Central bank liquidity swaps (13) $374,590- $5,097
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BROWN: Specifically, what worked that Roosevelt did? What did we learn from that? What worked that applies to now?
BERNANKE: Well, there were two things that he did almost within months of taking office that were extremely important. One was the bank holiday and the subsequent measures, like the deposit insurance program that stabilized the banking system.
Yes, deposit insurance allowed banks to fund themselves on an unsecured basis via federal deposit insurance.
The lesson was the liability side of banking is not the place for market discipline.
Which is why I’ve been proposing all along that the Fed needs to get immediate permission from Congress to lend to member banks on an unsecured basis. This would instantly clear up the interbank lending issues.
The problem is the FOMC doesn’t understand reserve accounting and how the monetary system actually works.
And it’s a point I’ve been making all morning, that we need to stabilize the banks.
And they need borrowers to have sufficient net incomes to make their payments. Hence my payroll tax holiday.
The second thing he did was to take the U.S. off the gold standard, which allowed the Federal Reserve to ease monetary policy, allowed for a rise in prices, which, after three years of horrible deflation, allowed for recovery.
Yes, it removed the supply side constraints on the ‘money supply’ with the gold standard this constraint makes it problematic for even the Treasury to fund its deficit spending, as competition to borrow a finite amount of reserves drives up interest rates.
When the currency is instead allowed to float interest rates are then instead set by the government rather than market forces. This allows the Fed to cut rates and the Treasury to deficit spend without risking the loss of gold reserves.
So those were the two perhaps most important measures that he took.
He did some counterproductive things, like the National Recovery Act, which put the floors under prices and wages and prevented necessary adjustment.
Excuse me??? His new Keynesian roots are showing. They believe lower wages will allow labor markets to ‘clear’ when deficits are too small to support demand.
The most controversial issue recently, of course, has been fiscal policy and I think there are two sides to that.
The classic work on this by an old teacher of mine from MIT, E. Cary Brown, said that fiscal policy under Roosevelt was not successful, but only because it wasn’t tried, and he argued that it wasn’t big enough relative to the size of the problem.
True!
Other people, other writers have argued that this wasn’t the right medicine.
So that one is more controversial, but if you ask me what I think the most important things were, I think they had to do with stabilizing monetary policy and stabilizing the financial system.
Which he hasn’t yet been able to do.
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Up a tad. Down from the highs but still troublingly high.
Leveling off is not a good thing for the Fed.
Central bank liquidity swaps (13) $389,671+ $880
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(email exchange)
Robert has it wrong.
There are excess reserves because the Fed has decided to not do what it used to do, sell or ‘reverse out’ its securities to offset operating factors that caused reserves to increase.
These operating factors include Fed purchases of securities.
The reason the Fed would ‘drain’ excess reserves was to keep the interest rate at its target rate.
By paying interest on reserves it can accomplish that without selling its securities.
Reserves are functionally one day securities, as all treasury securities are nothing more than deposits at the Fed anyway.
And previous concerns about the Fed running out of securities were also addressed by being able to pay interest on reserves.
The idea that banks hold reserves (for any reason) ‘instead’ of lending is nonsensical.
All that paying interest on reserves does regarding lending behavior is increase the rates banks might charge for loans.
As always regarding the Fed, it’s about price, not quantity.
With a 0% interest rate policy interest on reserves discussions are moot anyway.
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>   J wrote:
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>   Auerbach’s idea: stop paying interest on reserves. What do you think? J
>  
Where’s the Stimulus
by Jim McTague
Feb 2 (Barrons) — University of Texas Professor Robert Auerbach, an economist who studied under the late Milton Friedman, thinks he has the makings of a malpractice suit against Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, as the Fed is holding a record number of reserves: $901 billion in January as opposed to $44 billion in September, when the Fed began paying interest on money commercial banks parked at the central bank. The banks prefer the sure rate of return they get by sitting in cash, not making loans. Fed, stop paying, he says.
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IMPORTANT NEWS: The SNB and Fed have just confirmed that the unlimited swap lines have been extended to October, according to UBS.
Thanks, will spread this news around.
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Seems the Fed is no isolating the USD swaps to foreign CBs.
From my reading of the January 29 numbers the balance is about $466 billion:
Central bank liquidity swaps (13) $465,853 million – $2,672 million.
This down from where I thought it was as there were other assets mixed in on previous Fed reports.
Still a troublesome number, however. That’s a lot of unsecured loans to foreign governments without Congressional oversight.
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He gets some things right, but always manages to get a lot wrong:
That amounts to swapping taxpayers’ “cash for trash,” Stiglitz said in a panel discussion at the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland today. “You shouldn’t chase good money after bad. We’re talking about a national debt that’s very hard to manage.”
Stiglitz Criticizes Bad Bank Plan as Swapping ‘Cash for Trash’
by Simon Kennedy
Feb 1 (Bloomberg)
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Europe’s Growing Crisis Puts the Fed at Risk
by Jack Willoughby
Jan 31 (Barrons) — European central banks are at risk of defaulting on their currency swaps with the U.S. Federal Reserve, unless major banks on the Continent can find some way to stabilize their deteriorating balance sheets.
TO AID THEIR AILING COMMERCIAL banks, central banks in Europe have relied on huge currency swaps, borrowing nearly $400 billion from the U.S. Federal Reserve. But as European commercial banks and European currencies deteriorate, repaying all that money to the Fed is becoming ever more difficult.
“[Fed Chairman Ben] Bernanke’s assurances aside, I don’t see how they can easily be repaid,” warns Gerald O’Driscoll, senior fellow with the Cato Institute and formerly with Citigroup and the Dallas Fed.
Here is how the swaps work. The Fed and, say, the European Central Bank agree to exchange a set amount of each other’s currencies at a certain exchange rate for six months, with a provision to renew the terms at maturity. The ECB uses the money to help aid bank-bailout packages for countries like Belgium, Finland, Hungary and Ireland that have troubled dollar-based assets. (Asian central banks are also part of the program, but haven’t utilized it nearly as heavily.) The Fed gets a promise from the ECB to repay the debt in six months.
A big hitch: Europe’s commercial banks have more exposure to wounded emerging markets than U.S. counterparts. By one estimate, European banks provided three-quarters of the $4.7 trillion in cross-border loans to the Baltic countries, Eastern Europe, Latin America and emerging Asia. Their emerging-markets exposure exceeds that of U.S. lenders to Alt-A and subprime loans.
THE SWAPS MAY MERELY delay the inevitable major shake-up of Europe’s banking system, O’Driscoll fears, and move the U.S. Fed beyond its original operating brief. Adds Neil Mellor, currency strategist at Bank of New York Mellon: “The aftershocks of the current global credit crisis are continuing to induce huge turbulence in the foreign-exchange markets, which is only now being more keenly felt in the eurozone and Britain.”
You can debate the merits, but not the size of the swaps program. It is big. The Fed’s currency swaps have expanded from zero a year ago to $506 billion. Of the 14 central banks involved, the ECB by far has been the biggest counterparty to date, drawing down $264 billion (versus Mexico’s $33 billion drawdown via a similar program at the height of the 1995 peso crisis). Skeptics contend that the swaps are thinly disguised spending that was carried out without Congressional approval.
“A case can obviously be made for [swaps] in the current global crisis,” says Al Broaddus, a former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond. “But these swaps always struck me as uncomfortably close to the Fed making fiscal policy. That is why, whenever they came up for authorization, I voted against them.” Last week, current Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker voted against the Fed’s targeted-credit programs. It is rare for a Fed official to openly oppose the Federal Reserve Board.
Traditionalists would prefer that the Fed stick to guiding interest rates and controlling the money supply. Fiscal policy, by contrast, forces the bank to decide who gets what, which can become a political calculation.
In a Jan. 13 speech at the London School of Economics, Bernanke said the joint actions of the Fed and foreign central bankers “prevented a global financial meltdown in the fall.” Were these loans not made, he said, there would have been a much greater risk of crossborder financial collapses that would have left the global economy in even worse shape.
The swap lines, Bernanke continued, were necessary and will be self-liquidating, running off the Fed’s book like some of its commercial-paper programs already have. “Liquidity provision by the central bank reduces systemic risk by assuring market participants that, should short-term investors begin to lose confidence, financial institutions will be able to meet the resulting demands for cash without resorting to potentially destabilizing fire sales of assets,” Bernanke said.
Yet in recent weeks, the situation seems to have worsened for European banks and their home countries alike. The Dow Jones Euro Stoxx Banks Index is off 66% since Bernanke spoke. The Royal Bank of Scotland (ticker: RBS) is now a government property, as is Belgium’s Fortis (FORB.Belgium).
“I would say that most of the big banks in Europe are insolvent,” says Dory Wiley, president of Commerce Street Capital, a money-management firm that invests in banking stocks. “That is what made them great — but unpredictable — shorts. They represent major components in those country funds everyone buys.” The danger is that governments, being the prime backstops for their commercial banks, will be forced into default or be downgraded. One hedge-fund manager advises retail investors to simply steer clear of Europe.
Particularly vulnerable to further decline seem to be: Switzerland’s Credit Suisse (CS) and UBS (UBS), as well as Britain’s Barclays (BCS), Austria’s Erste Bank (EBS.Austria), Sweden’s Nordea (NDA.Sweden), the Netherlands’ ING (ING), Belgium’s Fortis and Spain’s Banco Santander (STD). These highly leveraged banks have huge emerging-market exposure, and reside in European countries whose financial resources are small relative to the assets of the giant banks they host.
Little wonder that countries have had a difficult time selling their own debt to investors worried about both general economic conditions and the possibility that the banks’ problems may overwhelm their governments’ ability to cope with them. Moody’s Investors Service recently downgraded the credit ratings of Latvia, and commented on Greece; the agency cited, in part, bank problems in both countries. Ireland was just put on credit watch with a view to downgrade by Moody’s because of its banking crisis.
How can the governments raise the cash to repay the Fed? The possibilities include printing more currency, thus undermining the euro’s value and increasing inflation; selling more sovereign debt; or raising taxes. None is a pleasing prospect.
The Bottom Line:
European banks face a new round of challenges. Most vulnerable: Credit Suisse, UBS, Barclays, Erste Bank, Nordea, ING, Fortis and Banco Santander.
A further complication: Countries such as Ireland must go along with whatever currency policy the European Central Bank chooses, even if it isn’t necessarily the right one for the nation. Those outside the ECB currency regime — like Switzerland — can custom-tailor their monetary response. Ireland has gone so far as to threaten to leave the monetary union unless it gets more help.
RECENTLY LATVIA, WHOSE central bank has bailed out the country’s banking system, was the scene of demonstrations and populist rhetoric aimed at granting borrowers relief on loans from Swedish banks — which have a big presence in the Baltic nation. If the Latvian government grants this relief, it would seriously hurt Swedish lenders, whose central bank has borrowed $25 billion from the Fed in these currency-swap lines.
“This is the kind of fiscal pressure that can easily rip the European Union apart, and cause the kind of civic upset that leads to revolution,” says Sean Egan, co-founder of Egan-Jones, a credit-rating firm in Pennsylvania.
And some of the most stable countries are involved. Switzerland, whose banking system has assets valued at eight times the nation’s annual economic output, is in hock to the Federal Reserve to the tune of $20 billion, a massive amount for a small country. Britain, with its highly leveraged financial system, has had to bail out its banks three times so far, yet must repay the Fed $54 billion.
These pressures are starting to affect sovereign borrowing, too: Germany recently auctioned 10-year government bonds — but the government was left holding 32% of the offer, in what analysts regarded as a failed deal.
Economists Carmen Reinhart of the University of Maryland and Ken Rogoff of Harvard have studied sovereign defaults going back to the 14th century, and found that mass sovereign defaults tend to run in waves when currencies begin to melt down. Says Reinhart, “We’ve found that global banking crises cause the kind of turbulence that leads to sovereign defaults. It’s just beginning.”
Lee Hoskins, former president of the Cleveland Fed, in the early ’90s led a move to stop the U.S. central bank from using swap agreements to warehouse foreign currencies to help the Treasury implement its foreign-exchange policy. Hoskins views the Fed as pursuing a policy of credit allocation rather than targeting monetary aggregates or interest rates. Hoskins believes the Fed should let some of the banks here and abroad go under. “Unless we stop the forbearance and dispose of the insolvent banks, the problems are only going to get worse,” says Hoskins.
Meanwhile, Bernanke says he isn’t so much managing the money supply on a quantitative basis, but rather pursuing “credit easing,” focusing on a mix of loans and securities affecting household- and business-credit conditions. Emergency loans and swap lines made to central banks will essentially be repaid once things return to normal for the big banks.
Walker Todd, a former lawyer for the New York Fed, would prefer that Congress review these swap lines and the agreements behind them — to make sure they were made with the proper authority.
Bernanke concedes that the banking sector is far from saved at this point: Worsening growth prospects, continued credit losses and markdowns will keep pressure on the capital and balance sheets of financial institutions.
“More capital injections and guarantees may become necessary to ensure stability and the normalization of credit markets,” says the Fed chief.
But shouldn’t Congress have a say in how much more the Fed lends to Europe?
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Karim writes:
Surprise dissent from Lacker who would rather buy Treasuries than utilize the current slew of credit programs (didn’t realize there could be dissents as it related to type of non-traditional easing).
Other notes:
The Federal Open Market Committee decided today to keep its target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent. The Committee continues to anticipate that economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for some time.
Information received since the Committee met in December suggests that the economy has weakened further. Industrial production, housing starts, and employment have continued to decline steeply, as consumers and businesses have cut back spending. Furthermore, global demand appears to be slowing significantly. Conditions in some financial markets have improved, in part reflecting government efforts to provide liquidity and strengthen financial institutions; nevertheless, credit conditions for households and firms remain extremely tight. The Committee anticipates that a gradual recovery in economic activity will begin later this year, but the downside risks to that outlook are significant.
In light of the declines in the prices of energy and other commodities in recent months and the prospects for considerable economic slack, the Committee expects that inflation pressures will remain subdued in coming quarters. Moreover, the Committee sees some risk that inflation could persist for a time below rates that best foster economic growth and price stability in the longer term.
The Federal Reserve will employ all available tools to promote the resumption of sustainable economic growth and to preserve price stability. The focus of the Committee’s policy is to support the functioning of financial markets and stimulate the economy through open market operations and other measures that are likely to keep the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet at a high level. The Federal Reserve continues to purchase large quantities of agency debt and mortgage-backed securities to provide support to the mortgage and housing markets, and it stands ready to expand the quantity of such purchases and the duration of the purchase program as conditions warrant. The Committee also is prepared to purchase longer-term Treasury securities if evolving circumstances indicate that such transactions would be particularly effective in improving conditions in private credit markets. The Federal Reserve will be implementing the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility to facilitate the extension of credit to households and small businesses. The Committee will continue to monitor carefully the size and composition of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet in light of evolving financial market developments and to assess whether expansions of or modifications to lending facilities would serve to further support credit markets and economic activity and help to preserve price stability.
Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Donald L. Kohn; Dennis P. Lockhart; Kevin M. Warsh; and Janet L. Yellen. Voting against was Jeffrey M. Lacker, who preferred to expand the monetary base at this time by purchasing U.S. Treasury securities rather than through targeted credit programs.
Since the Committee’s last meeting, labor market conditions have deteriorated, and the available data indicate that consumer spending, business investment, and industrial production have declined. Financial markets remain quite strained and credit conditions tight. Overall, the outlook for economic activity has weakened further.
Meanwhile, inflationary pressures have diminished appreciably. In light of the declines in the prices of energy and other commodities and the weaker prospects for economic activity, the Committee expects inflation to moderate further in coming quarters.
The Federal Reserve will employ all available tools to promote the resumption of sustainable economic growth and to preserve price stability. In particular, the Committee anticipates that weak economic conditions are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for some time.
The focus of the Committee’s policy going forward will be to support the functioning of financial markets and stimulate the economy through open market operations and other measures that sustain the size of the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet at a high level. As previously announced, over the next few quarters the Federal Reserve will purchase large quantities of agency debt and mortgage-backed securities to provide support to the mortgage and housing markets, and it stands ready to expand its purchases of agency debt and mortgage-backed securities as conditions warrant. The Committee is also evaluating the potential benefits of purchasing longer-term Treasury securities. Early next year, the Federal Reserve will also implement the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility to facilitate the extension of credit to households and small businesses. The Federal Reserve will continue to consider ways of using its balance sheet to further support credit markets and economic activity.
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