Discussing the Fundamental Price of Money.
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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

What is Missing from the Bank Bailout

After the stimulus bill passes, President Obama and Tim Geithner will propose the next bank bailout. The concept of the bailout is the “bad bank”: Toxic assets are lifted from the bank balance sheets so lending can resume.

The key to stimulating lending is to resume interbank lending. Interbank lending can not fully resume until banks are comfortable their bank counterparts do not have any toxic assets, which under-performance could trigger a default. A default would make it difficult for the lending bank to receive its cash.

Look at the LIBOR yield curves on

feb-9th-2007-interbank-lending

feb-6-2009-interbank-lending

The steepness of today’s yield curve shows how skittish banks are in lending money for long durations, including one year.

Many worry the “bad bank” will cost the taxpayers money. Banks will not sell toxic assets for their true worth. Yet if banks agree to sell, many fear the taxpayer will pay too much. These “toxic assets” are packaged “subprime” mortgages. As job losses continue, home prices continue to decline and defaults continue to increase. Volatility makes valuing these assets almost impossible. Worse, this volatility is starting to damage mortgages further up the food chain.

Restarting the ability to make these mortgages worth anything are the following two statistics.

1) Real Median Household Income has not increased since 2000 - incomeinamerica1

2) Since 2000, The US Current Account Deficit has increased as a percentage of World GDP

Since consumers are (were) 70% of the US Economy, any increase in home values in the bast eight years has been on the backs of household borrowing. Until US Families can annually earn more, home values and mortgage portfolios will not follow suit. Homeowners need to pay back existing loans and earn more for future consumption at the same time.

The economy that increases real median household income is the next question. The recent share, both overall size and contributions to growth of the Finance Sector, contributed to our current state.  This is not assigning blame. We need capital to back people, ideas, bringing improvements to today and tomorrow’s economy. But we need to make more than financial products if we are going to lead the world, resume growth, and further pay for social security and medicare/medicaid.

Which brings us to the bailout. Must we do something? Yes. But lending can not resume to its 2006/2007 state unless we have an economy with a stronger manufacturing base to support it. Leverage on leverage only brings defaults and further trouble.

That is the challenge of this administration and the the private sector -aka - everyone. If we can create an economy that creates wealth for everyone, our future will be far brighter.

February 8, 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

2009-economic-indicators1

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

Putting the Proposed Auto Bailout in Perspective

First off, Happy Thanksgiving to you and yours!

Last week Goldman Sachs became the first “bank” to float a bond issue guaranteed by the FDIC.   A look at the weekly debt issues from the Financial Times shows US banks springing back into action, all issuing FDIC guaranteed debt. As I can tell, these are the first bond issues of any major financial institution in Dollars since Lehman’s declaration of bankruptcy.

(For the purposes of this post, all noted bonds sold close enough to par that coupon yields as first order approximations for true yields will suffice. Sorry Professor Jenter!)

  • Goldman Sachs issued $5 billion due in June 2012 yielding 3.25%
  • Morgan Stanley issued $2.25 billion due in Dec 2010 yielding 2.90% and $2.5 billion expiring in December 2011 3.25% and $1 billion due in June 2011, half of which has a known floating rate of   1 month LIBOR plus 74 bp.
  • JP Morgan issued $5 billion due in December 2011 yielding 3.125% and $1billion due in December 2010 with floating rate interest of 3 month LIBOR plus 50bp .

Thanks to the FDIC guarantee, the yields on these bonds are very low, making them very favorable for the issuing banks. Yet the FDIC has only $34.6 billion in funds for this purpose or general insurance on accounts up to $250,000.

I would argue the FDIC’s funds are too small to take on insuring now larger accounts as well as guaranteeing bank bonds. So, the taxpayer is on the hook for  $16.75 billion of new bank debt.

Let’s put that amount in perspective.

  • GM, Ford, and Chrysler are asking for $25 billion
  • The net CDS exposure on GM and Ford amounts to $9.6 billion
  • As I wrote in Note Four A, as part of the TARP program, the tax payer is due to receive roughly $18 billion in dividends from the first $250 billion the Treasury is injecting as preferred equity capital into these same banks.
  • John McCain railed against earmarks all campaign long. President Elect Barack Obama said earmarks amount to $18 billion a year.

Further, it is important to compare the incredibly low yields on these bonds:

  • In the week of November 7, 2008 Ireland, a sovereign euro denominated nation that stated it would guarantee all deposits from six of its largest financial institutions, sold 4 billion of euro debt, due in November 2011, yielding 4.0%

And during the Year of Cheap Credit, Fall of 2006-Spring of 2007 (without any FDIC backing)

  • In September of 2006, Goldman Sachs issued 750 million euros due in October, 2021 yielding 4.75%
  • In September of 2006, Citi issued 1.25 billion euros due in October, 2013 yielding 3.95%
  • In February of 2007, three banks no longer in existence in the same form issued long duration debt:
  1. Wachovia issued 1 billion euros due in February 2014 yielding 3 month Euro LIBOR plus 15 bp.
  2. Lehman Brothers issued 1 billion euros due in March, 2019 yielding 4.625%
  3. Merrill Lynch issued 1 billion euros due in February , 2012 yielding 3 month Euro LIBOR plus 18 bp.

Side Note: it is amazing reviewing that year of cheap credit how few bonds were issued in dollars relative to Euros and Sterling. It made me believe Mayor Mike Bloomberg was right to worry New York was losing out as the capital of global finance.

IN SUM: This is new uncharted waters for the US Taxpayer. What if one of the banks uses the funding to underwrite new acquisitions that create “synergies” resulting in laid off workers? What if the funds are used  to lever up a commodities bet? I do not believe banks raised enough capital to make single bets of that systemic threatening magnitude, but the overall point is this:

  • In large part, banks and autos are short term inelastic industries. Without a bank, its hard to save currency and its hard to do commerce. Without a car in the USA, its hard to travel from point A to B.
  • There are plenty of foreign banks and plenty of foreign car companies.
  • I reckon between the FDIC, Treasury and Fed plans, we are spending close or guaranteeing close to $2 trillion, ~15% of GDP, for our private sector banking industry. While congress has made “noises” on insufficient bank lending, there is no plan attached to this funding. Yet produce autos and ask for $25 billion, you’d better have a plan.
  • Bottom line for CEOs learning how to manage through a future crises: It sure pays to be the industry first in line for help.

December 1, 2008   2 Comments

Emerging Market Debt Spreads - How things have changed

Remember the good old days of 2006-07?

On a random January 17th, 2007 3-Month LIBOR was 5.36%. Yet two treasuries were bidding 4.91%. The Fed Funds target rate was 5.25%. In short, spreads were short.

More amazing were Emerging Market Bonds and the market’s confidence in sovereign performance.

  • On that same January 17th, 2007, the Ukraine’s debt expiring in June, 2013 was priced only 1.35% higher than US government bonds of the same duration.
  • South Africa was only 0.97 basis points more and
  • Russia, the country that would 18 months later invade Georgia, had debt set to expire in March, 2030 only 100 basis points more than the US treasuries.

(sigh)

The picture is significantly different today.

  • At market close on November 12th, Ukraine’s debt noted above is now 18.13% more than US treasuries.
  • South Africa’s is 6.61% greater .
  • And Russia’s debt is 5.45% higher.

Why?

Current Account Deficits are the place to look.

  • Ukraine: At the end of 2006, 3.71% of GDP. Today,  the IMF estimates it is 7.2% of GDP
  • South Africa: At the end of 2006, 7.26% of GDP. Today,  the IMF estimates it is 8.0% of GDP
  • Russia: At the end of 2006, it had a surplus of 9.50% of GDP. Today,  the IMF estimates it had dropped to 6.4% of GDP.

In general, owing more to debtors outside your own walls creates one of two possibilities:

  1. Default (as in the case of Argentina)
  2. Currency devaluation, which when importing basic staples or other durables, causes inflation, making the bond payments less valuable

But further, this massive spread increase could also be caused by a flight to “quality” of US Treasuries. Capital is simply skittish of anything but the US Taxpayer. Which, at this point, should give us all pause.

Regardless, the bailout the G1, G3, G7 are trying is crimping the ability for emerging markets to raise capital, increasing strain on IMF funding and solvency.  Crowding out 101 is in effect.

November 13, 2008   No Comments

How to Finance the Bailout

The Treasury can choose how to finance this purchase.

First though, the plan gives us insight into when Treasury foresees the US Economy recovering. If all preferred shares are callable in three years, but only redeemable through equity (and not debt) prior to, then in essence, Treasury believes we will not fully calm the credit markets until three years from now.

At present, The Treasury issues 2 Years, 5 Years, and 10 Years. Yet Treasury must know most banks will call the preferred shares by year five when the dividend percentage increases from 5% to 9%.

Yet how many banks will take out the preferred shares prior to year three? Probably not many.

The safest debt instrument then is a five year treasury debt instrument. Here is why:

  • The Yield on Five Year Treasuries is 2.609%, cheap money.
  • No refinance risk. The preferred shares are retired back piece by piece through the next five years. While there is a chance of buying back treasuries at a premium when the debt is retired, the debt is so cheap; this problem is hard to imagine.

  • Isolates the problem to the current administration. No doubt, models exist predicting when various banks will pay back the preferred shares, estimating duration and a possible combination of two year debt, five year debt and accept some refinance risk if funding is further needed.

October 26, 2008   No Comments

Market highs, but only for TED

Since the First Note, The Government’s Credit Committee, with members Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, and Richard Shelby took more time to get comfortable with Hank Paulson’s proposal.

While the debate in Washington raged on, one month LIBOR increased from 3.19% to 3.70%. Three month LIBOR increased from 3.21% to 3.76%. Commercial Paper increased from 2.50% to 2.70%. Letter of Credit facilities are not expanding. Essentially the way balance sheets are funded is grinding to a halt.

So, how could most corporations raise capital faced with this problem? One answer would be to short treasury securities of the same duration. Simply borrowing the securities, selling them into the market for cash, with the promise to deliver those securities later would do the job.

And why not? Treasury securities expiring on Dec 31 are yielding a paltry 1.02%. Treasury securities expiring on Dec 15 are yielding .68%. Would a betting man believe yields would increase or decrease in the next week? Considering inflation increased over the past year and that the US will sell an additional $700 Billion of debt into the market, yields will most certainly rise.

So, given the demand to short and the rational argument that yields will increase, the fact that the spread is so significant is in fact very significant. Money that normally would buy commercial paper and be infused into interbank offerings is now moving to “quality”. That quality is the United States government backed bonds and notes.

We can quickly examine the balance sheet and income statement of the US Government to know the following:

  1. Liabilities just increased by close to $1 trillion, including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG and the proposed bailout.
  2. Projected top line tax revenue is expected to decline as housing values sink and oil relief is still far off.
  3. Inflation is still a huge risk.

So how is this quality? The simple answer is that it is not. And if the US Government is not quality, then imagine how much mistrust is in the private market right now. And this is exactly why those shorting trades are not occurring and not helping to re-balance the spread, lowering TED.

For all of 2008 until now, we heard and read the financial sector was amuck, but corporate American remained strong. Yet now, we are conceivably in a macro-economic death-spiral.

  1. If companies continue to be faced with high interest rates and refusal of credit, they will stop expanding.
  2. Further, for all those companies who did not hedge exposure (and with lack of quality counter-parties, it is conceivable this is a lot), they will be forced to pay higher rates of interest now on all existing loans and notes.
  3. To meet higher rates, companies will have to cut expenses, essentially wages. Reductions of wages will depress the economy further.
  4. Consumer spending will continue to decline, making more companies unable to meet existing obligations.
  5. Credit spreads will increase for fear of company credit and the cycle will continue.

This week will be as wild as the last one….

September 29, 2008   No Comments