Fed Reserve cause of bubble in everything

17 Jan, 2020 - 00:01 0 Views

eBusiness Weekly

It’s liquidity, stupid. Rephrasing the words of Bill Clinton’s adviser James Carville helps explain why many stocks are hitting record highs, why gold is breaking higher and why economies look set to rebound sharply this year.

About a year ago we described how modern financial systems have grown dependent on central bank balance sheets, and why another round of easing from the US Federal Reserve — a “QE4” — was vital for markets.

Fed chair Jay Powell has so far proved sufficiently flexible to reverse the balance sheet shrinkage, to which his immediate two predecessors, Ben Bernanke and Janet Yellen, had been committed.

The “Fed Listens”, as the name of its tour of US cities suggests and, true to form, recent worries in the repo market spurred the central bank to inject a further $400 billion into the financial sector.

It increased its balance sheet by about 10 percent between last September and the year end. Yet, the Fed’s spin-doctors are trying to persuade us that this is not quantitative easing.

Certainly, it has not involved direct buying of US Treasury notes and bonds, but it has still led to a sizeable uptake of short-term Treasury Bills. The difference between QE and “not QE” is mysterious, then, because liquidity has expanded and, in the process, relieved funding pressures and reduced systemic risks.

As a result, the prices of haven assets, such as the 10-year US Treasury note, have fallen, while risky assets such as equities have gone up. Gold has put on nearly one-third. We measure liquidity through the funds that flow through both the traditional banking system, and through the repo and swap markets.

The global credit system increasingly operates through these latter wholesale markets, and often with the active participation of central banks.

For some years now, the wholesale money markets have been fuelled by vast inflows
from corporate and institutional cash pools, such as those controlled by cash-rich companies, asset managers and hedge funds, the cash-collateral business of derivative traders, sovereign wealth funds and foreign exchange reserve managers. Today, these pools probably exceed $30 trillion and have outgrown the banking systems, as their unit sizes easily exceed the insurance thresholds for government deposit guarantees.

This forces these pools to invest in alternative short-term secure liquid assets. In the absence of public sector instruments such as Treasury bills, the private sector has had to step in by creating short-term vehicles known as repurchase agreements, or repos, and asset-backed commercial paper.

The repo mechanism bundles together “safe” assets such as government bonds, foreign exchange and high-grade corporate debt, and uses these as security against which to borrow.

While credit risk is to some extent mitigated, the risk of not being able to roll over or refinance positions remains. At the same time, markets have remained fixated on policy interest rates, which are supposed to control the pace of real capital spending and, hence, the business cycle.

That, at least, is what the textbooks tell us. But the world has moved on. We must think of western financial systems as essentially capital re-distribution mechanisms, dominated by these giant pools of money that are used to refinance existing positions, rather than raising new money. New capital spending has itself become eclipsed by the need to roll over huge debt burdens.

If debts are not to be reneged upon, they must either be repaid or somehow refinanced. However, not only is much of the new debt taken on since the 2008 financial crisis unlikely to be paid back but, more worryingly, it is compounding ever higher.

Our latest estimates suggest that world debt levels now exceed $250 trillion, equivalent to a whopping 320 per cent of world gross domestic product — and roughly double the $130 trillion pool of global liquidity.

This refinancing role means that quantity (liquidity) matters more than quality (price, or interest rates).

Central banks play a key role in determining liquidity, or this funding capacity, by expanding and shrinking their balance sheets, and in the US, of course, this is closely linked to the Fed’s QE operations.

Consequently, more and more liquidity needs to be added to facilitate the re-financing of the world’s debt. QE is here to stay. We should expect QE5, QE6, QE7 and beyond. Take a step back, though.

A rising tide of liquidity floats many boats, but we know from experience that liquidity-fuelled asset markets usually end badly, as they did in 1974, 1987, 2000 and in 1989 in Japan.

In this regard, the scale of recent Fed interventions needs to be understood. Last year, US markets enjoyed their biggest effective inflow of liquidity in more than 50 years, by our measures. That liquidity is already spilling around the world, with our global indices registering their sixth best year on record.

So remember what former Citigroup chief Chuck Prince said about “still dancing”, on the eve of the 2008 crash. Enjoy the party, yes. But dance near the door. — Financial Times.

 

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