The Zero Interest Rate Trap
By
Henry C.K. Liu
This article appeared in AToL
on January 22, 2009
John Maynard Keynes formulated the phenomenon of absolute
cash preference in a distressed market as a liquidity trap that can
neutralize
the stimulative effect of quantitative easing (increasing the money
supply by
changing the quantity of bank reserves) by the central bank.
Japan’s
two-decades-long recession is a manifestation of a zero interest rate
trap
which can also neutralize the stimulative effect of credit easing
(lowering the
cost of credit) by the central bank.
Federal Reserves Chairman Ben S.
Bernanke, in
the Stamp Lecture at London School of Economics, London, England
on January
13, 2009 defined the difference
between quantitative easing and credit easing as
follows:
The
Federal Reserve’s approach to
supporting credit markets is
conceptually distinct from quantitative easing (QE), the policy
approach used
by the Bank of Japan from 2001 to 2006. Our approach–which could be
described
as “credit easing”–resembles quantitative easing in one respect: It
involves an
expansion of the central bank’s balance sheet. However, in a pure QE
regime,
the focus of policy is the quantity of bank reserves, which are
liabilities of
the central bank; the composition of loans and securities on the asset
side of
the central bank’s balance sheet is incidental. Indeed, although the
Bank of
Japan’s policy approach during the QE period was quite multifaceted,
the
overall stance of its policy was gauged primarily in terms of its
target for
bank reserves. In contrast, the Federal Reserve’s credit easing
approach
focuses on the mix of loans and securities that it holds and on how
this
composition of assets affects credit conditions for households and
businesses.
Each in separate ways, the liquidity and the zero interest
rate traps together demonstrate the futility of macroeconomic attempts
to use both
quantitative and credit easing by the central bank to stimulate an
economy
contracting from excessive debt and leverage.
A liquidity trap can be formed when holders of cash seek
safe haven from risk in a distressed market. They rush to park cash in
risk-free
financial instruments until the market stabilizes, causing short-term
interest
rates on top-rated fixed income investments to fall from market forces
of
supply and demand. Low short-term rate in such situation is the result
and not
the cause of a slowing economy. Under such conditions, central bank
lowering of
federal funds rate targets below that set by market forces can have the
effect
of pushing investors towards higher risk in search of better returns in
a
risk-averse market in which good investment opportunities are in short
supply.
Since central bank power to set interest rates is unevenly concentrated
on the short term, a liquidity trap distorts the term structure of
interest rates
which defines the expanding spread between short-term and longer-term
interest
rates. This is because the Fed’s influence on the much larger
outstanding
long-term credit market is less direct than the short-term credit
market where the
central bank has complete control for rates for loans of short
maturities. Yet the Federal Reserve is
institutionally
focused more on the long-term health of the monetary system as compared
to the
Treasury which is institutionally more concerned with the short-term
health of
the financial sector. Thus to achieve the Federal Reserves’ long-term
goal for
the monetary system, a stable interest rate regime is ideal. Milton
Friedman
and other monetarists have long agreed on 3% as the most effective
interest rate
with up to 6% structural unemployment for avoiding wide price
volatility and
destructive business cycles.
The “risk structure” of interest rates defines the rising risk
premium for a declining scale of credit ratings. Risk premium is
defined as the
difference between the rate of return on risk-free government
securities and
other financial instrument of higher risk. The higher the risk, the
larger is
the compensatory risk premium. The risk premium, which is calculated
from both
historical data and forward-looking estimates, adjusts the required
risk/reward
ratio for investments of different risk exposures.
On January 6, 2009,
the yield on one-month Treasury was near zero while a year earlier it
was 3.2%.
In one year, the Fed cut short-term rate nearly 320 basis points to
stimulate
the slowing economy. On the same day, the yield on 10-year Treasury was
2.5%
while a year earlier it was 3.8%. In one
year, the long-term rate fell only 130 basis points from market forces,
less
than half of the short term rate cut of 320 basis points by the Fed.
On January 6, 2009,
the term structure between federal funds and 10-year Treasury rates was
250
basis points. A year earlier the term structure was only 60 basis
points. The
Fed had pushed the short term rate down further (by 190 basis points)
than the
fall of the long term rate from market forces, widening the normal term
structure of interest rates by 2.5 times. This means significant future
inflation was being seeded.
Risk/Reward Ratio
In the 16th century, Chinese rice traders
observed the intricate relationships between Opening, High, Low and
Closing
market prices and represented them graphically using vertical bars
which came
to be known nowadays on Wall Street as Japanese Candlesticks because
Japanese
traders learned it from their Chinese counterparts and Western traders
later
learned the technique from Japan during the Meiji Reform Era of
1868-1912.
Today, Candlestick traders look for recognizable patterns
with repeating “highs” as good probabilities for profitable trades.
They do
this by determining entry and exit points to meet profit targets and
stop loss
targets. These trading points can be located by looking at historical
moving
averages, Bollinger bands, or other technical indicators to evaluate
probable
support and resistance levels.
In the 1980s, John Bollinger developed the Bollinger Bands
as a technical analysis tool from the concept of trading bands.
Bollinger Bands
can be used to provide a relative definition of high and low and to
measure the
highness or lowness of a price relative to previous trades. By
definition,
prices are high at the upper band and low at the lower band. This
definition
can enhance rigor in pattern recognition and is useful in comparing
price
action to indicator movements to arrive at disciplined trading
decisions.
Some stock traders seek profit by buying when price touches the lower
Bollinger Band and selling when price touches the moving average in the
center
of the bands. Other traders buy when price breaks above the upper
Bollinger
Band and sell when price falls below the lower Bollinger Band. Options
traders,
most notably implied volatility traders, often sell options when
Bollinger
Bands are far apart by historical standards, and buy options when the
Bollinger
Bands are close together, expecting volatility to revert back towards
the
average historical volatility level. When the bands lie close together,
a
period of low volatility in stock price is indicated; and when far
apart, a
period of high volatility in price is indicated. When the bands have
only a
slight slope and lie approximately parallel for an extended time, the
price of
a stock will be found to oscillate up and down between the bands as
though in a
channel.
As an illustration, a stock with a per share entry price of $20.35
can be assigned by the trader a profit target of $21.35 and a stop loss
target
of $19.85. The risk of loss is $20.35 minus $19.85, or
$0.50. The
reward is $21.35 minus $20.35, or $1. The trade is risking 50 cents to
make $1,
with a risk/reward ratio of 1:2. The return on capital of $20.35 is
around 20:1,
or 5% for the open duration of the trade, which could be minutes,
hours, days
or months. If the trade is closed out by the stop loss target, the
return on
capital is negative 40:1, or -2.5%. Trading and financing cost has not
been
included in the calculations. A long open period will reduce the
positive
return on capital as financing cost rises over time.
It is necessary to bear in mind that rational quantitative
trading models while giving an unemotional framework for decision
making, are
not guarantees for achieving targets. Models are by definition
abstractions of
reality which is infinitely more complex. One can fail rationally as
well as
intuitively. Often, rationality can prolong the denial phase
unconstructively
even when intuition suggests something is wrong.
There is another problem of
modeling reality. Most model builders
assume reality to be rational and orderly. In fact, life is full of
misinformation, disinformation, errors of judgment, miscalculations,
communication breakdowns, ill will, legalized fraud, unwarranted
optimism,
prematurely throwing in the towel, etc. One view of the business world
is that
it is a snake pit. Very few economic models reflect that perspective.
The risk reward ratio provides a non-intuitive quantitative evaluation
of risk decisions. It does not say anything about the qualitative
evaluation of
the decision, which is the surmised probability of achieving the profit
target,
which when missed, will produce a loss of $0.50 per share plus
transaction and
financing cost. Price reward ratios are merely quantitative
justification for
taking manageable risk. High risk only means high propability of loss
but it is
not synonymous with certainty of loss.
Probability/Impact
Ratio
Good management of risk must include a probability/impact
ratio. A low probability event with high impact is more dangerous or
profitable
than a high probability event with low impact, which may fall into the
“not
worth the bother” category unless it can be exploited in large volume
with high
leverage. The net capital rule created by the SEC in 1975 required
broker-dealers to limit their debt-to-net-capital ratio to 12-to-1.
After the
rule was exempted in 2004 for five big firms, many hedge funds
increased their
leverage to 40-to-1 to maximize profit by enlarging the risk profile.
Both Risk and Profit
Magnified by Leverage
The five big investment banking firms wanted for their
brokerage units an exemption from the 1975 regulation that had limited
the
amount of debt they could take on to $12 for every dollar of equity.
The debt-to-net-capital
ratio exemption would unshackle billions of dollars held in reserve as
a
cushion against potential losses on their investments and trades. The
released
equity funds from higher leverage could then flow up to the parent
company,
enabling it to speculate in the fast growing but opaque world of
mortgage-backed securities, credit derivatives, credit default swaps
which are
a form of insurance for bond holders, and other exotic structured
finance
instruments.
In 2004, responding to financial globalization, the European
Union, to attract profitable finance operations to financial centers in
its
member nations, passed a rule allowing the European counterpart of the
US SEC to
liberalize manage of risk for both broker dealers and their investment
banking
holding parents. In response, the SEC instituted a matching voluntary
program
for broker-dealers with capital of at least $5 billion, enabling the
SEC to
oversee both the broker-dealers and the holding parents. Deregulation
was being
driven by financial nationalism.
Ever since the Great Depression, the government has tried to
limit the leverage available to investors in the US
stock market by maintain margin requirements. But regulators, led by
former
chairman of the Federal Reserve Alan Greenspan, thought financial
innovation
would be hampered, and financial activity driven to unregulated markets
overseas, if there were any attempts to impose limits on leverage in
the
unregulated credit and capital markets. After all, innovation was
viewed as the
driving force in US
prosperity. The global financial system embarked on a race to assume
more risk
under a mentality of “if I don’t smoke, somebody else will.”
This brave new approach, which all five qualifying broker-dealers -
Bear
Stearns, Lehman Brothers, Merrill Lynch, Goldman Sachs, and Morgan
Stanley -
voluntarily adopted, altered the way the SEC measured their capital.
The five
big firms led the charge for the net capital rule change to promote
financial
innovation, spearheaded by Goldman Sachs, then headed by Henry Paulson,
who two
years later, would leave Goldman to become the Treasury Secretary,
who now
has to deal with the global mess after failing to secure government
aid. Bear
Sterns and Merrill Lynch had been sold to big commercial banks and
Goldman and Morgan Stanley have turned themselves into regulated
bank-holding companies. The age of independent investment banks came to
an end
in the US.
Growth of Structured
Finance
Structured finance, the structuring of financial needs for
larger market to generate greater financial value, emerged at first as
means to
profit from unlocking latent value of conventional debt through
unbundling of
risk through securitization, and from eliminating market inefficiency
through
arbitrage. It creates financial value by facilitating the transfer of
unit
risk to
the credit system through complex legal entities that shifts
liabilities off
balance sheet. Risk transfer through debt securitization leads to
degradation
in underwriting standards as liability is transferred to counterparties
or to
market participants systemically.
Advances in computerized trading enable the handling of
large amounts of market information at electronic speed to conduct
profitable
trades to exploit market inefficiency to restore fundamental
equilibrium. The
intellectual energy of structured finance came through spillovers from
risk
management advances in nuclear arms control during the Cold War. Before
long,
with financial deregulation, quantitative trading groups, known as
quant shops,
and hedge funds, hoping to profit from capitalizing on eliminating
market
inefficiency, were springing up like mushrooms after a spring rain.
Also, risk management needs by all institutions with
financial risk exposures create massive market demand for derivative
instruments of all varieties and complexities to transfer unit risk to
systemic
risk. This leads to securitization of financial obligations to
manipulate risk
levels to attract investors of varying risk appetite. With increasingly
sophisticated hedging against risk, investors begin to assume higher
tolerance
for risk through hedging. Hedging then transforms from a method of
protection
by reducing risk, to one of achieving higher profit by assuming more
risk. Risk
is no longer merely an index of danger; it becomes an index to command
compensatory returns. Risk changes from
something to be avoided to something that should be sought for those
seeking
higher returns. Finance capitalism is built on a structure of risk.
Hedging only transfers risk to other parties; it does not
eliminate risk from the system. Systemic risk rises as more unit risks
are hedged.
But while unit risk is managed by resident risk managers, deregulation
reduced
the role of systemic risk managers, traditionally market regulators,
which in
the US
are the
Federal Reserve for banking institutions and the Security Exchange
Commission
for equity markets.
Former Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan’s argument in support for
deregulation is that innovation should not be inhabited and that self
interest
of financial institutions would be sufficient to assure self
regulation. The
logic is akin to if foxes were given free run of chicken coops, self
interest
of the foxes would regulate consumption of chickens to ensure a steady
food
supply. He has since admitted that he had put too much faith in the
self-correcting power of free markets.
Seduced by Fantasy
Profit Targets
The entire structured finance sector has been seduced by
fantasy profit targets driven by excess liquidity of cheap money
released by
the central bank. These fantasy profit
targets are pushed even unrealistically higher by the under-pricing of
risk due
to the ease with which entity risk has been passed onto counterparties
in the
global credit system to get liabilities off the balance sheets of
funding
intermediaries and underwriters.
Instead of acting as responsible intermediaries between
investors, securitizing intermediaries and borrowers, investment banks
while
acting as securitizing intermediaries, also became investors in
structured
finance instruments they themselves invent and whose risk has been
under-priced
and whose safety is dependent on the performance of borrowers of poor
credit
ratings and record.
Fantasy profit targets have permeated the entire credit market
because risk has been pushed unrealistically low by spreading it to a
great
number of counterparties in a daisy chain. When a few counterparties in
the
daisy chain defaulted, it impacted the credit ratings of all parties in
the
global daisy chain, requiring additional compensatory collateral,
placing the
entire daisy chain in an unenviable position of undercapitalization.
The opaqueness
of the daisy chain makes it impossible to locate and strengthen the
weak links
and the whole system comes crashing down from undercapitalization.
The Fear Factor
A fantasy profit target cannot be justified merely by low
risk, particularly if the alleged low risk assessment itself is a
fantasy.
There is no mileage in risking even one penny for an impossible dream.
Pricing
of risk is a judgment call based on confidence on likelihood of gain,
the
reverse of which is fear of loss. The fear factor usually faces a
rising
threshold in a bull market and declining bar in a bear market in
reverse direction
to a required risk reward ratio. The
greater the fear, the higher would the risk reward ratio be required.
At some
point, the fear factor can push the required risk reward ratio to
infinity when
risk aversion overrides any and all reasonable profit targets. That is
the
point when markets seize.
Historical data suggest that a 100-basis-point (1%) increase
in federal funds rate has been associated with 32-basis-point change in
the
10-year bond rate in the same direction. Many convergence trading
models based
on this ratio are used by hedge funds. The failure of long-term rates
to
increase as short-term rates were raised by the Fed in late winter 2003
can be
explained by the expectation theory of the term structure which links
market
expectation of the future path of short-term rates to changes in
long-term
rates, as St Louis Fed President William Poole pointed out in a speech
to the
Money Marketeers in New York on June 14, 2005. The market simply
did not
expect the Fed to keep short-term rate high for extended periods under
then
current bullish conditions. The upward trend of short-term rates
was
expected by the market to moderate or reverse direction as soon as the
economy
slowed. The failure of long-term rates to fall as short-term rates were
cut by
the Fed to near zero in December 2008 can be explained by the fear
factor and
by the uncertainty direction of the purchasing power of the dollar in
the
future.
Zero Short-term
Interest Rate Can Increase Systemic Risk
A liquidity trap can also raise the risk premium as market appetite
for risk wanes and investors flee towards safety. But a zero short-term
interest
rate trap set by the central bank can distort the historical term
structure by abnormally
widening the gap between short term and long term rates as long-term
rates fail
to fall with the short-term rate because of a rising spread in risk
premiums.
This distortion can increase systemic risk by tempting investors to
engage in
term interest arbitrage by borrowing at near-zero short term rate to
invest in
higher-yielding long term instruments with even normal risk premiums.
The re-pricing of short-term risk was a root cause of the
1997 Asian financial crisis and it was again a root cause of the 2007
credit
crisis a decade later. Monetarism had not banished the business cycle;
it
merely extended the length of boom phase by making the eventual bust
more
painful.
A liquidity trap, together with a zero interest rate trap,
can combine to lead to a structural under-pricing of risk, followed by
a
subsequent overshoot of the risk premium from a rising fear factor to
lead to a
systemic failure of the short-term credit market. In August 2008, all
debts
that matured in 30, 90 or 120 days could not be rolled over at previous
rates,
or as the fear factor escalated, at any interest rate.
Risk is inherently dangerous even if it is
priced
appropriately to reflect realistic market conditions. A
healthy dose of risk aversion is
indispensable for the survival of financial capitalism which thrives on
prudent risk-taking, not suicidal heroic risk abuse. Yet under-pricing
of risk driven by excess liquidity
released by
the central bank over long periods to stimulate economic activities,
the basic
strategy of monetarism, will implode as a systemic crisis at the end of
the day
as surely as the sun will set.
Central Banking,
Democracy and Monetary Policy
The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 gave the Federal Reserve authority
and responsibility for setting monetary policy, which guides central
bank
actions to influence the availability and cost of money and credit to
help
promote national economic goals. Since its founding, full employment
has never
been part of the US
national economic goal. From the nation’s beginning, during the
pioneering
days, the US
had faced a persistent labor shortage. In the agricultural South, the
labor
shortage problem was solved by the institution of slavery. During the
age of capitalist
industrialization, the industrial North solved the labor shortage
problem with
immigration after 1830 from the laboring class in Europe.
Until then, The US did not have a working class, or an unemployment
problem.
The winning of independence by the US
from Britain
in
1782 was accompanied by gloomy predictions that the new nation would
not
succeed in creating a stable central authority to replace the British
Crown and
would quickly dissolve into anarchy. It was to the great credit of the
founding
fathers that they were able to create a new democratic republican
government
which would combine freedom with order, and local self-government with
national
unity. The achievement was the more remarkable in view of the deep
socio-economic and ideological conflicts among the American people on
contradiction
between individualism and collectivism, democracy and oligarchy,
conservatism
and liberalism, and agrarianism and mercantilism.
The democratic ideal was represented early on by Sam Adams,
Patrick Henry and other Sons of Liberty. Among Constitution drafters,
democratic ideals were represented by Thomas Jefferson. In the 1820s,
democratic politics found expression in the new Democratic Party headed
by Andrew
Jackson. These early democrats believed that government should be
controlled by
the people and that its power should be strictly limited and its
economic
policy should aim at protecting the interests of the average citizen
rather
than the wealthy elite.
This democratic attitude was natural to economic conditions
of abundance of land and self development opportunities that formed the
virgin
political canvas on which to paint a new city
on the hill from 18th century liberalism. Before the
formation of economic
classes, US
representative democracy was based on geographic regions focusing on
sectional
interests rather than class interests. This early liberalism was
fundamentally different
from 19th century liberalism and 21st century
neo-liberalism under which the working class, while emerging as the
majority of
the population, is systemically underrepresented politically as control
of all
political machinery are captured by the moneyed class, as predicted by
Alexis de Tocqueville who warned in his Democracy in America published
in 1836 that the loss of "general equality of condition" would threaten
equality in American society.
Alexander Hamilton was the spokesman of the American aristocratic
movement, representing large landowners, foreign trade merchants and
international
financiers. Hamilton, a
forerunner
supply-sider, believed that wealth can only be created by the energetic
financial elite who through their superior intelligence and character
are natural
entrepreneurs and innovators that can better mobilize the ignorant and
undisciplined masses for high national purpose than the contended
agricultural
landed gentry. Politically, Hamilton
thought the people could not be trusted with power and that majority
rule
without strong minority rights would lead to confiscation, by the
undeserving
poor, of the wealth created by the deserving rich. Hamilton
favored a strong central government that is controlled and run by a
well-born,
educated elite of principle and property for the public good.
Thomas J. DiLorenzo in his new book, Hamilton’s Curse: How
Jefferson’s Arch Enenemy Betrayed the American
Revolution – and What It Means for America Today, argues that
regarding the
stipulation that policies must promote “the public good” that “no
government
policy can be said to be for ‘the public good’ unless it benefits every
member
of the public.” More often than not, the “public good” turns out to
mean good
only for special interests. The argument puts the test for legitimate
government
intervention on the populist effect of government policies.
Hamilton
rationalizes
state intervention on the basis of high national purpose. His view of
government control of the economy is more appropriate for emerging
economies,
such as the US economy in the1860s, the Japanese economy in the 1950s
or the
Chinese economy today. Henry Clay’s American System after the War of
1812 took Hamilton’s
elitist program of economic nationalism away from the upper class and
offered
it to the masses by making federal authority champion of the people,
rather
than a captured machine for narrow sectional interests. Through
representative
democracy as advocated by Jefferson, Clay
promoted
measures designed to strengthen the young nation, enhancing its
economic
independence from foreign economic and financial dominance with
protective
tariffs, and promoted national unity by developing a reciprocal
relationship
between agriculture and industry and the establishment of a nation bank
to
finance domestic development. Daniel Webster, representing New
England internationalist shipping interests in Congress,
opposed
Clay’s populist economic nationalism. Clay’s ideas of economic
nationalism are
similar to Chinese economic policy today, albeit adjustments need to be
made
regarding the difference in historic conditions and political culture
in the
two countries. (Please see my
December 9,
2003 AToL article: US-CHINA:
QUEST FOR PEACE - Part 1: Two nations, a world apart)
Economically, while all Americans in the mainstream believe
in the protection of private property by the state, Hamilton
advocated the concentration of wealth in the hands of those who will
profitably
use it to build a strong nation, and not be distributed widely as
advocated by believers
of economic democracy. Modern-day neoliberals are not Hamiltonians in
that they
willingly compromise economic nationalism in support of empire-building
globalization in the name of free trade.
Hamilton’s
idea
reflected the need of a new, young nation of rich undeveloped resources
for capital
formation in a world beginning to enter the industrial capitalist age.
In the
17th and 18th centuries, the agricultural economy
of the US
faced a labor shortage which gave rise to the institution of slavery.
The agrarian
South prospered until challenged by the capitalist industrial North.
The Civil War settled more than the socioeconomic issue of
slavery. It set the US
economy irreversibly on the path of industrial capitalism. After 1850,
early
industrialization solved the labor shortage problem by attracting
immigration
from the underprivileged masses of Europe that
formed
the beginning of a laboring class, a large segment of the population
whose main
economic function was to provide labor to an industrial economy. The
opening of
the West brought about servitude immigration from China
in decline under conditions not much more liberal than slavery.
As the process of industrialization in late 19th
century reduced demand for labor through mechanization while
immigration
continued as an established policy, unemployment became a major
socioeconomic
issue in the US.
The end of slavery after the Civil War also added to an oversupply of
wage-earners
in a not-so-free labor market. Unemployment has since become a
structural
component in capitalism as fundamental as interest charges on the use
of money.
During the age of feudalism, finance was not an arena for
the elite in Europe. The US,
founded only in 1776, did not experience a feudal economy. In the age
of
industrial capitalism, industrialists were in control of the US
economy, while relying on passive financial institutions for capital.
Henry
Ford was disdainful of bankers. Industrialists and inventors such as
Ford and
Edison did not consider themselves as capitalists, even though they
operated
under capitalism.
As finance capitalism replaced industrial capitalism,
financiers wrestled control of the economy from the industrialists.
Standard
Oil, General Motors were financial trusts built around economic sectors
through
acquisition of companies to form monopolies. Financiers such as JP
Morgan, John
D Rockefeller were trust builders, not industrialists.
Financial engineering, a euphemism for
financial
manipulation, emerged as the center for profit in which the aim of
economic
activity becomes that of making profit to provide return on capital,
rather
than producing goods to satisfy consumer needs. To allow more capital
formation, financial capitalism disconnects profit from fair return on
production
cost, to what the money market will bear. Excess profit requires low
wages and
leads inevitably to overinvestment in relation to market demand. On the
observation of this relationship Karl Marx formulated his concept of
surplus
value. The monetization of surplus value became the basis of capital
formation.
As capital assumes dominance over labor, finance became the core of
capitalism.
Overcapacity resulting from overinvestment combines with
stagnant market demand resulting from low wages and structural
unemployment to cause
recurring crises in market capitalism, known as business cycles. After the Great Depression of the 1930s,
social security introduced as part of the New Deal created a new
reservoir of
wealth in pension funds of workers. In WWII, war demands soaked up all
overcapacity and wage price equilibrium was established to facilitate
war
production.
With the growth of pension funds, capital then comes
increasingly from forced savings of the working masses. Yet control of
capital
continues to stay in the hands of the financial elite. While
entrepreneurship
flowered democratically through social mobility and openness, it took
almost
two centuries after its founding, until after the end of World War II,
that the US
would admit children
of poor families into finance professions, mostly due to the GI bill in
support
of education for returning veterans. Large numbers of Wall Street
leaders today
owed their opportunity to education provided by the GI Bill after WWII.
While the entrance to the arena of wealth management is now
more democratic, the institutions that operate the machinery of wealth
manipulation
remain fundamentally biased in favor of capital against labor even
though
overcapacity from overinvestment has become clearly a structural
problem that
can only be solved by workers being allowed to get a fairer share of
the wealth
they essentially create. Central banking, in its adherence to
monetarism that
aims to protect the value of money at the expense of fair wages is a
strategic
bastion against a much needed new financial order to address this
imbalance between
the labor theory of value and the theory of marginal utility of supply
and
demand in a market economy. The modern
economy requires fair spreading of wealth for the common good by
maintain a
balance between supply and demand.
Exchange Rate and
Monetary Policy
Like the federal funds rate target, currency exchange rate
is not a product of market forces. It is always, directly or
indirectly, the product
of national policy. Although exchange rate policy has become a crucial
component of the monetary policy after the 1971 collapse of the Bretton
Woods
regime of fixed exchange rates based on a gold-pegged dollar at $35 per
ounce,
the Treasury retains responsibility for setting exchange rate policy as
a
matter of national economic security. On exchange rate issues, the Fed
follows
policies set by the Treasury with no questions asked.
The Three Tools of
Monetary Policy
The Federal Reserve controls three traditional tools of
monetary policy: 1) open market operations, 2) the discount rate and 3)
bank
reserve requirements. Using these three tools, the Federal Reserve
influences
the demand for, and supply of, balances that depository institutions
hold at Federal
Reserve Banks and in this way alters the federal funds rate, the
interest rate
at which depository institutions lend balances at the Federal Reserve
to other
depository institutions overnight.
Of these three tools, the discount rate and bank reserve
requirements regulate banks as market intermediaries; only open market
operations interact directly in the market to keep the federal funds
rate on
target as set by the FOMC. Changes in the federal funds rate trigger a
chain of
market events that affect other short-term interest rates, foreign
exchange
rates, long-term interest rates, the amount of money and credit, a
range of
economic variables, including employment, output, and prices of goods
and
services and ultimately the market value of derivative instruments.
The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is
responsible for the discount rate and reserve requirements which
regulate
liquidity in the banking system, but not liquidity in the non-bank
credit
markets, such as commercial paper markets and structured finance
markets. The
Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) is responsible for open market
operations
which involve purchases and sales of US Treasury and federal agency
securities.
Open market operations are the Federal Reserve’s principal tool for
implementing monetary policy in the market directly.
The FOMC consists of twelve members--the seven members of
the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; the president of
the
Federal Reserve Bank of New York which carries out open market
operations; and
four of the remaining eleven Reserve Bank presidents, who serve
one-year terms
on a rotating basis. Nonvoting Reserve Bank presidents attend the
meetings of
the Committee, participate in the discussions, and contribute to the
Committee's
assessment of the economy and policy options. The FOMC holds eight
regularly
scheduled meetings per year to review economic and financial
conditions,
determine the appropriate stance of monetary policy, and assess the
risks to
its long-run goals of price stability and sustainable economic growth.
The
Chairman can call emergency meetings at any time at his/her discretion,
through
conference calls by phone if necessary.
Open Market
Operations
The short-term objective for open market operations has
varied over time, ranging from maintaining a desired quantity of
reserves to
affect the money supply to maintaining a desired price for funds set by
the
federal funds rate target.
During the 1980s, the Fed under Paul Volcker adopted a “new
operating method” as a therapeutic shock treatment for Wall Street,
which had
been spoiled fearless by the brazen political opportunism of Arthur
Burns,
Volcker’s predecessor during the Nixon-Ford era. Wall Street had lost
faith in
the Fed’s political will to control inflation after Nixon’s misuse of
Keynesianism to bypass the unappetizing choice of “guns or butter” to
fund his
“guns and butter” fantasy with fiscal deficits.
Volcker’s new operating method concentrated on managing
monetary aggregates to levels deemed appropriate for a given state of
the
economy, and let them dictate federal funds rate swings to be
facilitated by
Fed open market operations. For 1980, the inflation momentum meant a
federal
funds rate target within a range from 13-19% was needed in the context
of
double-digit inflation.
This new operating method was an exercise in “creative
uncertainty” to shock the financial market out of its complacency about
the
Fed’s tradition of interest-rate stability and gradualism. The market
had
developed a habitual expectation that even if the Fed were forced by
inflation
trends to raise interest rates, it would not permit the market to be
volatile,
lest the political wrath from both the White House and the Congress
should
threaten its existence by abolishing it. Banks could continue to create
money
through lending as long as they could profitably manage the gradual
rise in
rates, foiling the Fed’s policy objective of slowing the growth of the
money
supply to contain inflation.
Volcker's new operating method reversed this traditional mandate of the
Fed,
which, as a central bank, was supposed to be responsible for
maintaining
orderly markets, meaning smooth, gradual changes in interest rates. The
new
operating method was an attempt to induce the threat of short-term pain
to
stabilize long-term inflation expectations. The reversal was necessary
because
the market had come to expect the Fed only gradually to raise interest
rates to
keep even an unbalanced economy from collapsing.
Targeting a steady money supply generates large sudden swings in
short-term
interest rates that produce unintended shifts in the real economy that
would then
feed back into new demand for money. The process has been described as
the Fed
acting as a monetarist dog chasing its own tail.
Unlike the Keynesian formula of deficit financing to reduce
unemployment in a down cycle, the Fed’s easy-money approach since the
Nixon administration
had been to channel the funny money to the rich who needed it least,
rather
than to the poor who would immediately spend it to sustain aggregate
demand to
moderate the down phase of the business cycle. This supply-side
easy-money
approach led to an economy of permanent overcapacity, with idle plants
unable
to produce goods profitably for lack of consumer demand due to low
wages. Say’s
law, that supply creates its own demand, is inoperative unless there is
full
employment, which sound money deems undesirable. Supply-side theory is
cooked
by its own success requiring its own failure to bring about.
Greenspan’s Measured Pace
Gradualism
Alan Greenspan, who succeeded Volcker at the Fed on August 11, 1987, re-adopted
a measured-paced
interest-rate policy to reverse back to the Fed’s tradition of
gradualism. The
trouble with a measured-paced interest-rate policy in a debt-driven
economy of
overcapacity is that the debt cancer is spreading faster than the
gradual doses
of medical radiation can handle. Yet fatality is a poor tradeoff for
the
avoidance of hair loss from radiation. Greenspan’s measured pace
represented a
lack of political courage to acknowledge that it is preferable by far
for the
finance sector to take a huge haircut preemptively than for the whole
economy
to collapse later. This lack of political courage e is still evident in
2008.
Moral hazard is increased unless risk-takers in the finance
sector are made to bear the consequences of their actions, and not be
allowed
to pass the pain from excessive risk-taking on to the economy at large.
Thus
any government bailout with public money should be directed in saving
the
economy directly and not to save wayward institutions which aim to
ensure their
own undeserved survival by holding the economy hostage. (Please
see my September 14, 2005
AToL article: Greenspan,
the
Wizard of Bubbleland)
The High Cost of Job
Creation
Senator Richard Shelby, the senior Republican member of the
Senate Banking Committee said the Bush administration’s effort to avoid
an
imminent meltdown of the US
financial system could end up costing taxpayers $1 trillion. Yet after
spending
a good part of that huge sum, the economy lost 2.5 million jobs in 2008
with
524,000 jobs lost in December alone. The Bush administration is handing
over to
the Obama administration a sick economy in need of intensive care, with
7.2%
unemployment, above the 6% structural tolerance, with 11.1 million
unemployed
workers. Goldman Sachs projects the
unemployment rate to hit 9% by the end of 2009.
The Obama economic team has proposed an $800 billion
stimulus package that promises to create 4 million new jobs in two
years. That
comes to $200,000 of stimulus spending to create one new job. Still,
with 2.5
million jobs expected to be lost each year, Obama’s stimulus plan of
creating 2
million new jobs each year still leaves 500,000 newly unemployed
workers. To give
jobs to today’s 11.1 million unemployed, Obama’s stimulus plan would
need to be
around $2.5 trillion, plus another $200 billion every year for new
workers
entering the economy to keep the nation fully employed. Common sense
would
suggest there’s got to be a better way. This is not an argument for
nonintervention, but an argument against ineffective intervention that
insists
on rescuing people in financial distress by first rescuing the
distressed institutions
that put them there.
One of the reasons while the New Deal was less than
effective in fighting unemployment was that Franklin D. Roosevelt was
reluctant
to implement direct relief programs. Keynes wrote Roosevelt
in February of 1938 to criticize his program for insufficient relief
spending.
On the other hand, the Obama campaign for the presidency reportedly
spent $105,599,963 in the first
two weeks of October 2008, which came to $293,000 an hour. So spending
$200,000
to create one new job is not as outrageous as it sounds. As they say,
it’s all
relative.
The Federal Funds
Rate Target
From its low of 1% set on June 25, 2003, the federal funds
rate target was raised by the Fed to 5.25% on June 29, 2006, in 17
steps of 25
basis points each, . The Greenspan Fed had kept the rate at 1% for one
whole
year before raising it on June
24, 2004 to 1.25%. Greenspan raised the fed funds rate
another 25 basis
points to 4.50% on January
31, 2005,
his last day in office. Ben Bernanke assumed office as Chairman of the
Fed on
February 1, 2006 and continued the upward path to raise the fed funds
rate
target by 25 basis points to 4.75% on March 28, to 5.00% on May 10, to
5.25% on
June 29 and kept it there until September 18, 2007, some eight weeks
after the
credit market seized in July. The Bernanke Fed then began lowering the
federal
funds rate target on September 18, 2007 in 11 steps, with three steps
cutting
by 50 basis points and two steps cutting by 75 basis points, until
December 16,
2008 when the rate was lowered to a range between 0% to 0.25%, an
effective
zero rate.
The Fed’s Unconventional
Tool - Nationalization
The Fed has exhausted its interest rate ammunition since the
fed funds rate cannot go below zero. From then on the Fed would have to
use
“unconventional” tools to rescue the financial market, such as
nationalization
by other names. The New York Fed on January 5, 2009 began buying mortgage-backed securities (MBS) guaranteed by
Fannie,
Freddie and Ginnie Mae as part of a $500 billion program that
equals a
ninth of the $4.5 trillion agency MBS market.
Already stunned by the Fed-arranged rescue of Bear Stearns by
JP Morgan Chase on March 14, 2008 after only narrowly avoiding
collapse,
investors abruptly exited short-term markets after Lehman Brothers
collapsed and
filed for bankruptcy protection on September 15, because the government
refused to
take responsibility for losses on some of Lehman’s most troubled
real-estate
assets, something it agreed to do when JP Morgan Chase bought Bear
Stearns to
save it from a bankruptcy filing earlier in March.
While offering to
help Wall Street organize another shotgun marriage for Lehman, both Fed
Chairman
Bernanke and Treasury Secretary, being sensitive to earlier criticism
over the
Bear Stearns rescue, declared publicly that they would not again put
taxpayer
money at risk simply to prevent a private institution such as Lehman
from collapse.
The message marked a major reversal in government strategy established
in the
Bear Stearns rescue. It now remained unclear if the government had
adopted firm
rules of the game to draw the firm line on intervention. It became
clear to the
market that the piecemeal, patchwork, case-by-case fire fighting
approach of
the Fed and the Treasury without an overall strategy would do little to
stabilize
market turmoil. The government has no overall plan for stopping the
spreading
fire storm with an effective strategic fire break. Instead, it appeared
to be
running around to put out fires in isolated institutions as they
started to
burn.
Paulson, supported
by Bernanke, was sensitive to criticism that the Bush administration
had
already gone too far ideologically merely a few weeks before the
presidential
election in which Republicans, already hard pressed by a two unpopular
and
unending foreign wars, were also put on the defensive on the economic
front,
first by underwriting the takeover of Bear Stearns in March and by the
far
bigger bailout of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac announced on July 13.
Accusations
of enlisting socialism to be the undertaker of market capitalism were
becoming
vocal from conservatives who claim that once the socialist genie is out
of the
bottle, it would be impossible to put it back. While that assertion is
on
target, the assertion that the US is
falling into socialism is not. What the US is
doing is enlisting state capitalism to
save market capitalism.
The disclosure that
Merrill Lynch, now owned by Bank of America, had suffered a $21.5
billion
operating loss as the value of mortgage-backed assets plunged in the
last three
months of 2008 came as BofA secured a $138 billion bail-out from the US
government.
Bof A finalized an
$18.8 billion all-share takeover of Merrill in early January 2009,
received a
$20 billion capital infusion and a backstop on $118 billion of troubled
assets.
BofA told the government in December 2008 that it would not be able to
close
the deal without help. Shares in BofA, which reported a $2.4 billion
loss in a
quarter marred by Merrill’s disastrous performance, fell nearly 14%.
Citigroup
underlined the depth of banks’ problems by reporting an $8.3 billion
net loss,
its fifth consecutive quarter of loss. The troubled financial group
suffered
nearly $28 billion in write-downs and loan loss provisions in Q4 2008
as the
price of mortgage securities plummeted. Citi’s
loss for 2008 was more than $18 billion. The company confirmed its plan
to
isolate some $800 billion worth of unwanted assets and businesses into
a
non-core unit called Citi Holdings.
At his January 13,
2009 London School of Economics Stamp Lecture: The Crisis
and the Policy Response, Bernanke
suggested measures of nationalization of the banking system while
denying the
characterization. Banks have transformed from being “too big to fail”
to being
“too big to rescue by non-nationalization means”. In the case of
Citigroup, the
continuing losses have so far become so big, with still more to come,
that it
approaches mathematically impossible for the Fed to inject enough
capital into
it without taking a majority stake, thus squeezing out or at least
diluting
existing shareholders. The new ground rules laid down by the incoming
Obama
economic team for the final half of the $700 billion bailout fund,
known as Troubled
Asset Relief Program (TARP), called for government control over bank
operations
such as dividend payments and executive compensation.
Some have
misleadingly suggested that the government’s approach of nationalizing
the
banks harks back to Andrew Jackson’s closing of the Second Bank of the United States in 1841. But in fact the equivalent of Jackson’s move
would be to close the Federal
Reserve Ssytem.
The First Bank of
the United States was founded by Treasury Secretary Alexander
Hamilton in 1791 with a charter for 20 years to handle the
financial
needs and requirements of the central government of the newly formed United
States. Its mission was
to establish financial order, clarity and
precedence in and of the newly formed United
State, to establish domestic and foreign credit
for the new nation and to resolve the chaotic currency left the
Continental
Congress immediately prior to and during the Revolutionary War.
The Bank proposal was
support by Northern merchants but viewed with suspicions by Southern
plantationers whose economy did not need a centralized bank. The major
controversy
centered around the Bank’s incorporation as a private institution with
public
powers. Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson argued that the
Bank
violated traditional property laws and that Hamilton’s
proposal was against both the spirit and letter of the Constitution and
its
relevance to constitutionally authorized powers was weak. To this day, the Federal Reserve,
established in 1913, having transformed its mission from a national
bank to
support the development of the nation to a central bank to preserve the
value
of money, continues to be a private institution owned by member banks
with
public power granted by Congress.
By the early 1830s, populist president Andrew Jackson had
come to be thoroughly antagonistic to the Second Bank of the United
States because of its fraud and
corruption
on behalf of special interests. Jackson,
ordered an investigation on the Bank which established it “as an
instrument of
political corruption and a threat to American liberties” and “beyond question that this great and
powerful institution had been actively engaged in attempting to
influence the
elections of the public officers by means of its money.” A replay of Jackson’s
killing of the Second Bank of the United States would be Obama abolishing the Federal
Reserves System.
The $300 billion
aid package of Citigroup in November 2008 and the additional $150
billion for
Bank of America on January 15, 2009 relating to
losses by BofA acquisition
Merrill Lynch are being presented publicly not as bank nationalization
moves,
but in a fest of accounting gymnastics, as insurance programs for toxic
bank
assets.
Reversing the
Treasury’s previous approach of investing billions of taxpayer dollars
only in “healthy”
bank recapitalization against toxic assets, the Fed is now guaranteeing
the banks’
non-performing liabilities which may well turn out to cost taxpaying
much more
money if such guarantees have to be covered by Fed insurance. Instead
of merely
bailing out healthy banks by investing taxpayer dollars in exchange for
bank
preferred shares which would receive regular dividend and include
warrants that
could benefit the government should bank stocks rise in price, but
letting bank
shareholders take part of the loss, the Fed now has committed itself to
bailing
out the entire credit system against losses, to the disadvantage of
taxpayers.
The Citigroup deal
covered $300 billion in toxic assets, with Citigroup agreeing to absorb
the
first $29 billion in losses, the Treasury then absorbing up to $5
billion, the
FDIC then absorbing up to $10 billion and finally the Federal Reserve
lending
Citigroup at low interest rates for the value of the remaining toxic
assets.
The Bernanke Fed is now proposing putting a bank’s impaired assets into
a
separate new “bad” bank to free the bank from the need to set aside
more
reserves for further losses. This would prevent the bank’s common
shareholders
from being wiped out by the government.
January 19, 2009
Next: No Exit for
Emergency Nationalization |