On Inflation, Martin Feldstein is Wrong
Martin Feldstein’s column, (June 29, 2009) on inflation opines that while federal stimulus is still necessary, a combination of looming deficits, federal reserve bond purchases, and skittishness of foreign investors are pushing yields on the 10 Year Treasury up to alarming levels.
Feldstein’s major premise is detailed in the second paragraph of his column: Higher Yields have led to higher mortgage rates, reducing home buying, depressing net worth tremendously in the last six months. Further, lower home prices have caused more defaults and “weakened bank balance sheets”.
Lets correct some facts: Between 2006 and Six Months ago (December 2008), house prices dropped 27 percent. From December 2008 to March 2009 - the latest month of data, housing prices fell comparatively 7%. Further, August 2009 Futures for Case-Shiller Composite index is currently trading at 152.0 slightly above where the index level stood in December of 2008, bookmarking the recent rise in treasury yields.
Feldstein, in his column, notes that the current spread between 10-year TIPS and 10 year Treasuries shows an inflation expectation of 2% annually. That inflation predictions have “jumped” to slightly over 2% per year is hardly alarming. 2% is often seen as an inflation target. That the jump in rates is perpetrated by fears foreign investors may no longer continue to buy US debt is simply not true.
China, most notably, while making loud noises is in a “dollar trap”, argued most notably by Paul Krugman. Fail to purchase US Treasuries, and decline the dollar’s value, making our goods cheaper and China’s goods more expensive, ending China’s competitive advantage in manufacturing.
At a high-level, if manufacturing in China continues to keep durable good costs down, and the Federal Stimulus package will improve roads and cargo lines, reducing transportation costs, price increases outside of energy spikes are hard to imagine for durable goods measured in CPI.
Perhaps Feldstein’s view of investor skittishness and his call for the Fed to assure the markets it will curb future “inflationary lending” are really directed at asset inflation: Perhaps investors believe that while policy makers are acting vigorously, nothing structurally has or is going to change to prevent another asset bubble similar to house price inflation witnessed over this past decade.
Asset inflation, be it houses or equities, is much harder to prevent than inflation in durable goods. Let us hope our fiscal stimulus and monetary policy are giving the economy surer footing to produce more, sharing those productivity gains across a wider spectrum, ensuring a diverse economy in the odds of preventing future asset bubbles.
June 30, 2009 No Comments
The Fed’s Balance Sheet - Deflation Preventing and not Inflation Causing
The Federal Reserve released its combined 2008 Financial Statements on April 20, 2009. 2008 was stunning, with the balance sheet growing from $915 billion to $2.245 trillion. The major increases were in the commercial paper facility, foreign currency swaps, and term asset backed facility. Essentially - stabilizing mechanisms for short term market operations (both foreign and domestic) to continue.
The increase of $1.33 trillion is slightly larger than the gain in US GDP from $13.178 trillion to $14.264 trillion from 2006 to 2008. Essentially, the gains in US GDP from 2006 - when the Case-Shiller Composite Housing Index reached its peak - to 2008 are now sitting on the Fed’s books when they should be out in the private economy, on the balance sheets of companies, creating the next wave of products and services.
There are those who have argued the Fed’s actions will cause tremendous inflation. It is important to remember the major actions of the Fed are all preventing short term credit disruptions, which if not collectively implemented, would have all lead to price declines, deflation.
Currency Swaps, worth roughly $553 billion or 1% of world GDP, are held against a basket of G-20 currencies, have most likely prevented an increasing demand for dollar. In the fall of 2008, the demand for the dollar reached a recent record high. Further appreciation would have further pressured US producers, unable to compete on price for various goods/services. The only solution would have been to cut costs to reduce prices.
Commercial Paper, worth $333 billion, is necessary to keep working capital afloat. Without it, the only solution to meet existing funding needs or return previously funded commercial paper would have been to liquidate existing inventory at reduced prices.
Term Asset-Backed Facility (TAF), worth roughly $450 billion, is further short term financing to allow banks to continue liquidity while suffering losses on their longest duration assets - CMOs. Without access to short term financing, again the only choice would be asset liquidation, further forcing price declines.
True, CPI did not increase in 2008. But added together, the Commercial Paper and TAF are roughly 5% of US GDP. As most companies were levered to the tilt, if the Federal Reserve funding was not there, the US price and consequentially unemployment situation would have been far worse.
As to worries of runaway inflation, the jury is still out. My belief is that the capital these facilities are replacing - in a sense - is now shoring up the balance sheets of various banks and companies. By increasing equity ratios at companies and banks, future invested dollars from these newly shored up institutions will need higher returns on capital (all else equal), which is equivalent to the Fed raising fed funds rates to control inflation.
Until a recovery though, it is a good thing our economy has not faced deflation, certainly a real possibility in the fall of 2008.
May 27, 2009 No Comments
Ireland, Currency Controls, and Must Reads
Paul Krugman writes this week about the Irish Economy. In his column and blog, Paul notes Ireland is painfully transitioning, raising taxes to keep its fiscal position in line.
Let’s pause. If you have not read Lords of Finance yet by Liaquat Ahamed, stop reading this blog (or any other) and give the book a go. It is the cornerstone to understanding the current economic/financial crisis and comprehending possible solutions of both short and long duration.
In Lords of Finance, Ahamed writes of an eerily similar situation during the 1920s when Great Britain, starved for credit to funds its fiscal deficits, had to seek tacit approval from the House of Morgan on its proposed budget. Upon approval, Morgan helped raise a consortium of funding to help Great Britain stay afloat.
No doubt the same conversation was probably occurring in Ireland before it made its proposed increase in taxes. In the months since the world Financial Meltdown, Ireland raised debt in November 08 ($4bn), January (Euro 6bn), and February (Euro 4bn). Then on March 30, 2009 Standard and Poors dropped Ireland’s sovereign credit rating from AAA to AA+ with a negative outlook. Since then, Ireland has not tapped the capital markets and has now tightened its fiscal belt.
This is now the choice of Ireland and other European Countries with current account deficits. There is an immediate need to shore up the balance sheet, repay existing debts, and wait until domestic prices decline to a point where goods and services are competitive enough to be readily exported, regrowing the economy. But waiting for prices to decline is a very painful phenomenon. Prices only decline when demand drops and a drop in demand across the board is synonymous with higher unemployment.
Ireland may be a small country (GDP wise), but its decisions are no different than California’s or many other states and municipalities here in the US. Without complete currency control, acting prudently (although potentially not economically), is the only choice to continue to tap existing capital markets, paying teachers, fire fighters and policemen. Economies in trouble and with a net debt position and complete currency control would either see a currency devaluation (in the form of a crash) or would choose to devalue their currency. Currency devaluation would hopefully occur faster than responsive domestic inflation allowing goods to be exported at a more competitive basis. Yet without currency controls, deflation is the only mechanism to getting prices to a point where exports can repay existing net debts (assuming those debts are denominated in the domestic currency).
Ireland is being used as an example of when economies are too reliant on the financial sector. To be clear, robust capital markets are critical to any functioning economy. Yet it is also important to note the following function: The limits to the magnitude (1x, 2x, 3x) of a sale of any business are equivalent to its estimated Rate of Return on Assets divided by its weighted average cost of capital - In a simpler Mogdliani Miller world this is the rate of asset return divided by the sum of the funding spread above the risk free rate and the risk free rate of return. In other words, the numerator to any business sale is the Rate of Return on Assets and the denominator is the return a new buyer is willing to accept. In the last eight years, we’ve grown because of the denominator: capital became cheap and offered increasingly attractive multiples for business transactions. In the next eight years, we must focus on the upper bound, the return on assets, the productivity of the country and its ability to make goods and services, representative of its currency.
April 22, 2009 1 Comment
Defending Tim Geithner’s Bank Bailout Plan
On February 10th, Secretary Tim Geithner announced the next wave of bank bailouts. The press - from the New York Times to major blogs, ripped the Obama Administration for “not enough detail”.
What does “not enough detail” mean? This is a plan roughly $2 trillion in size. Roughly equivalent in size to California’s GDP. How can “enough detail” satisfy those commenting on a proposed solution to a problem this complex to write 200 accurate words on it? The problem’s sheer size , the moving pieces, makes it incredibly hard for anyone to understand. But lets start with the largest part: banks holdings of assets, largely those in housing.
Houses and underlying property must be viewed as derivatives, not underlying assets. Houses and property are merely reflective of economic activity occurring on the square feet. As economic activity rises, so should the house. As economic activity falls, so too should the value of that same house. Should I buy a house, I am buying it because:
- I can afford the monthly payments
- I believe my wages will continue to rise above the monthly payments, inflating away the payment burden
- My wages will rise due to my improved performance
- My performance is due to my company’s continuing ability to sell its product to other companies or consumers
- Or my performance is good enough to find another job in the same area
If the company can not sell product, I can not earn a living. If I can not find another job, I can not earn a living. If I can not earn a living, I can not afford my house. If I can not afford my house, it must no longer be worth what I paid for it. Unless someone else buys it for what I originally paid. But if the house’s location prevents this, again, it must no longer be worth what I paid for it.
The key to any communities’ housing values appreciating is its ability to export goods and services to other communities. No exporting means no chance of true economic appreciation, and no concurrent increase in underlying value. Today’s domestic economy however has been running current account deficits for years - exporting far less than importing. Thus the derivatives that are houses have been completely overvalued for years.
Which brings us back to the banks. If banks hold leveraged derivatives on their books in the form of subprime mortgages bonds, then it is clear they are holding assets valued far more than their true worth. Given the over-leveraged position of most banks, Nationalization is coming and coming soon for some banks. Painful at first, but best in the long run. This is why Geithner left his position open and why he will not make the same mistakes others have made in the past. “Not enough detail” is easy to write, but fixing this correctly takes far more skill.
February 17, 2009 No Comments
Why the Long Term Solution is More than the Bad Bank
Yesterday’s news was not encouraging. Home value declines will continue to make families and home owners second guess their net worth. In a recession, this prompts only one reaction: saving.
The macro economic accounting identity states savings equals investment. This static steady theory is becoming a large force against fiscal stimulus, now awaiting Senate Approval.
Let’s review the facts. With the Fed meeting today, Fed Funds ended trading at 0.18% according to the Financial Times. As rates are not able to go below zero, interest rates are essentially fixed. And bank reserves held at the Fed increase. There thus is no further mechanism to force private investment to equal savings.
As savings not offset by investment (which would lead to new jobs) and unemployment increase, taxes decline. If government expenditures just stayed the same, our federal deficit would have to increase, even without fiscal stimulus.
Faced with the choice of
- Large Federal Deficit
- Infrastructure Investments => New Jobs and a Large Federal Deficit
Its best to choose jobs, new infrastructure and a large federal deficit.
Today’s news was even less encouraging. That jobs are lost in record numbers makes valuing mortgage bonds, even if simply constructed, even harder. Yet mortgage bonds are not simply constructed, they are incredibly complex.
Job losses will not decelerate for a while. It will take time for fiscal stimulus to take effect. This makes the idea of the “bad bank” incredibly complex. Many like Reich still hold out hope for a solution that protects the tax payer. The economic reality makes it impossible that mortgage assets still on the books are worth anything close to what they were previously valued. To unclog lending, we -the taxpayer- must further take it on the chin.
Yet as the fiscal stimulus and bad bank solutions work through the economy (and slowly), we must ask ourselves: what kind of economy do we want to now create? Should the Financial Sector contribute 31% of GDP as it did in 2006?
Which should we value more? Financial engineering or mechanical engineering?
This is again why infrastructure investment as the stimulus for tomorrow’s economy is so important: The only way long term balance will be restored (and one could measure this by the current account balance) is to choose engineering over financial engineering. The more we build (not out of paper) at home, the more our economy will grow in a balanced, mature way for generations.
January 29, 2009 No Comments
What the Market Sees for the Economy in 2009
It is time to take stock of where the market sees the economy moving in 2009. Let’s examine
- Overnight Index Swap (OIS) Futures - tracking the effective Federal Funds rate
- Three-Month Eurodollar Futures - tracking three month LIBOR - the base private lending rate
- Oil Futures - tracking energy
- Dow Futures tracking industrial performance
Let’s start with the base of the economy, the effective Fed Funds rate. By reviewing OIS Futures, the Market believes by the fall of 2009, the Fed will have increased the target funds rate to 0.5%. Further, economic activity will be strong enough that the effective rate will mirror the target rate by both the midyear and by the end of the year. Treasuries expiring in December 2009 yield 0.41%, according to the Wall St. Journal, close to the effective funds rate Dec-09 futures.
Three Month Eurodollar futures, a mirroring instrument to 3 month LIBOR trading on the CME state marginal increases in lending cost. Considering treasuries expiring in March 2010 yield 0.4% (compared to treasuries expiring in December 2009), there is still a very high TED Spread - the private capital trust spread -by the end of 2009.
Oil futures-according to the Wall St. Journal- show robust increases in energy cost. Further, according to the WSJ, there is no change in Dollar futures against a world currency basket through 2009. This shows a pickup in world oil demand, potentially a pickup in global economic growth.
The Dow, however, points down. This could be explained in two ways:
- The first is inflation. According to the FT, the Five Year Treasury Bond trades at 1.51%. According to the WSJ, Five Year TIPS trade at 2.65%. Declining prices mean declining profits, which pushes down share prices. Declining prices coupled with increasing energy further pressures profits.
- The second - compounded with deflation - is the cost of debt. Fair to say, this fall was miserable for bond offerings. This past week was positive - companies actually went to market- weekly-bond-issues-ft-january-5-9-2009 - but for those companies able to issue debt, it is expensive, especially relative to treasuries -as mentioned before - of similar duration.
In 2009, the market predicts a start to economic recovery. That the fed funds effective rate will mirror the target rate and that the target rate will increase by end of 2009 shows positive economic activity. While 3-month LIBOR is low through 2009, the actual cost of debt to firms - both in spreads and the growth/contraction in inflation - still puts long term pressure on economic growth.
January 11, 2009 No Comments
The Last Action of 2008 and the Economy’s Next Steps
Dec 15th and 16th are when the Fed meets for the final time in 2008, when it will decide how low the Fed Funds rate should be.
No ordinary time:
- The Fed Funds Rate sits at 1.00%. But the Effective Rate as of Friday, Dec 12th according to the Financial Times was 0.14%
- Fed Reserves normally are $800-900 billion. Today there are $1.5 trillion in Fed Reserves, according to The St. Louis Federal Reserve.
- Treasuries normally pay positive interest rates. According to the Financial Times, overnight rates for three month treasuries are paying 0.03%. Further, the latest auction showed people are willing to pay the US Government more for less in the future. (deflation).
So what should the Fed do?
- Conventional wisdom leading up to this meeting was that the Fed would cut interest rates by 50 basis points from the current 1.00%.
- I argued in a previous post that only a 50 basis point cut would do nothing.
- Now, the expectation has shifted (maybe thanks to my Note….just maybe). CME Fed Binary Options prices as of Friday, Dec 12th show the market is betting on a 75 basis point cut.
The three major reasons against a 50 basis point cut are as follows:
- For some time, the effective Fed Funds rate has been trading below 50 basis points, making a 50 bp cut moot.
- With demand for Treasuries now essentially inelastic, part of the Fed’s open market operations are simply ineffective.
- Since the Fed’s rate cuts in the fall, bank lending has not responded. I argued in Note 16 one way to view this. Here is another: A look at the St. Louis Fed research shows M2 has remained largely unchanged from October 20th to December 1st. We need a resounding effort to get capital out of Fed Reserves and into the private markets.
A 75 basis point cut will occur by Close of Business, Tuesday the 16th.
But a 75 basis point cut may not help all that much without a spur of domestic demand.
- St. Louis Fed research shows corporate Aaa bond yields have remained largely unchanged over the fall: While base rates have declined, spreads have widened.
- The Commercial Paper Market has dramatically shifted from private market consumption to the Fed. According to the St. Louis Fed, in October, the figure of borrowing from the Fed was $450 billion. Today, it still is over $250 billion.
- This week, according to Financial Times data, The American Express -now- “Bank” jumped on the bandwagon of FDIC backed debt raising, floating $5.5 billion of debt at yields of 2-3%.
In short, the Fed’s and other government’s massive expansion of credit market intervention is now more powerful than Open Market Operations. While the need for a 75 basis point is important and required, other actions are now more powerful to spur economic recovery.
Turning to 2009:
The fact-pattern above gives pause to how big a stimulus package needs to be vs. how quickly it needs to be spent. I am for a massive Fiscal Stimulus of at least $600 billion. But every dollar borrowed by the US Government (especially today) is a dollar unable to be accessed by Private Companies for new projects and investments, even in ZIRP land.
As Paul Krugman said today on “This Week”, it is hard to spend $600 billion dollars, even for the Government. Domestic Demand stimulus will only be effective therefore in boosting the private economy if “size” is optimally aligned with “velocity” and “accuracy of spending”.
Still, look for a 75 basis point cut this week as the final message of 2008 in preparation of massive fiscal stimulus in early 2009.
December 14, 2008 2 Comments
Evaluating Robert Shiller’s Debt Instrument
Robert Shiller, in his book The Subprime Solution offers a risk management tool for governments. It is a “Trill” and it pays a perpetual share of GDP.
As GDP increases, the instrument pays a higher coupon. During a recession, it pays less. Quite the floating instrument. Shiller assumes each share would pay roughly $15, believing perpetual GDP would average $15 trillion annually. (Hence the “Trill”). Each Trill would be worth roughly $300. This assumes the US Risk Free rate is 5%. The risk-less rate of the US economy is 5%.
The “Risk” that is managed is during hard times, the government obviously owes less in debt service costs. In times of plenty, the government can afford to pay more. But in bad times, governments would have more cash on hand to handle a crisis (such as today).
The Pros.
- This instrument allows the market to truly estimate GDP growth. In some ways, the instrument is worth issuing simply to have a market view (a great view) of GDP growth.
- One now has the ability- with TIPS, Treasuries, and Trills- to estimate real GDP growth given market views.
- Instead of perpetual Instruments, it could be more beneficial to issue “Trills” expiring annually, similar to TIPS and Treasuries. This way, one could have the market truly predicting GDP growth.
The Reasons for Pause:
- Reviewing the LM curve, as output grows, interest rates rise. As the economy falters, interest rates fall. Even in today’s crisis, this relationship holds true. The Trill’s desired hedge already exists. Further, this means the government has the ability to re-finance higher yielding paper in tougher times.
- The Hedge: Shiller’s main reason for the GDP indexed Trill is to provide government “room to spare” should a contraction occur. As GDP declines, so would tax receipts, lowering government revenue. It then is hard to argue the Government would have spare cash to attack a crisis.
- Other Financings: GDP, remember, is defined as Consumption + Investment + Government Expenditure + Net Exports. GDP could remain stable year on year, but Imports could still rise. In this example, Investment (Foreign Direct Investment) remains unchanged meaning the Current Account Deficit is in the form of domestic bonds and stocks, essentially payments to foreigners from US income. Trill payments could remain unchanged, but the country as a whole would pay more to maintain the same standard of living (in the short run).
Robert Shiller is one of our smartest thinkers on real property. Let’s work on the Trill as it has definite promise as a positive instrument for US Debt.
December 9, 2008 No Comments






