural Rate (r) Estimator* Estimate the “neutral” real interest rate consistent with stable growth and inflation. Improve it by including profit/capital return signals (ROIC, earnings, capex plans) — higher profitable investment opportunities suggest a higher r*. Use bands, not single points, due to uncertainty.
  4. Financial Conditions & Term Premium Module Recognize when markets have already tightened (or eased) conditions via higher term premia or wider credit spreads. This can substitute for official rate hikes. Track estimates like ACM or Kim-Wright.
  5. Policy Optimizer Combine everything via Bayesian updating. Output a recommended rate plus a full probability distribution for the path ahead. Only deviate from the market prior when evidence is strong enough (with a confidence threshold).
  6. Scenario & Stress Testing Simulate shocks (oil spikes, banking issues, big deficits) to show how recommendations would change.
  7. Explanation Layer Clearly show why a recommendation was made: e.g., “Inflation expectations added +10 bp pressure; term premium offset -15 bp.” Use attribution methods like SHAP.

Ethical & Practical Guardrails

  • Hard rules: Stick to the dual mandate (inflation + employment). Limit rate move sizes per meeting. Respect zero lower bound. No partisan or protected-class data.
  • Financial stability: Add penalties if stress indicators spike.
  • Transparency: Publish probabilities, error bands, dashboards, and attribution notes.
  • Human oversight: FOMC makes final decisions. AI is decision support.
  • Privacy: Use techniques like differential privacy for any sensitive data.
  • Validation: Backtest against past cycles. Must improve on pure market forecasts without excessive deviations. Monitor for regime shifts.

Lightweight Daily Signal Stack (Ready-to-Use Version)

  • Market baseline: Check CME FedWatch for meeting probabilities and OIS curves.
  • Inflation signals: Track TIPS real yields vs. breakevens (adjust for liquidity).
  • Term premium: Watch ACM/Kim-Wright estimates. Rising term premium without hotter inflation = markets already tightened.
  • Policy path: Compare 2-year Treasury yield to current fed funds rate (and FRBSF estimates).
  • r band*: NY Fed Holston-Laubach-Williams model, enhanced with profit data.

Decision Process Example:

  1. Start with market odds.
  2. Update with latest nowcasts and r* signals.
  3. Adjust for term premium effects.
  4. Output probabilities + explanation.
  5. Only suggest a rate change if the combined signal crosses a reliability threshold.

What This Honors from Free-Market Principles

  • Respects prices as information aggregators.
  • Links policy to real profit opportunities (Wicksellian idea).
  • Recognizes when markets do the tightening for the Fed.
  • Emphasizes probabilities and uncertainty over false certainty.
  • Competition and backtesting would naturally discipline any persistent errors.

Limitations & Fallbacks

  • Markets can be wrong in crises or regime changes → lean harder on markets then.
  • r* is hard to estimate precisely → use ranges.
  • Fallback: Default to market pricing + simple inertial rule if models disagree too much.

This design is built on established tools (Fed models, term-structure methods, Bayesian stats) with some practical enhancements for profit awareness and term-premium offsets. It aims for auditable, non-partisan support that improves on pure discretion while preserving market discipline.

This remains general framework information, not policy advice. The sources referenced (CME, NY Fed, academic papers) provide solid foundations for implementation.

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