Posts tagged ‘Fed’

Siberia finance

Everything is frozen. Banks do not lend money to each other, only overnight and at very high rates. Corporates cannot refinance their commercial paper, so Fed will buy CPs. If Fed also moves into unsecured lending to banks (as reported by some sources) it would be a truly dramatic decision. Why would you borrow from interbank market at very high rates, borrow from Fed cheaply. Why lend to another bank and take the counterparty risk, park liqudity at the Fed and sleep well. Why sell “toxic” assets at dirt cheap prices to the market (nobody wants to buy anyway) sell to government dear and make a buck.

Would all this together work and help restore confidence? Well, I saw reports predicting that housing market will drop by another 20-25% in 2009, so bank losses will continue to grow. US recession which now seems inevitable would lead to “traditional” loan portfolio deterioration, with further losses. My guess is that fear and lack of trust will remain with US banks for quite some time. Therefore the only action could be between Fed and banks, while interbank market will remain frozen. Siberia finance. This will last as long and banking sector capital reamin low and is being depleted by continuing losses.  I think that the best way to improve US banks credibitlity is to sell them to Chinese or Arab capital-rich investors, if they want to buy. I think that there exists a share price that will clear US banks demand for capital and Asian/Gulf supply of capital, now invested in US Treasuries. A mega-swap could delived a warm, spring wind of change to frozen markets.

 

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Understanding the Paulson plan

There is a wild party, a long one. Every time alcohol supply dries up central bank shows up and keeps the party going and going, and people get more and more addicted to partying and drinking. At some stage premises are demolished and party is over. Paul and Ben show up and ask who did the most damage. John, people say, he broke four windows and crashed the table. Great says Paul, John will get 300 dollars, who is next on the did-most-damage list. Tim, crowd cries, he put a spray all over the place and burned the sofa. Excellent goes Paul, Tim will get 250 dollars. Who is next …
In a few days the next party will begin. People are planning to show up in large numbers, not only they can have a lot of fun (while others – obviously jerks and dorks – will go to work every morning), drink for free, and they will also get free cash handouts when the party is over.

How do you like the Paulson plan?

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Post-crisis regulatory reform

Financial markets regulations are often very complicated and rarely make first page headlines, other than just the pure fact that they exist. But we have just seen a sequence of events that clearly indicate the possibility of far-reaching changes in supervisory regulations around the globe.

There was a meeting of the Financial Stability Forum in late March that issued a statement calling for far reaching reforms, a quote:

“The FSF discussed the report to be delivered to G7 Finance Ministers and Central Bank Governors in April that identifies the key weaknesses underlying the turmoil and recommends actions to enhance market and institutional resilience going forward. The report has been prepared by a working group comprising senior officials from major financial centers and from the international financial institutions and the chairs of international supervisory and regulatory bodies. It sets out specific policy recommendations in the following areas: prudential oversight of capital, liquidity and risk management; transparency, disclosure and valuation practices; the role and uses of credit ratings; the authorities’ responsiveness to risks and their arrangements to deal with stress in the financial system. These recommendations are concrete and operational and, if approved, the FSF will report on their prompt implementation”.

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Will central banks buy real estate? Adopting Belarus standard.

Few years ago I had dinner with deputy governor of the central bank of Belarus (for those who do not now where it is, it is an Eastern neighbor of Poland, and it belongs to a club of communist countries with North Korea and Cuba). He had a permission to leave Belarus for three days and delayed return could put him to jail or at least cost him a job. Anyway, he told me the the central bank operated several sovhozes (collective farms) as the Belarus lunatic leader Lukaszenka wanted state owned enterprises to take care of those farms, so central bank has several of those.

I am reading in today’s Financial Times that Western world biggest central banks are contemplating adopting Belarus standard. They want to move into real estate. To be precise they may start mass purchases of mortgage-backed securities. Hey, this is different than owning a sovhoz, you may say. In the collateralized world there is hardly any difference, you simply hold a more diversified portfolio and you care less abut risk, sometimes you are even risk careless. So in practice buying MBS paper is no different that owning few collective farms by the central bank of Belarus.

I stick to my view presented in the previous post. Central banks should focus on safeguarding stable prices, which is at risk now, globally, and governments should manage the crisis. What we need is not increasing global money supply by half a trillion dollars, we need a well-targeted action to address the problem of confidence crisis. If bank A starts lending money to bank B only if bank A has enough liquid assets (read my lips – government paper) then swap MBS for govies. Becasue – as FT argues – prices of some MBS imply unrealistic default rates (way too high) , then governments could make a lot of money. This would be relative change (asset swap), while purchases by central bank could lead to further increase of global money supply. Central banks should be reminded about existing research which shows that on the global level acceleration of money supply will lead to higher inflation, from already elevated levels.

My advice, governments should do massive assets swaps with troubled investment banks, insurance companies and mortgage houses. Central banks should manage inflation risks.

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Crisis of confidence and the sin of short-termism

When bankers made forecasts for 2008 in late 2007 the most common one was: the present crisis will calm in the 2nd half of 2008, after all audits see daylight and there are no more nasty surprises. But it will get worse, possibly much worse before it gets better.

This forecast is materializing, see today’s article in FT describing the situation at Bear Stearns, US investment bank, which arranged emergency lending from JP Morgan (which may be preparing to buy bits of Bear Stearns) and got first time in forty years “direct” support from the Fed. The core of the problem is nicely explained by the Bear’s chief executive quote:

“Alan Schwartz, Bear’s chief executive, said the investment bank had fallen victim of a crisis of confidence in which counterparties in its core fixed-income markets were no longer willing to provide financing given widespread rumours that Bear could fail. On Wednesday, Mr Schwartz had told CNBC that the bank’s balance sheet had “not weakened at all”. On Friday he said that demands for cash had accelerated on Thursday”.

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FT: Three wiser men

I thought I’d draw your attention to the full page Financial Times article about three wiser men: Bernanke, Trichet and King. Article concludes that:

“If the central bankers reach an agreement on how to move forward on these issues, they could gain a better arsenal of policy tools to use next time a crisis strikes. Better still, if such tools are already in place, they could be pulled out with less drama – and thus trigger less panic. But as ever in central banking, policymaking remains a balancing act. Do too little or only act in the most grave circumstances and you threaten to increase the stigma associated with your operations, so they are ineffective. Do too much and you run the risk that bankers will take advantage and so you generate more crises by your actions. No one said central banking was easy. And none of the central bankers gathering in Tokyo last weekend was willing to bet that their current test is yet finished.”

I am still digesting this article, I will write my comments this evening. One quick reaction is that global problems require global response (global talking is not enough, it just adds to global warming), and second is that we may be applying wrong medicine. Recall IMF-run multilateral consultations process and its main conclusions. Now look at the implemented actions. Will deeds and words ever get more inconsistent than nowadays? More on this later today.

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Central banking goes global – TAF measures and CB swap facility

It is the 21st century indeed. Phillips curves became flat, inflation is a global phenomenon, financial market is global and ensuring its stability is a global mandate. No single central bank is able to fulfill this mandate therefore we should not be surprised to see more and more often that these global issues dealt with in a co-ordinated global manner. Global imbalances were discussed by Eurozone. US, Japan, China and Saudi Arabia. Global liquidity/confidence crisis was met with a co-ordinated response as well, by central banks in US, EMU, UK, Switzerland and Canada, see FT article. The Federal Reserve press release on creation of temporary Term Auction FAcility (TAF) is here. Swedish Riksbank positive reaction to TAF and swap arrangements with other central banks is here and Bank of Japan statement is here .   A qoute from FT article is below:

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US exorbitant privilege revisited

The paper by Gourinchas and Rey identified US exorbitant privilege as ability of the US to earn much more on its foreign assets (7%) than cost of its foreign liabilities (3.5%). Among many arguments explaining why this was possible is one that US financial markets are biggest, most liquid, with best regulatory framework. I have been arguing for a long time that this privilege will slowly go away amid rapid development of financial markets in other parts of the globe.

Recent paper by New York Fed economist Stavros Peristiani provides a nice overview on this topic, showing that US markets are loosing global importance, in a most pronounced way with respect to global bond markets. It is also worth noticing, that while home bias among investors has been falling (with hedge funds contributing to this process, with Feldstein-Horioka puzzle vanishing in the last decade) at the same time the home bias with respect to IPOs and new bond issuance has been on the rise. It does reflect positive corporate governance developments in Asia, creation of euro market and predatory regulations in US following the Enron case.

Mean-reversion minds are predicting US dollar strengthening from historically low levels. They might be right, but the above trends of strengthening home IPO bias combined with SWF diversification policies argue for further dollar weakness. See chart from Peristiani paper below:

ipos.jpg

Two links added later:

  • Daniel Gross article in Newsweek about IPOs moving outside the US
  • PIMCO article by Richard Clarida about US “exorbitant privilege”

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Interesting articles: core EU, US protectionism, WEO chapters, PIMCO on Bernanke put

  • Swedish study says that despite enlargement big EU states are gaining power, see EUobserver article . It also says that because of personality Luxemburg leader weighs probably more than a country of 12-14 million population.
  • Bloomberg article commenting on US deicsion to put tariffs on imports of coated paper from China. Quotes: ” Figures last week showed the world’s central banks have the lowest level of U.S. currency in their foreign-exchange reserves since at least 1999. Dollar holdings dropped to 64.7 percent in the fourth quarter, according to the International Monetary Fund, down from 65.8 percent in the previous quarter and from as high as 72.6 percent in mid-2001. The euro is at its most popular since its 1999 introduction, with a share of 25.8 percent.” [...] ” The U.S. can hardly claim to be a paragon of free trade. In his book “Making Globalization Work,” for example, Nobel Prize- winning economist Joseph Stiglitz says there are 25,000 U.S. cotton farmers enjoying $4 billion of annual subsidies. Without those government payments, “it would not pay for the United States to produce cotton; with them, the United States is the world’s largest cotton exporter,” he writes.” [...] ““We see U.S. protectionism as a key long-term risk,” T.J. Bond, Hong Kong-based chief Asia economist for Merrill Lynch and Co., said in a research note today. “The economics aren’t going to change. If it interferes with the global flow of goods and capital, protectionism could raise global inflation as well as U.S. bond yields.”

    “Do Not Meddle in the Affairs of Dragons, For You Are Crunchy and Taste Good With Ketchup,” is a slogan available on T-shirts and bumper stickers. Maybe some champion of free trade could buy a box of each and send them to the gaggle of short- sighted, crowd-pleasing U.S. politicians as a warning that if you pull the tail of the Chinese dragon, you might be devoured.”

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Interesting articles: credit derivatives, reserves, Phillips curve, Asian Union

  • Fed Governor Sandra Pianalto speech on Internationalization of national currencies. Quote:

“The evidence suggests that the share of euros held in countries’ reserve portfolios has increased. This appears to be consistent with the widening of the European Union and the prospective growth of the euro area. The euro now accounts for slightly less than 30 percent of developing countries’ portfolios, and it is the second-most widely used international reserve currency. The British pound and Japanese yen remain well behind.

We have only limited information on the currency composition of those reserves, but the data and anecdotal evidence indicate that developing countries are adding euros to their portfolios faster than they are adding dollars. At the end of 2001, developing countries held 70 percent of their foreign-exchange reserves in dollar-denominated assets, but by 2006, this share had fallen to 60 percent. Valuation adjustments stemming from the dollar’s depreciation since 2001 account for some of the decline in the dollar share, but not all of it.”

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