Reinhart is referring to the two-day testimony which
"Humphrey Hawkins was also a major risk event as investors placed importance on an event the Fed deemed important," Reinhart continues. "That was then, this is now."
As you can tell from the tone, Reinhart expects the testimony, which includes economic forecasts, to be pretty uneventful.
If there's one topic anyone's interested in, it's the Fed's process for rate normalization. In other words, we all want to know how the Fed plans to scale back easy monetary policy and allow interest rates to rise again.
Here's Reinhart on the subject and why Bernanke won't reveal anything [from a note published on Friday]:
There is no easy answer, but a discussion from the chairman would be helpful.
But do not expect one. Chairman Bernanke operates as a more democratic chairman than his predecessors. He typically shuns the spotlight. He does not talk about unsettled issues because it would give the appearance of front-running his committee. In his appearance next week, he will not even have a new forecast to talk about. Last month’s FOMC conclave was one of the four orphan meetings of the eight per year that neither include a survey of their economic projections nor end with a press conference. As a result, the economic rundown will most likely be based on submissions from late November. If there is any drama, it will be from a mistake during the question-and-answer period. And Ben Bernanke seldom makes those.
Perhaps he'll make a mistake. Business Insider will be covering the testimony live, so we'll let you know if that happens.