Greenspan - the Wizard of Bubbleland
By
Henry C.K. Liu
Part
I: Greenspan
- Bubble Wizard
Part II:
The Repo Time Bomb
Part
III: How the US Money Market Really Works
Part 4: The Global Money and
Currency Markets
Appeared
in Asia
Times February 16 2006
Until the late
1950s, a currency’s money market was based in
the issuing nation’s financial center: US dollars in New York, sterling
in
London, yen in Tokyo, Swiss francs in Zurich, etc. The Bretton Woods
monetary
regime of fixed exchange rates built around a gold-backed dollar did
not
consider unrestricted cross-border flow of funds desirable or necessary
for
facilitating international trade. At the height of the Cold War, the
Soviet
Union became concerned that its dollar deposits in New York might be
frozen by
a US hostile government, as happened to the funds held in the US by the
People’s Republic of China after the Korea War broke out. The
USSR opened dollar accounts with European
banks. Then in 1963 the US introduced the populist Regulation Q, which
for
subsequent decades imposed limits and ceilings on bank and
savings-and-loan
(S&L) interest rates. Regulation Q created incentives for US banks
to do
business outside the reach of US law, and London came to dominate this
offshore
dollar business.
Bank accounts in London are subject only to the laws of
England and Wales, so US sanctions, restrictions and taxes cannot apply
to the
dollars deposited in them. British law on international finance is well
developed on account of historical financial hegemony of the British
Empire
since the fall of Napoleon. In time, banks in London, often branches of
US
banks, started actively trading deposits in other currencies besides
dollars as
well, as it became possible for them to accept deposit in one currency
in one
country and lend in another currency in another country profitably.
Nowadays,
financial regulation has become even lighter, so money can be moved
with little
cost to and from London; therefore the price of London money generally
tracks
very closely that of domestic money in many countries. But there have
been
differences between domestic and London interest rates. These
differences have
had different causes at different times: tax laws, bank regulations,
the
possibility that a country might introduce exchange controls, and the
differences between the creditworthiness of the banks in London and
those in
the domestic market. The London money
and foreign exchange markets are dominant for trading currencies,
raising
capital and selling debt. In 1971, the
US detached the dollar from gold and made it a fiat currency based on
the
strength of the US economy, which allowed the dollar to continue to
perform the
role of the world’s key reserve currency for international trade. This
was the
beginning of dollar hegemony.
The London money market is particularly active in dollars,
sterling, euros, yen, and Swiss francs, with less liquidity (ease of
trading in
large size) in Australian, Canadian and New Zealand dollars. Deposits
in other
currencies are mostly traded only in their domestic markets. The
terminology
for London money is confusing. When dollar deposits started to trade in
London,
they were called eurodollars, the “euro” prefix then meaning
that the
currency was outside its home jurisdiction, mostly in Europe, despite
the fact
that the United Kingdom never considered itself part of Europe. And
hence euromarks
stand for London-traded Deutschmarks; eurolira for Italian lira
in
London, euroyen, euroswiss, and so on. The use of the
“euro”
terminology subsequently became more widespread. Much corporate debt is
issued
under the laws of England and Wales, even if the currency is that of
the US,
Germany, Switzerland or Japan. This convention traces back to the
financial
globalization of the British Empire. Thus tradable debt (bonds) issued
in
London became known as Eurobonds,
even if they are not denominated in euros. In
1999, Europe adopted a single currency and
called it the euro. The words “eurodollar”
“euroyen” and “euroswiss”
become ambiguous. They still refer to London-delivery dollars, yen and
Swiss
francs, but now they can also mean exchange rate equivalents of euros
in
dollars, in yens and in Swiss francs. On rare occasions, one even hears
the
term “euroeuro” for London-delivery euros.
When Regulation Q was phased out by 1986, US banks were
allowed to pay interest on checking account - the NOW accounts, to lure
depositors back from the money markets. The traditional interest-rate
advantage
of Savings and Loan (S&L) banks was removed, to provide a “level
playing
field”, forcing them to take the same risk as commercial banks to
survive.
Congress also lifted restrictions on S&L commercial lending,
instead of the
traditional home mortgages, which promptly got the whole S&L
industry into
bad debt troubles that would soon required an unprecedented government
tax
money bailout of depositors in a S&L crisis. But the real-estate
developers
who made billions with S&L loans were allowed to walk away with
their
profits, leaving S&L banks with foreclosed properties with market
values
way below the values of their mortgages. State usury laws were
unilaterally
suspended by an act of Congress in a flagrant intrusion on state rights.
A political coalition of converging powerful interests was
evident. Virulently high inflation had damaged the financial position
of the
holders of money, including small savers, created by a period of benign
low
inflation earlier, so that even progressives felt something has to be
done to
protect the propertied middle class, the anchor of political democracy
by
virtue of their opposition to economic democracy. The solution was to
export
inflation to low-labor-cost economies in newly industrialized countries
(NICs)
around the world, taming US domestic inflation with outsourcing
employment
overseas and exorcising the domestic inflation devil in the form of
escalating
US wages. Neo-liberalism was born with the twin midwives of dollar
hegemony and
unregulated global financial markets, disguising economic
neo-imperialism as
market fundamentalism. The debasement of
the dollar, dragging down all other currencies, finds expression in the
upward
surge of commodities and asset prices, which pushes down global wages
to keep
US inflation low. This
pathetic phenomenon is celebrated as economic growth by neo-liberals.
An operating detail about money markets has emerged as
windows of opportunity for speculative profit. In most currencies,
including
USD, EUR, JPY and CHF, the money market operates on “T+2”. This means
that
settlement, when delivery of funds takes place, occurs 2 business days
after
the trade date. The settlement
date is also known as the value date. So
if on Monday 13 August
2007 JPMorgan agrees to lend USD to CSFB for 3 months, JPMorgan would
pay this
money to CSFB two days after trading, on 15 August, and it would be
returned
with interest 3 months after that, on 15 November 2007. The main
exception to
T+2 is sterling, which is T+0, also known as same-day
settlement. In sterling, standard practice is to settle
a trade on the same day that it is agreed. However, counterparties can
always
agree to a non-standard settlement, but in the absence of such
agreement, GBP
is T+0 and almost all others are T+2.
There is a standard definition of the seemingly simple
phrase “3 months”. For example, when is 3 months after 30 November
2009? It
can't be 30 February 2010, because there isn't such a day. And it can't
even be
28 February 2010, because that is a Sunday. As it is, the official
definition
from the International Swap Dealers Association (ISDA) says that 3
months after
Monday 30 November 2009 is Friday 26 February 2010, but the point is
that there
is a precise trading definition. Payments in the
real
economy cause banks' balances with the central bank to rise and fall. A
bank
with a shortfall will want to borrow it from a bank with an excess, and
hence
there is an interbank deposit market (a money market).
This interbank deposit market exists, with maturities from 1
day to 1 year, in every currency, and in the major currencies it exists
both
domestically and in London. A market participant, by choosing to borrow
or lend
money at any particular maturity, is implicitly speculating against the
forward
rates implied by the spot rates. Banks also lend money against
collateral; the
secured nature of this lending reduces the credit risk, and hence it
reduces
the interest rate. Central banks have fiat control over short-term
interest
rates, motivated by monetary ideology and perceived forward-looking
economic
conditions. The euro when it was first introduced was a legal construct
that
made the national currency units in Euroland irrelevant to wholesale
financial
markets. A money market fund inn the US is a type of mutual fund that
is
required by law to invest in lowest-risk securities. These funds have
relatively low risks compared to other mutual funds and pay dividends
that
generally reflect short-term interest rates. Unlike a “money market
deposit
account” at a bank, US money market funds are not federally insured.
Money
market funds typically invest in government securities, certificates of
deposits, commercial paper of companies, and other highly liquid and
low-risk
securities. Money market funds are regulated primarily under the
Investment
Company Act of 1940 and the rules adopted under that Act, particularly
Rule
2a-7 under the Act. They attempt to keep their net asset value (NAV) at
a
constant $1.00 per share—only the dividend yield goes up and down. But
a money
market’s per share NAV may fall below $1.00 if the investments perform
poorly.
While investor losses in money market funds have been rare, they are
possible
in a financial panic.
The Nature of
Financial Panics
A panic is a species of neuralgia. A financial panic is
cured by having it starved, stopping the drain of confidence from a
market that
runs on confidence. To cure a financial
panic, the holders of cash reserves must, in contrast to natural
instinct, be
ready not only to keep the reserves for their own liabilities, but to
advance
it most freely for the liabilities of others. They must lend to all
market
participants in need of liquidity whenever credit is otherwise good in
normal
situations. The hesitance is related to the unhappy prospect of
unnecessary
larger loss in the event the cure fails to stem the panic, resulting in
throwing good money after bad. And the cure will fail if any entity in
the
chain of credit should decide to bail itself out at the expense of the
system. In
wild periods of alarm, one failure will generate many others in a
falling
domino effect, and the best way to prevent the derivative failures is
to arrest
the primary failure which causes them.
This was easier to do when the number of
counterparties in the
distressed contract was relatively small, as in the case of Long Term
Capital Management
(LTCM) crisis in 1998, a large hedge fund, where they could all be
gathered in
one room is the New York Fed Building and work out a rescue deal. But in the case of the Refco collapse in 2005,
where counterparties are spread over 240,000 customer accounts located
in 14
countries, it became a different problem. The identities of
counterparties for
over-the-counter derivative contracts are unknown as risks are
unbundled and
sold off to a variety of investors with varying appetite for risk.
Dealers like
Refco are intermediaries that earn their fees by providing the money to
effectuate the performance of the contracts between remote and
unidentified
counterparties in synthetic collateral debt obligations (CDO). Rather
than the
traditional pools of assets such as bonds and loans, the pools of
credit
derivatives that back synthetic CDOs include instruments such as credit
default
swaps, forward contracts, and options. When Refco, a large foreign
exchange and
commodity broker providing clearing and execution services for global
exchange-traded derivatives including futures, was forced into
bankruptcy by
alleged fraud in its parent holding entity, the funds and customer
accounts in
its unregulated over-the-counter derivative trading subsidiary were
frozen. Reuters reported on
October 20, 2005 that a fund
that tracks a commodities index created by
investor
Jim Rogers, former co-founder, with George Soros, of Quantum Fund, said
it was
unlikely to allow clients to immediately redeem investments as 63% of
its
assets were held by nearly collapsed Refco Inc. Beeland Management Co.
LLC, a
Chicago-based manager for the Rogers International
Raw Materials Fund LP, said it could not be sure if the fund would lose
assets
held by Refco Capital Markets.
In a letter to investors,
Beeland said it was unable to provide an accurate value of fund units because of Refco's bankruptcy.
Beeland,
Rogers' middle name, is majority controlled by Rogers. In Refco's bankruptcy filing, the
Beeland fund
was listed as a creditor with
claims of
$75.2 million. Another Beeland-managed fund, the
closely held Rogers Raw Materials Fund, has claims of $287.4 million. What is not known is how many other funds are
affected by the Refco bankruptcy.
The management of a panic is mainly a confidence restoring
problem. It is primarily a trading problem. All traders are under
liabilities;
they have obligations to meet that are time-sensitive and
unconditional, and
they can only meet those obligations by discounting obligations from
other
traders. In other words, all traders are dependent on borrowing money
as bridge
loans until settlement of their trades, and large traders are dependent
on
borrowing much money. At the slightest symptom of panic, traders want
to borrow
more than usual; they think they will supply themselves with the means
of
meeting their obligations while those means are still forthcoming. If
the
bankers gratify the traders, they must lend largely just when they like
it
least; if they do not gratify them, there is a panic.
Fear generates more fear in a vortex toward
abyss.
There a great structural inconsistency of logic in this.
First, bank reserves are established where the last dollar in the
economy is
deposited and kept in a central bank. This final depository is also to
be the
lender of last resort; that out of it unbounded, or at any rate
immense,
advances are to be made when no one else can lend. Thus central banks
posit
themselves both as depositories of reserves and as lenders of last
resort to
the banking system. This seems like saying first, that bank reserve
should be
kept, and then that it need not be kept because in a real panic, the
central
bank will lend where bank reserve is insufficient. What is more
problematic is
that banks now constitute only a small part of the credit market. The lion share is in the derivatives market.
Granted
notional values in derivative contracts are not true risk exposures,
but a
swing of 1% in interest rate on a notional value of $220 trillion in
the
current derivative market is $2.2 trillion, approximately 20% of US GDP. When reduced to abstract principles, a
financial panic is caused by a collective realization that the money in
a
system will not pay all creditors when those creditors all want to be
paid at
once. A panic can be starved out of existence by enabling those alarmed
creditors who wish to be paid to get paid immediately. For this
purpose, only
relatively little money is needed. If the alarmed creditors are not
satisfied,
the alarm aggravates into a panic, which is a collective realization
that all
debtors, even highly credit-worthy ones, cannot pay their creditors. A
panic
can only be cured by enabling all debtors to pay their creditors, which
takes a
great deal of money. No one has that much money, or anything like
enough, but
the lender of last resort – the central bank. And injecting that amount
of
money suddenly after a panic has begun will alter the financial system
beyond
recognition, and produce hyperinflation instantly, because the
extinguishment
of all credit with cash creates an astronomical increase in the money
supply.
David Ricardo (1772-1823), brilliant British classical
economist and a Bullionist along the line of Henry Thornton
(1760-1815), wrote:
“On extraordinary occasions, a general panic may seize the country,
when
everyone becomes desirous of possessing himself of the precious metals
as the
most convenient mode of realising or concealing his property, against
such
panic, banks have no security on
any system.” Thornton
in his classic The
Paper Credit of Great Britain (1802)
provided the
first description of the indirect
mechanism by observing that new money created by banks enters the
financial
markets initially via an expansion of bank loans, through increasing
the supply
of lend-able funds, temporarily reducing the loan rate of interest
below the
rate of return on new capital, thus stimulating additional investment
and loan
demand. This in turn pushes prices up, including capital good prices,
drives up
loan demands and eventually interest rates, bringing the system back
into
equilibrium indirectly.
The Bullionist Controversy emerged in the early 1800s
regarding whether or not paper notes should be made convertible to gold
on
demand. But today, no central bank has enough precious metal (gold) to
back
their currencies because the global currency system is based on fiat
money. The use of credit enables debtors
to use a large part of the money their creditors have lent them. If all
those
creditors demand all that money at once, their demands cannot be met
for that
which their debtors have used is for the time being employed, and not
to be
obtained for payment to the creditors. Moreover, every debtor is also a
creditor in trade who can demand funds from other debtors. With the
advantages
of credit come disadvantages of illiquidity which require a store of
ready
reserve money and advance out of it very freely in periods of panic,
and in
times of incipient alarm.
Notwithstanding the fact that the global money market has
already run away from the control of every central bank, the management
of the
global money market is much more difficult than managing banking
reserves in
any particular country by its central bank, because periods of internal
panic
and external virtual demand for gold bullion commonly occur together.
The
virtual demand for gold bullion in today’s fiat currency world is expressed in the exchange rates of
currencies. A falling exchange rate drains the global purchasing power
of a
currency and the resulting rise in the rate of discount, as expressed
in a
change in the exchange rate, tends to frighten the market. The holders
of bank
reserves have, therefore, to treat two opposite maladies at once: one
requiring
punitive remedies such as a rapid rise in the market rates of interest;
and the
other, an alleviative treatment with large and ready loans to combat
illiquidity. Experience suggests that
the foreign drain must be counteracted by raising the rate of interest.
Otherwise,
the falling exchange rate will protract or exacerbate the alarm,
generally
known as a loss of confidence in the currency and the banking system
and the
functioning of the market. And at the rate of interest so raised, the
holders
of the final bank reserve must lend freely. Very large loans at very
high rates
are the best remedy for the worst malady of the money market when a
foreign
drain is added to a domestic drain. Any notion that money is not
available, or
that it may not be available at any price, only raises alarm to panic
and enhances
panic to madness with a total loss of confidence. Yet the acceptance of
loans
at abnormally high interest rates is itself a sign of panic. This is
the fate
that awaits the dollar going forward. Against such contradictions, no
central
bank has found the appropriate wisdom.
Greenspan’s formula has always been more
liquidity at low interest rates
which pushes the monetary system into what Keynes calls the liquidity
trap.
This transforms him from a wise central banker to a wizard of bubbleland.
And great as the delicacy of such a problem in all
countries, it is far greater in the US now than it was or is elsewhere
because
of dollar hegemony. The strain thrown by a panic on the final bank
reserve is
proportional to the magnitude of a country’s trade, and to the number
and size
of the dependent banks and financial institutions holding no cash
reserve that
is grouped around the Federal Reserve. There are very many more
entities under
great liabilities than there are, or ever were, anywhere else because
of the
emergence of the debt-driven US economy. At the commencement of every
panic,
all entities under such liabilities try to supply themselves with the
means of
meeting those liabilities while they can. This causes a great demand
for new
loans while loans are still available. And so far from being able to
meet it,
the bankers who do not keep extra reserve at that time borrow largely,
or do
not renew large loans, or very likely do both. The repo market relieves
the
need of any bank or institutions to hold extra reserves, as new loans
are
supposed to be always available.
Money center bankers in New York and London, other than the
Fed and the Bank of England, effectuate this in several ways. First,
they have
probably discounted bills to a large amount for the bill brokers, and
if these
bills are paid, they decline discounting any others to replace them.
In the panic of 1857, the London and Westminster Bank
discounted millions of such bills, and they justly said that if those
bills
were paid they would have an amount of cash far more than sufficient
for any
demand. But how were those bills to be paid? Someone else must lend the
money
to pay them. The mercantile community could not suddenly bear to lose
so large
a sum of borrowed money; they had been conditioned to rely on it, and
they
could not carry on their business without it. They could not handle it
at the
beginning of a panic, when everybody wanted more money than usual.
Speaking
broadly, those bills could only be paid by the discount of other bills.
When the
bills of a Manchester warehouseman which he gave to the manufacturer
became
due, he could not, as a rule, pay for them at once in cash; he had
bought on
credit, and he had sold on credit. He was but a middleman. To pay his
own bill
to the maker of the goods, he must discount the bills he had received
from the
shopkeepers to whom he had sold the goods; but if there is a sudden
cessation
in the means of discount, he would not be able to discount them. The
entire
mercantile community must obtain new loans to pay old debts. If someone
else
did not pour into the market the money which the banks like the London
and
Westminster Bank took out of it, the bills held by the London and
Westminster
Bank could not be paid.
Who then was to pour in the new money? Certainly not the
bill brokers who had been used to rediscount with such banks as the
London and
Westminster millions of bills, and if they saw that they were not
likely to be
able to rediscount those bills, they would instantly protect themselves
and
would not discount them. Their business did not allow them to keep much
cash
unemployed. They paid interest for all the money deposited with them at
rates
often nearly approaching the rate they could charge; as they could only
keep a
small reserve a panic affected them more quickly than on anyone else.
They
stopped their discounts, or much diminished their discounts,
immediately. There
was no new money to be had from them, and the only place at which they
could
have it was the Bank of England. The same situation occurred in the
1907
banking crisis in the US which led to the creation of the Federal
Reserve. A panic can be caused by a number
of
developments. In the case of LCTM, it was an unexpected Russian default
of
sovereign debts. In the case of Refco, it appears to be a relatively
minor
fraud that might bring down an otherwise well-hedged operation.
A bank which is uncertain of its credit standing, and wants
to increase its cash reserve, may have money on deposit at the bill
brokers. If
it wants to replenish its reserve, it may ask for it, suppose, just
when the
alarm is beginning. But if a great number of banks do this very
suddenly, the
bill brokers will not at once be able to pay without borrowing. They
have
excellent bills in their case, but these will not be due for some days;
and the
demand from the more or less alarmed banks is for payment at once and
today.
Accordingly, the bill brokers take refuge at the central bank, the only
place
where at such a moment new money is available.
The case is just the same if the bank wants to
sell government
securities, or to call in money lent on securities in the repo market.
These
the bank reckons as part of its reserve. And in normal times, nothing
can work
better. In England, there is a saying: “you can sell Consols (sovereign
debt)
on a Sunday.” In a time of no alarm, or in any alarm affecting that
particular
banker only, the bank can rely on such reserve without misgiving. But
not so in
a general panic. Then, if the bank wants to sell $50 billion worth of
government securities, it will not find $50 billion of fresh money
ready to
come into the market. All ordinary banks are trying to sell, or
thinking they
may have to sell. The only resource is the Fed. In a great panic,
Consols could
not be sold unless the Bank of England would advance to the buyer, and
no buyer
could obtain advances on Consols at such a time unless the Bank of
England
would lend to him. The same is true with the Fed.
The case is worse if the alarm is not confined to the money
center banks, but is diffused throughout the economy and around the
world
because of the existence of Eurodollars and the systemic effects of
dollar
hegemony. As a rule, local bankers only keep enough cash as is
necessary for
their common business. All the rest they leave at the bill brokers, or
at the
interest-paying banks, or invest in government securities in the repo
market.
But in a panic they come to New York and London to find this money. And
it is
only from the Fed that they can get it, for all the rest of New York
and London
want their money for themselves.
History tells us that the liabilities of Lombard Street (the
name of the London money market, as Wall Street is the name of the US
equity
market) payable on demand were far larger than those of any like
market, and that
the liabilities of the country were greater still, the magnitude of the
pressure on the Bank of England when both Lombard Street and the
country
suddenly and at once came upon it for aid. No other bank was ever
exposed to a
demand so formidable, for none ever before kept the banking reserve for
such a
nation as the English. The mode in which the Bank of England met this
great
responsibility was very curious. It unquestionably did make enormous
advances
in every panic.
Credit in business is like loyalty in Government. You must
take what you can find of it, and work with it if possible. Every
banker knows
that if he has to prove that he is worthy of credit, however good may
be his
arguments, in fact his credit is gone. The whole rests on an
instinctive confidence
generated by use and tradition. A many-reserve system, if some miracle
should suddenly
put it down in Lombard Street, would seem monstrous there. Nobody would
understand it, or confide in it. Credit is a power which may grow, but
cannot
be constructed. Those who live under a great and firm system of credit
must
consider that if they break up that one, they will never see another,
for it
would take years upon years to make a successor to it.
The Fed has been abusing this truism for too
long. The damage Greenspan has done to the credit worthiness of the
dollar
monetary system would take decades to restore and would require much
systemic
pain.
How Banking Evolved
Banking had not been consciously or rationally designed. It
evolved as an institution by meeting the changing needs of stages of
evolving
economies that have later become obsolete.
The institution of banking is frequently
trailing behind current
financial needs of a contemporary economy. The earliest banks of Italy,
where
the name began from a bench for counting money, were finance companies.
The
Bank of St. George at Genoa, as with other banks founded in imitation
of it,
was at first only finance companies for making loans to and float loans
for the
governments of the city states where it operated. Money is an urgent
want of
governments in all times, and seldom more urgent than it was in the
tumultuous
Italian Republics of the High Middle Ages. After these banks had been
well
established as finance companies, they began to do what today is
referred to as
banking business but originally never contemplated. The great banks of
Northern
Europe had their origin in a want still more curious. The prime
business of a
bank was to give good coin. Adam Smith (1723-1790), Scottish moral
philosopher,
whose ideas so influenced US free marketeers, describes it clearly:
“The
currency of a great state, such as France or England, generally
consists almost
entirely of its own coin. Should this currency, therefore, be at any
time worn,
clipt, or otherwise degraded below its standard value, the state by a
reformation of its coin can effectually re-establish its currency. But
the
currency of a small state, such as Genoa or Hamburg, can seldom consist
altogether in its own coin, but must be made up, in a great measure, of
the
coins of all the neighboring states with which its inhabitants have a
continual
intercourse. Such a state, therefore, by reforming its coin, will not
always be
able to reform its currency. If foreign bills of exchange are paid in
this
currency, the uncertain value of any sum, of what is in its own nature
so
uncertain, must render the exchange always very much against such a
state, its
currency being, in all foreign states, necessarily valued even below
what it is
worth.” Smith was giving an early
description of currency hegemony, linking great statehood with sound
money. It
was the opposite of Greenspan’s approach of debasing the dollar through
over-issuance
to maintaining the economy of a great state, notwithstanding Greenspan
repeated
expression of fidelity to the ideas of Adam Smith.
Smith went on to observe that “in order to remedy the
inconvenience to which this disadvantageous exchange must have
subjected their
merchants, such small states, when they began to attend to the interest
of trade,
have frequently enacted that foreign bills of exchange of a certain
value
should be paid not in common currency, but by an order upon, or by a
transfer
in the books of a certain bank, established upon the credit, and under
the
protection of the state, this bank being always obliged to pay, in good
and
true money, exactly according to the standard of the state.” Thus fixed exchange rates set by government
is a necessity for small states to overcome the disadvantages of market
forces
on the value of currencies.
Before the Bank
of Amsterdam, also known as the
Wissel Bank, was founded in 1609, an important date in banking, the
great
quantity of clipped and worn foreign coins, which the extensive trade
of
Amsterdam brought from all parts of Europe, reduced the value of its
currency
about 9% below that of good money fresh from the mint. Such good money
no
sooner appeared than it was melted down or carried away from general
circulation, as prescribed by Gresham’s Law of bad money driving out
good.
Nobel laureate economist Robert Mundell asserts that the correct
expression of
Gresham’s Law is: “Cheap money drives out dear, if they exchange for
the same
price.” It is a proposition that defines the relation between paper
money and
the precious metals. David Hume, writing in 1752, went to great pains
to
demonstrate that the existence of paper credit would mean a
correspondingly
lower quantity of gold, and that an increase in paper credit would
drive out an
equal quantity of gold. Hume goes on to
explain why some countries have more gold - in proportion to population
and
wealth - than others; it is because there is no credit to displace gold. Adam Smith developed the same idea in The
Wealth of Nations with the use of paper money and applauded its
use in the
nation: “The substitution of paper in the room of gold and silver
money,
replaces a very expensive instrument of commerce with one much less
costly, and
sometimes equally convenient. Circulation comes to be carried on by a
new
wheel, which it costs less both to erect and to maintain than the old
one. .
.” By accepting the use of paper money,
Smith was not necessarily advocating debased money.
Smith went on to say that merchants, with plenty of
currency, could not always find a sufficient quantity of good money to
pay
their bills of exchange; and the value of those bills, in spite of
several
regulations which were made to prevent it, became in a great measure
uncertain.
In order to remedy these inconveniences, a bank was established in 1609
under
the guarantee of the City. This bank received both foreign coin, and
the light
and worn coin of the country at its real intrinsic value in the good
standard
money of the country, deducting only so much as was necessary for
defraying the
expense of coinage, and the other necessary expense of management. For
the
value which remained, after this small deduction was made, it gave a
credit in
its books. This credit was called bank money, which, as it represented
money
exactly according to the standard of the mint, was always of the same
real
value, and intrinsically worth more than current money. It was at the
same time
enacted, that all bills drawn upon or negotiated at Amsterdam of the
value of
six hundred guilders and upwards should be paid in bank money, which at
once
took away all uncertainty in the value of those bills. Every merchant,
in
consequence of this regulation, was obliged to keep an account with the
bank in
order to pay his foreign bills of exchange, which necessarily
occasioned a
certain demand for bank money. On this
simple principle, the Bretton Woods regime set out in 1944 a
gold-backed dollar
as the reserve currency for post-war international trade. Since then,
the
central bank of every trading nation has been obliged to keep a dollar
reserve
account with the Federal Reserve to support the value of its currency,
even
when the dollar was taken off the gold standard in 1971.
An important function of early banks, which modern banks
have retained, is the function of remitting money to facilitate trade.
A
customer brings money to the bank to meet a payment obligation at a
great
distance, and the bank, having a connection with other banks at that
location,
causes the destination bank to pay by debiting the account of the
originating
bank. The instant and regular remittance of money is an early necessity
of
growing trade. By providing these services, banks gained the credit
rating that
over time enabled them to make profits as deposit banks. Being trusted
for one
purpose, they came to be trusted for a purpose quite different,
ultimately far
more important, as depository and intermediary of money and credit. But
these
services only affect a small number of customers. The real function
deposit
banks perform is the supply of paper money circulation to the economy.
Up to 1830
in England, the main profit of banks was derived from the circulation,
and for
many years after that the deposits were treated as very minor matters,
and the
whole of so-called banking discussion turned on questions of
circulation.
Today, most of the circulation is handled electronically as virtual
money
instead of paper money. Banks are in fact a retail network for the
central
banks for circulating the money central banks issue. The Federal
Reserve, with
its unlimited power to create money as a lender of last resort, is
owned by its
member banks, not by the people of the US.
This arrangement is the key obstacle to
economic/financial democracy in
the US.
The Fed and the
Value of Money
The Fed, though not part of the government, and not
collectively owned by the people, but by commercial banks, enjoys a
monopoly on
the creation of money. The Fed has some extra-constitutional power to
fixing
the value of money, through the setting of short-term interest rates
and its
control of the money supply. The Fed sets the minimum rate of discount
from
time to time that all banks must accept. Liberal economists view money
as a
commodity, and only a commodity. Why then is its value fixed by fiat
and not
the way in which the values of all other commodities are fixed, by
supply and
demand in the market? The answer is that the issuing of money as a
legal tender
is a government monopoly which gives government pricing power over
money. But
the Fed by its own definition of being politically independent, is not
part of
the government. The Fed, owned by its
member banks, is a living example of a financial oligarchy. While the Fed claims that its monetary policy
measures are designed to sustain the health of the whole economy, it
sees the
health of the economy’s financial heart, the banks in the Federal
Reserve
System, as the paramount objective.
In normal times, there is not money enough in the money
markets to discount all the bills outstanding without taking money from
the
Fed. As soon as the Fed funds rate target is fixed, market participants
who
have bills to discount try to discount these bills cheaper than the Fed
funds
rate. But they seldom can get them discounted cheaper, for if they did
everyone
would leave the Fed, and the outer market would have more bills than it
could
handle and the rate would rise to the rate set by the Fed.
In practice, when the Fed finds this process beginning, and
sees that its business is diminishing, it lowers the Fed funds rate
target, so
as to secure a reasonable portion of the business to itself, and to
keep a fair
part of its deposits employed. At Dutch auctions an upset or maximum
price is
fixed by the seller, and he comes down in his bidding till he finds a
buyer.
The value of money is fixed in the money market in much the same way,
only that
the upset price is not that of all sellers, but that of one very
important
seller, the Fed, some part of whose supply is essential. The notion
that the
Fed has a control over the money market, and can fix the rate of
discount as it
likes, has survived from the old days before 1844, when the Bank of
England
could issue as many notes as it liked. But even then the notion was a
mistake.
A bank with a monopoly of note issue has great sudden power in the
money
market, but no permanent power: it can affect the rate of discount at
any
particular moment, but it cannot affect the average rate. And the
reason is
that any momentary fall in money, caused by the fiat of such a bank, of
itself
tends to create an immediate and equal rise, so that upon an average
the value
is not altered. Also the amount of outstanding long-term debt is
infinitely
greater than short-term debt, making it difficult for short-term
interest rates
to dictate long-term rates. This is the cause of what Greenspan calls
the
interest rate conundrum.
If money of constant value were all held by its owners, or
by banks which did not pay an interest for it, the value of money might
not
fall quickly. Money would, in the market phrase, be “well held.” The
holders
would be under no pressure to employ it all; or they might chose to
employ part
at a high rate rather than all at a low rate. Thus the three conditions
that
compel money to be constantly employed are taxes and interest and mild
inflation. Taxes are not levied to finance government expenditure, but
to keep
the population productive. Similarly,
interest on money is not to reward the holders of money, but to keep
the
borrowers working for it. Prosperity is produced by work, not profits.
But in
the money market, money is very largely held by those who do pay an
interest
for it, such as money market funds, and such entities must employ it
all to
avoid insolvency. Such entities do not so much care what rate of
interest at
which they employ their money: they can reduce the dividend they pay in
proportion
to that which they can make, but they must pay something. The
fluctuations in
the value of money are therefore greater than those on the value of
most other
commodities. At times, there is an excessive pressure to borrow it, and
at
times an excessive pressure to lend it, and so the price is forced up
and down.
These considerations define the responsibility thrust on the
Fed and other central banks. The Fed cannot control the permanent value
of
money, but it can fully control its momentary value. It cannot change
the
average value, but it can determine the deviations from the average. If
the Fed
badly manages, the rate of interest will at one time be excessively
low, and at
another time excessively high. The economy will experience pernicious
booms and
busts. But if the Fed manages well, the rate of interest will not
deviate much
from the average rate. As far as anything can be steady the value of
money will
then be steady, and probably in consequence trade will be steady too at
least a
principal cause of periodical disturbance will have been withdrawn from
it.
This is the view of Milton Friedman who coined the slogans “money
matters” and
“inflation is everywhere and anywhere a monetary phenomenon.” Friedman
advocated a fixed expansion of M1 at 3% long-term to moderate the
runaway
business cycle over-stimulated by Keynesian deficit financing measures.
But
economies can develop imbalances from monetary causes independent of
inflation,
as the US economy has from dollar hegemony.
Greenspan’s solution was to keep a steady
expansion of the money supply
to neutralize the imbalances with debt, thus postponing the day of
reckoning by
accepting a bigger crash that requires a bigger cleanup.
The rise of prices is the quickest way to improve the state
of credit. Prices in general are mostly determined by wholesale
transactions
which are commonly not cash transactions, but bill transactions. Years
of
improving credit, if there be no disturbing causes, are years of rising
prices,
and years of decaying credit, years of falling prices. Deflation is the
deadly
enemy of outstanding debt. In the US, when house prices have generally
tripled
in less than a decade, it is evidence that the value of the dollar has
decline
by a factor of three in the same time period. Consumer prices have not
risen by
the same amount because of outsourcing of manufacturing to low-wage
economies
overseas also acts as a depressant on domestic wages. Imbalance in the
economy
appears if wages and earnings have not risen proportional to prices. A homeowner whose house has increased 300% in
market price while his income has risen only 30% has not become richer.
He has
become a victim of uneven inflation. He may enjoy a one time joy ride
with
cash-out financing with a new mortgage, but his income cannot sustain
the new
mortgage payments if interest rates rise and he will lose his home. And interest rates will rise if his income
increases because that is how the Fed defines inflation. Thus when his
income
rises, the market price of his home will fall, giving him an incentive
to walk
away from a big mortgage in which he has little equity tie-up. This can become a systemic problem for the
mortgage-backed security sector.
Under every system of banking, there will always securities
dealers and who, by attending only to one class of securities, come to
be
particularly well acquainted with that class. The Fed recognizes them
as
primary dealers. And as these specially-qualified dealers can for the
most part
lend much more than their own capital, they will always be ready to
borrow
largely from bankers and others and in the repo market, and to deposit
the
securities which they know to be good as a pledge for the loan. They
act thus
as intermediaries between the borrowing public and the less-qualified
capitalists.
Knowing better than the ordinary capitalists which loans are better and
which
are worse, specialist dealers borrow from them, and gain a profit by
charging
to the public more than they pay to the lenders.
Many stock brokers transact such business on an enormous
scale. They lend large sums on domestic and foreign bonds or
infrastructure
shares or other such securities, and borrow those sums from bankers,
depositing
the securities with the bankers, and generally, though not always,
giving their
guarantee. But with the development of deregulated capital and debt
markets,
banks are increasingly reduced to the role of market participants
rather than
intermediaries, by proprietary trading. By far the greatest of these
new
intermediate dealers are the bill-brokers. Mercantile bills are a kind
of
security that only professionals understand. In the US, they are called
commercial papers, short-term obligations with maturity ranging from 2
to 270
days issued by banks, corporations and other institutional borrowers to
investors with temporary idle cash. Such
instruments are unsecured and usually discounted, though some are
interest-bearing.
In the US, the money market is a subsection of the fixed
income market. A bond is one type of fixed income security. The
difference
between the money market and the bond market is that the money market
specializes in very short-term debt securities (debt that matures in
less than
one year). Money market investments are also called cash investments
because of
their short maturities. Money market securities are essentially IOUs
issued by
governments, financial institutions and large corporations of top
credit
ratings. These instruments are very liquid and considered
extraordinarily safe.
Because they are extremely conservative, money market securities offer
significantly lower return than most other securities.
One of the main differences between the money market and the stock
market is
that most money market securities trade in very high denominations.
This limits
the access of the individual investor. Furthermore, the money market is
a
dealer market, which means that firms buy and sell securities in their
own
accounts, at their own risk. Compare this to the stock market where a
broker
receives commission to acts as an agent, while the investor takes the
risk of
holding the stock. Another characteristic of a dealer market is the
lack of a
central trading floor or exchange. Deals are transacted over the phone
or
through electronic systems. Individuals
gain
access to the money market through money market mutual funds, or
sometimes
through money market bank account. These accounts and funds pool
together the
assets of hundreds of thousands of investors in order to buy the money
market
securities on their behalf. However, some money market instruments,
such as treasury
bills, may be purchased directly from the Treasury in denominations of
$10,000
or larger. Alternatively, they can be acquired through other large
financial
institutions with direct access to these markets.
There are different instruments in the money market, offering different
returns
and different risks. The desire of major corporations to avoid banks as
much as
possible has led to the widespread popularity of commercial paper.
Commercial
paper is an unsecured, short-term loan issued by a corporation,
typically for
financing accounts receivables and inventories. It is usually issued at
a discount,
reflecting current market interest rates. Maturities on commercial
paper are
usually no longer than 9 months, with maturities of 1-2 months being
the
average. For the most part, commercial paper is a very safe investment
because
the financial situation of a company can easily be predicted over a few
months.
Furthermore, typically only companies with high credit ratings and
credit
worthiness issue commercial paper. Over the past 4 decades, there have
only
been a handful of cases where corporations have defaulted on their
commercial
paper repayment. Commercial paper is usually issued with denominations
of
$100,000 or multiples thereof. Therefore, small investors can only
invest in
commercial paper indirectly through money market funds.
On December 23, 2005, commercial paper placed
directly by GE Capital Corporation was 4.26% on 30-44 days and 4.56% on
266 to
270 days while the Fed funds rate target was 4.25% and the discount
rate was
5.25% both effective since December 13, 2005.
Through the commercial paper market, GE has
become the world’s biggest
non-bank finance company.
February 14, 2006
Next: The
Commercial Paper Predicament
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