Sunday, December 14, 2008

The Fed’s War on Cash


Markets are dithering their way to the end of the year. It doesn’t look like much is happening. But some interesting things are going on. Pressure is building. For example, the dividend yield on the S&P 500 is 3.48%. The yield on a 30-year U.S. bond is 3.16%.
According to Mark Hulbert at CBS Marketwatch, 1958 was the last time the yield on the S&P 500 exceeded the yield on the 30-year bond. 1958? Are you kidding? Elvis joined the U.S. Army in 1958. Eisenhower was in the White House, Khrushchev in the Kremlin, and Menzies was elected for the fifth time in Australia.
The world may have lived on the edge of nuclear holocaust in 1958, but at least some things were more certain. You were better dead than Red. What was good for GM was good for America. And everyone liked Ike.
The world is much more confusing today. The yield on S&P stocks was 2% this time last year, a 74% increase in the last twelve months. We reckon stocks will start to look even more appealing when the yield reaches 5% or 6%, which would also mean lower stock prices first.
But there’s a bigger story going on, too. It’s what we call the Fed’s war on cash. You see, the Fed is driving down yields on government bonds and notes of all maturities quite deliberately. More on what it’s up to below. But it’s not just the Fed that’s pulling out all the monetary stops to float the world on a sea of credit.
It’s a now a race to the bottom for central bank interest rates. New Zealand’s central bank cut its main interest rates by a whopping 1.5% overnight. But the Kiwis have some work to do. Short-term rates across the Tasman are still at 5%, 450 basis points above Ben Bernanke’s Fed.
You don’t normally see such aggressive rate cutting in an economy until unemployment levels are much higher. It’s the classic Keynesian trade-off between inflation and unemployment. You can keep prices stable by keeping the rate growth low and savings high.
But slow, steady, prudent growth doesn’t create jobs fast enough for politicians. So rates are lowered! This leads to lower unemployment rates, but higher inflation. The big change in the last thirty years is that higher inflation was tolerable for most workers in the Western world because it seemed to come with some juicy benefits.
The first was asset price inflation. Houses and stocks went up too! Real wage growth was flat (or even fell). But the value of things you bought went up! On paper, everyone got wealthier.
Then, when China came along and started churning out geegaws and widgets faster than you could slap down a credit card, the apparent virtues of a little bit of inflation seemed limitless. Stocks and house prices went up, but consumer goods, durables, and electronics got cheaper.
This so-called “Great Moderation” suckered people into a dangerous financial strategy: asset-based saving and debt accumulation. And why not?
In a way, it’s perfectly rational. If credit is cheap and asset prices are rising, why not borrow to buy stocks and houses? The debt service is low, employment was pretty easy to find, and capital appreciation in your assets would smooth out any rough edges to the strategy.
Well, now that strategy is coming unhinged. In fact, the larger implication is so scary that only people like Robert Shiller dare to mention it: asset price appreciation is not a retirement strategy. It was a good run, from 1982 to 2000. But the idea that the stock market is society’s way of managing the risk of old age is now showing its own age. Investors are skittish.
“Fortress Investment Group LLC fell 25 percent to a record low,” reports Bloomberg, “after the private-equity and hedge-fund manager halted redemptions from its Drawbridge Global Macro fund, which had lost value this year.” Investors are seeking redemptions of over $3.5 billion from Fortress.
The run on the hedge funds is only restrained by the lock-up periods most investors agree to when turning their money over to a fund manager. But time takes care of that. Investors will continue asking for their cash back if they believe the market is either too risky or too mediocre.
This move to cash must distress the Fed and other central banks. It wants banks to lend, businesses to spend, and consumers to borrow. But the exact opposite is happening. So now we see the Fed doing its best to punish those in cash and force them to spend, or at least get out of government bonds and buy stocks.
Banks are content for now to build up a war chest of excess reserves. In fact, there’s been a surge in excess reserves held at the Fed by banks, and not just since the crisis began last October (the same is true of cash held at the RBA by authorised deposit taking institutions, see column K).
In other words, banks are happy to borrow from the Fed, but sad to lend to anyone. So what do they do? They deposit their new borrowings right back with the Fed, where they earn 1.5% interest (in excess of the target Fed Funds rate).
According to Fed data, U.S. financial institutions had just $60 billion in excess reserves held at the Fed at the end of September. On October 5th, the TARPenstein was passed. By the end of October, excess reserves held at the Fed had grown to $267 billion. By the end of November, it was $610 billion. Don’t fight the Fed! Flee to it!

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