post boat ride recap and a reader’s questions answered

After my brief recap is my response to a very good and typical inquiry I thought I’d pass along.

Meanwhile, the tax cuts were extended, and perhaps a bit of restriction removed, eliminating that source of risk of a sharp contraction that could have happened otherwise.

With the 2%, 1 year reduction in FICA taxes for individuals, arguably traceable to my efforts, there was some consideration of declaring victory and moving on, but I’m feeling more the opposite.

First, it’s tiny and at the macro level the propensity to spend of the recipients is trivial.

And it probably doesn’t even offset the drag from prices for imported crude and products.

And it may just be an interim step in letting the next Congress ‘pay for it’ with Social Security cuts.

The large increase in ‘spending cutters’ are about to take their seats in Washington, with many pledged to kick things off with a $250 billion spending cut, and then balance the Federal budget, along with what could be a majority ready to pass the doomsday bill for a balanced budget amendment to the US constitution.

And a President who seems to think that’s all a good idea as well.

And my nagging feeling that a 0 interest rate policy is highly deflationary, meaning that for a given size govt we need even lower taxes than otherwise, remains.

Lastly, for this post, China has been a first half/second half story, with much of their economic year front loaded into the first half, and they have apparently capped state sponsored lending, which could mean a relatively weak first half, or worse.

The euro zone is forecasting lower growth for next year as austerity bites and the ECB’s job becomes more problematic, as slower growth will slow the ‘fiscal improvement.’

And the recent extreme absurdity of the ECB raising more capital serves to highlight the risk of having incompetents in control.

Reader’s Questions:

I continue to review your book. A question or thought I come back to a lot lately is what is the long term implication of national debt.


– Should the federal deficit and associated payments be taken completely out of the budget discussion?

Yes, especially in conjunction with a permanent 0 interest rate policy and the tsy selling nothing longer than 3 mo bills.

That seems to be what is implied on page 32, when you state that “Nor is the financing of deficit spending of any consequence”. I take that whole section to mean that in any year the ability to consume output is not impacted by prior consumption and spending rather it is impacted by the current economic environment and ability to pay, and that payment on the national debt is not an issue (just moving money from one account to another).

Right. And potential consumption is always what goods and services we are physically capable of producing.

I understand that, but does value (rather than money) get added to the economic system when the transfers are made?

Yes, what’s called ‘nominal value’ is added- net financial assets such as tsy bonds, reserves at the fed, and cash are equal to the deficit spending.

Does it have any impact on inflation or taxation?

Not the deficit per se. Govt spending can drive up/support prices if the spending is on a ‘quantity basis’ vs a price constrained basis.

For example, if the govt offers a job to anyone willing and able to work that pays $8/hour and leave the wage at that level it won’t drive up wages.

But if it decides to hire, say, 5 million people and pay what it takes to get them to work it can drive up wages.

The first example is spending on a ‘price rule’ that says $8 max

The second is spending on a quantity rule that says we pay what it takes to get 5 million workers.

I guess the simple question is if we ran deficits every year forever would pricing or wages be impacted and if so how?

The spending and taxing will have the impact. The deficit is the difference between the two and equal to new savings of financial assets added to the economy. If the deficit spending matches ‘savings desires’ that means the spending and taxing are ‘in balance’ with regards to over all pricing pressures.

Is there a national security concern by having foreign governments having huge deposits in our currency? What if China, or whoever, just started selling their positions in dollars purposely to drive down the dollar’s value, accepting the risk that it would have on its own economy?

There is the risk that China might do that.

But also note that we are currently trying to force China to adjust its currency upward, which is a downward adjustment of the dollar. So at the current time driving the dollar down is actually a national policy objective, albeit one I don’t agree with.

Also, the level of one’s currency doesn’t alter the real wealth of the nation. With imports always real benefits and exports always real costs, the challenge is to optimize ‘real terms of trade’ which means get the most imports for any given level of exports. Here, again, we are going the wrong way as a nation, attempting to increase exports to proactively get our trade gap lower.

I guess what I am trying to reconcile is that if everything has a consequence, I don’t understand what consequence deficit spending has on the long term.

It allows available savings to be added to the economy.

For a given size of govt, there is a level of taxes which keeps the real economy in balance.

Over taxing is evidenced by unemployment/excess capacity, and under taxing is evidenced by excess spending that’s causing inflation.

My assumption, based on history is that there is no consequence. My hunch is that the deficit spending is what pushes the economy along

Yes, though I like to say it’s about removing the restriction of over taxation that allows the economy to move on it’s ‘natural’ course of some sort, of course massively influenced by the rest of our institutional structure.

and supports increases in pricing, which translates into inflation. Even at 2% per year after 100 years prices would be whatever 2% compounded annually over 100 years amounts to. And, in essence that is of no consequence.

Right, while ‘a’ dollar buys less than it used, all ‘the’ dollars are buying a lot more that’s being consumed. That is, real GDP is far higher than 100 years ago.

Trichet cmnts

Translation- they keep funding on an as needed basis, at least for now.

*DJ ECB Trichet: The ECB Is Meeting Its Resposibilities
*DJ ECB Trichet: Important That Deficit Targets Are Met
*DJ ECB Trichet: Spain Should Deepen Labor Mkt Reform
*DJ ECB Trichet: Bank Stress Tests Are Very Useful
*DJ ECB Trichet: Stress Tests Important To Do On Regular Basis
*DJ ECB Trichet: Investors Don’t Yet Appreciate Postive Actions Taken
*DJ ECB Trichet: We Permamently Watch Commodities Prices
*DJ ECB Trichet: Spain One Of Countries That Needs Deficit Cuts

cross currents

I wasn’t sure whether to send this, as it reveals my lack of clarity on current events, but decided to send it to make the point.

Here’s what I see:

Markets are already discounting a large QE and are also discounting that QE actually makes a difference:

The dollar went down
Gold went up
Commodities went up
Interest rates fell
Stocks went up

So we have a big ‘buy the rumor sell the news’ leading up to the Fed meeting.

AND a potential ‘QE doesn’t work anyway’ let down.

I’ve never seen a more confused set of circumstances.
I recommend all traders stay out of this one.
Making money on this probably falls into the ‘better lucky than good’ category.

One of two things will happen- QE will or will not happen, data dependent

1. Good news for the economy means QE might not happen.

So the dollar reverses, and it went down for the wrong reason anyway, as QE fundamentally doesn’t alter the dollar, so it’s probably net short.

But how about the euro? It’s fundamentally strong with no end in sight, and good econ news helps them as much as anyone.
But an over sold dollar reversing can rally it against most everything while the unwinding goes on.

Stocks up, as that would be good news for stocks?
Or stocks down as rates go up and the dollar goes up, and the world goes to ‘risk off mode?’
(Stocks were helped by the weak dollar and lower rates.)

Is good econ news good or bad for gold? More demand in general is good, but less risk, less fear, and a strong dollar hurts. And it could be over bought in the QE craze as QE in fact has nothing to do with demand, currencies, or gold. It’s just a duration shift for net financial assets.

10 year notes? QE buying reverses and they go higher in yield.
But strong dollar and weak commodities and weak stocks and the Fed still failing on both mandates means low for long is still in place, even without QE.

It’s been strange enough that rates fell with a weak dollar (inflation) and rising commodities, so who knows what actually happens when whatever has been going on is faced with some combo of no QE and/or the realization that QE doesn’t do anything of consequence.

2. Bad news for the economy means QE happens.

Dollar keep falling? Or already discounted?
Gold and commodities keep rising? On bad econ news? And when already discounting QE working?
Stocks keep rising? On bad econ news? And already discounting QE working?

To a point, based on the presumption that QE actually works to add to domestic demand.
But has it already been discounted? And if markets believe QE works won’t they discount the Fed hiking after it works and the economy ‘takes off’???

The answer?

Don’t think of the medium term, just the short term.
Short term technicals will rule due to what’s been discounted.

The dollar is the pivot point, as it’s moved the most and for the wrong reason (except maybe vs the euro).

If nothing else, the dollar will appreciate if:

No QE due to good econ news
Buy the rumor sell the news/already been discounted forces
There is awareness that QE doesn’t do anything in any case
Foreign govt buying (currency war, etc.)

The dollar continues to fall if QE is larger than expected and the belief that it does something holds.

Recent economic news and Fed speak indicate that is not likely.

The other short term market moves will be reactions to the dollar move, and not so much reactions to what made the dollar move.

I do continue to like BMA forwards.
The one thing there is to be know is that high end marginal tax rates won’t go down, and that forward libor rates won’t fall below 50 bp.

If initial claims fall again

If today’s initial claims fall again, indicating underlying employment improvement, there is a lot to think about.

The Fed might decide QE isn’t needed- yields back up due to the Fed not buying and the concern rates might not be low for all that long.
The low for long/QE 2 scenario is almost entirely based on employment showing no signs of life.

The dollar might suddenly reverse as short dollar positions that were placed due to qe2/low for long outlooks are reversed.

Messages more mixed for stocks and commodities.
Employment growth indicates more demand is possible.
But fears of money printing induced inflation (whatever that actually means doesn’t matter for short term trading) subside.
Dollar strength causes dollar prices of commodities to fall.
Commodity stocks hurt by falling prices, internationals hurt by rising dollar/earnings translations/falling export margins, etc.
Valuations hurt by higher term structure of rates.

Basically a partial unwinding of the massive qe2/low forever/weak dollar market of the recent past.

Weber Says ECB Should Start to Phase Out Bond Purchases ‘Now’

>   
>   (email exchange)
>   
>   On Tue, Oct 12, 2010 at 1:17 PM, Kevin wrote:
>   
>   Warren
>   
>   I am interested in your views on this development
>   
>   It would strike me as either blather or a dramatic reversal of fortune for
>   the continent
>   
>   Any thoughts?
>   

Weber has been against it from day one, which tells me he doesn’t get it at all. For now he’ll keep getting over ruled, but that can change down the road when ECB management turns over.

Yes, if this were to happen in this kind of economy it could all head catastrophically south very quickly again, and, as before, not end until the ECB resumes writing the check.

The problem is he doesn’t understand that inflation and currency weakness would follow from excess spending by the national govts, which is both not the case and under control of the ECB while they are funding. Instead he thinks the bond purchases per se somehow matter, though with no discernible transmission channel.

Weber Says ECB Should Phase Out Bond Purchases ‘Now

By Gabi Thesing and Christian Vits

October 12 (Bloomberg) — European Central Bank Governing
Council member Axel Weber said the ECB should stop its bond-
purchase program and signaled that it’s time for officials to
show how they will withdraw other emergency measures.

“As the risks associated with the Securities Markets
Program outweigh its benefits,
these securities purchases should
now be phased out permanently,” Weber said, according to the
text of a speech delivered in New York today.

“As regards the two dimensions of exit consisting of
phasing-out non-standard liquidity measures and normalizing our
clearly expansionary monetary policy, there are risks both in
exiting too early and in exiting too late,” Weber said. “I
believe the latter are greater than the former.”

Weber’s comments are the strongest so far from any official
on how the ECB will withdraw its emergency stimulus measures.
They come as governments and banks in some euro nations such as
Ireland and Portugal struggle to convince investors about their
financial health and as other major central banks signal their
willingness to add more stimulus to their economies.

The remarks also come less than a week after ECB President
Jean-Claude Trichet’s last policy statement, when he declined to
comment on the timing of the ECB’s exit strategy.

The bond purchases were opposed by Weber when they were
started in May as part of a strategy to keep the euro region
together after the Greek crisis threatened to undermine the
currency. The ECB stepped up its bond purchases at the end of
September, buying 1.38 billion euros ($1.9 billion) in the week
to Oct. 1, as tensions reemerged in Portugal and Ireland.

Comments on China’s temporary hike of Reserve Requirements

The lesson should be changing reserve requirements for a non convertibility currency, as the yuan is domestically for all practical purposes, doesn’t alter liquidity, but does alter balance sheet composition and pricing necessary to hit return on equity targets.

And looks to me more like their stealth inflation problem hinted at previously hasn’t yet been reigned in to their satisfaction?

  • 50bp hike in RRR for six large banks, valid for two months
  • the unusual temporary move reflects the central bank (PBoC)’s concern over strong lending appetite and hot money inflow
  • the PBoC is likely to follow up with more measures based the effectiveness of current policy
  • a lesson to the developed country on how difficult it is to rein in excessive liquidity

According to Reuters, China has raised reserve requirements by 50 basis points for six large commercial banks to 17.5%. It is reported that the move is only temporary and will be in place for two months. However there is no official statement from the central bank yet.

These six banks account for around 40% of China’s total lending and nearly 50% of the total bank assets. The 50bp hike in reserve requirement ratios will lock up about CNY150 bn of deposits.

We think the unusual temporary measure reflects the PBoC’s concern over excessive liquidity in the domestic economy on the backdrop of a robust growth. The total banking lending from January to August has reached 76% of the full-year target (CNY7.5 trillion), which means the monthly lending needs to be below CNY450 bn. However the domestic credit demand still seems to be very strong. Another possible reason for this move is the mounting evidence that the hot money is flowing back due the increasing pressure on the yuan appreciation.

The PBoC move speaks of the problems in managing a generous liquidity policy and stands as both a warning and a contrast to those other central banks considering a further round of quantitative easing. Once a generous liquidity policy is in place, it becomes difficult to wean dependent companies off the cheap and easy liquidity flow. Whereas the PBoC is not “pushing on a string” and there is genuine demand for this liquidity, the warning to the US federal reserve is clear. Even for economically well-administered economies, the latter stages of generous liquidity policies become very difficult to manage. Zombie (cheap liquidity dependent) companies, potential asset bubbles and the intractability excess liquidity are all legacy issues central banks
considering QE2 must consider.

Except that those are not the result of QE, but of what is functionally fiscal support for zombies, and the only effect zombies have on the real economy is that they waste valuable labor hours. Unfortunately no one seems to know how to keep fiscal drag low enough to sustain full employment so they see political benefit to useless employment.

Maybe Greenspan has finally read Soft Currency Economics?

>   
>   (email exchange)
>   
>   On Fri, Oct 8, 2010 at 9:28 AM, Eileen wrote:
>   
>   Greenspan comments from last night. Of course, he hasn’t said that loans create deposits,
>   but he’s finally acknowledging excess reserves. Reported by BBG TV:
>   
>   “If you add to excess reserves and they just sit there, you’ve merely gone through an
>   interesting bookkeeping calculation. It has no, I mean zero, economic effect. You need
>   commercial bank A to lend to steel company B.”
>   

very good!

Chairman Bernanke address to students

Bernanke says more Fed asset purchases could help

October 4 (Reuters) — The Federal Reserve’s asset purchases lowered borrowing costs and supported the economy, and more buying could further ease financial conditions, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Monday.

He leaves out the negative influence of the interest rate and fiscal channel that he wrote about in his own 2004 paper. The economy is a net receiver of interest from the govt and lower rates reduces interest payments from the govt to securities holders. And in this cycle savers lost more interest income than borrowers gained, with the difference going to wider net interest margins for banks, who have no propensity to consume from that interest income.

“I don’t have a number to give you, but I do think that the additional purchases, although we don’t have precise numbers, have the ability to ease financial conditions,” Bernanke said.

Bernanke said he was convinced that the Fed’s massive purchases from March of 2009 until early 2010 had lowered effective interest rates at a time the central bank’s benchmark lending rates were anchored near zero, where they remain.

The buying program “increased the willingness of investors to take a reasonable amount of risk and create some support for the economy,” he said.

Again, he leaves out the fact that all the $50 billion + of annual interest earned by the Fed on its new portfolio of over $2 trillion in securities would otherwise have gone to the economy, but instead is turned over to the us treasury, thereby functioning as a tax.

In September, the Federal Open Market Committee said it was ready to take further steps to help the U.S. recovery if the economy stays sluggish. Reviving the program to buy assets such as U.S. Treasuries seem like a potential step.

In a wide-ranging, hour-long forum with university students in Providence, Rhode Island, Bernanke defended the U.S. government’s often criticized program to support banks during the global financial crisis.

The Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP, has turned out to be a ‘pretty good investment” for taxpayers money loaned to banks during the financial crisis is returned with interest.

Many people don’t understand that TARP was designed to help the economy, not the banks, and that the country’s economic downturn would have been much worse without it, Bernanke said.

Nor does he seem to understand it was nothing never anything more than regulatory forbearance, and not a fiscal expenditure. The FDIC, for all practical purposes, already guaranteed all bank deposits should bank losses exceed the amount of the bank’s private capital. So adding more public capital through tarp rather than simply granting regulatory forbearance (along with imposing any terms and conditions the govt might desire) was non nonsensical, politically destructive and divisive, and demonstrative of a complete lack of understanding of the banking system by the entire govt., media, and financial sector in general.

in case you thought Dallas Fed Pres Fisher understands monetary operations and banking

Fisher Speech

Summary from MNS:
FED: Dallas Fed Pres Fisher (votes on FOMC in ’11) is a hawk on QE2.
Says “it is not clear that the benefits of further quantitative
easing outweigh the costs,” especially if U.S. has “anemic recovery, but
not one that slips into reverse gear.” Barring further shock, he has
“concerns about the efficacy of further expanding the Fed’s balance
sheet until our political authorities better align fiscal and regulatory
initiatives with the needs of job creators. Otherwise, further
quantitative easing might be pushing on a string. In the worst case, it
could flood the engine of the economy with gas that might later ignite
inflation.”

Ireland Banking System Recapitalization

On Fri, Oct 1, 2010 at 9:14 AM, wrote:
Note the Anglo (not Allied) Irish Bank has been split up into a bad bank, the Asset Recovery Bank, and a good bank, the Funding Bank. The Asset Recovery Bank requires 29 bb and the Funding Bank 250 mm Euro. Allied Irish Bank is also to be split eventually into a good bank/bad bank structure.


Where is the Irish government getting 29.3 bb of Euro to recapitalize Anglo Irish Bank?

It doesn’t ‘get’ the money, as you next state.

The government will issue promissory notes to recapitalize Anglo Irish Bank (this is unrelated to the NAMA program activity), which the bank can count towards their capital base.

Right, capital isn’t ‘spent’ until there are losses and depositors want out. It is just ‘counted’

The promissory notes will be amortized over a 10 yr period. Currently the government is estimating that a total of 29.3 bb in capital will need to be provided to Anglo Irish Bank. Of this 29.3 bb, 23 bb has already been given to the bank in the form of promissory notes. The Irish MOF has stated that no additional borrowing will be required this year due to the additional capital support needed.

Right, and going fwd the bank can buy irish debt that will ‘count’ as capital which is the same as the notes it now holds. So in that sense it’s ‘self funding’ and all nothing more than a guarantee of the govt. that we call deposit insurance. But as previously discussed it’s like having a US State provide the deposit insurance over here.

Given the bank related issuance plan, it is my understanding that Ireland’s debt to GDP program will show a significant jump at year end as the European Commission has required Ireland to include this issuance in their reported debt figure. This should not be new information but the headline debt/gdp number, which may break 100% when it is released, may get the markets attention.

Functionally ‘debt’ should include all the deposit guarantees, not just this one. But that’s another story

In addition, the government will fast-track the transfer of Anglo Irish Bank’s remaining bad loans to NAMA in order to be finished by early 2011. The haircut for the remaining 19 bb euro loans to be transferred will be 67% in the base case scenario well above the average of 56% for the first two tranches transferred totaling 16 bb euros. The total transfer of bad loans from Anglo Irish Bank is projected to total €35bn.

Actual losses on that portfolio will be actual losses to Ireland

Current Status of NAMA Program


Program is not completed yet.
81 bb euro face value of loans from 5 different banks, including Anglo Irish Bank, are expected to be transferred to the government (NAMA)
Two tranches of transfers have been completed for a total of 3,518 loans with a face value of 27.2 bb euro
The loans were given a haircut of 52.3% on average. NAMA bond issuance to the banks in exchange for these loans has totaled 13 bb euros
A third tranche is expected to be completed this month (Sept) involving 12 bb euro face value of loans (not including the haircut)


While the ECB does not disclose the collateral it receives in return for loans via its main refinancing operation (MRO) or its long term repo operation (LTRO) it is presumed that the NAMA issued bonds have been given to the ECB as collateral for funding at the policy rate.

Makes sense. Underneath it all the ECB is supporting the funding by buying irish bonds.

Miscellaneous


By December Allied Irish Bank (not to be confused with Anglo Irish Bank) is scheduled to raise 5.4 bb in capital. A rights issue for approximately 3 bb euro is expected to be fully underwritten by the National Pension Reserve Fund Committee (NPRFC) and offered to existing shareholders. The NPRFC currently holds 15 bb euros in liquid assets according to UBS which would be available for this transaction.


Based on the haircuts used for NAMA transfers, the central bank has requested an additional capital injection for the Irish National Building Society of 2.7 bb euro. The MoF plans to inject this extra capital via promissory notes as well.