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It is generally
accepted that the recent financial crisis was brought about by excessive
borrowing due to cheap and easy credit, and this excessive borrowing
increased the risk in the financial system as market participants leveraged
up to the hilt. Therefore it appears to be somewhat hypocritical to claim
that the best action to take after such a crisis is to lower borrowing costs
and make credit more accessible. This essay will explore the recent
quantitative easing actions by the Federal Reserve, the repercussions of
these actions and what implications similar policies may have on the
financial markets and the global economy going forward.
The first effect of this quantitative easing by the Fed
that we will consider is higher equity prices, which Chairman Ben Bernanke
believes will lead to lower unemployment. Although such a leap may appear a
tad far-fetched to some, Bernanke's reasoning for this is based on an
economic theory called the wealth effect, which states that an increase in
spending accompanies an increase in perceived wealth. Therefore if the stock
market is rising, consumers will feel wealthier and increase their spending.
This will boost the economy and lead to more jobs, thereby decreasing
unemployment.
The question that therefore must be raised is this: how
many people actually feel richer and therefore spend more due to a rise in
the stock market? One would have to have investments in the stock markets
to be a beneficiary of such a rise, and with US domestic funds being hit with
their 27th consecutive week of outflows, it is clear that the majority of
ordinary retail investors do not have significant holdings in the stock
market and those that do are reducing those holdings. Furthermore, retail
outflows for 2010 stand at $85 billion, so the very consumers that Ben
Bernanke is trying to stimulate by raising stock prices are pulling their
money out of the market. Even if a consumer did have significant stock
holdings, if they are to spend that money in the economy, then they will have
to sell their holdings to create the cash to spend. In turn, this would exert
a downward pressure on stock prices which the Fed is trying to keep high.
Perhaps the Fed believes it can create more money to counteract this, or that
consumers will borrow money against their stock market profits to spend, or
they will start spending their cash savings instead of selling stocks.
Whichever way one looks at it, the logic is built on shaky foundations. It
makes one wonder why the Fed does not simply cut the stock market, (the middle
section of the equation) out, and simply write all consumers a cheque. The recent measure quantitative easing
announcement of US$600 billion split amongst the US population would give
everyone $1954.35 each, which would undoubtedly lead to a fair increase in
spending.
However there could be something to be said for the
psychological effect of rising stock prices even for those who do not have
any holdings in the stock market. This is the preposition that a rising stock
market generally increases confidence amongst consumers leading them to spend
more. Businesses may also be more confident in the state of the economy and
therefore be more inclined to hire more workers. Such a boost in confidence,
however, is more likely to be generated via a sustained rise in the stock
market over a longer period of time. The fact that the S&P 500 has just
about rallied to a level (1200) it first reached in nominal terms in 1998,
some 12 years ago, isn't exactly confidence building material.
 
Therefore, if the stock market is to truly have a
psychological impact on the mindset of consumers and businesses, it would really
need to make a new all time high. This would be a clear psychological sign
that the business cycle is in an upswing and consumers can get back to
spending, and businesses back to hiring. However the market would need to
rally by a good 25% to reach these highs, something which may require a great
deal more quantitative easing by the Fed to be achieved in the short term.
The image of the Federal Reserve pumping money into the
system to keep stock prices rising may actually be counterproductive to confidence
building. Ben Bernanke saying that it is necessary to print another $600
billion, on top of previous quantitative easing programs that injected over
$1 trillion, in order to keep the stock market rising, implies that without
such action by the Fed share prices would not be moving upwards. Therefore
one can infer that all is not well in the economy and using the stock market
as a barometer of the economic health is flawed since the market is being
moved higher by the Fed's actions, as opposed to good fundamentals. So while
the wealth effect theory may have its merits, its application by the Federal
Reserve to restore confidence and achieve their mandate of full employment is
not going to work. After all, Zimbabwe's stock market gained 30,000% in 2008,
but nobody would say that it is an effective measure of economic health in
that country, nor restoring confidence in the state of the economy.
A primary goal of the current Federal Reserve policy is
lower interest rates, which it believes will stimulate growth after the
global financial crisis. Despite the apparent hypocrisy of combating a
financial crisis spawned by an excess supply of cheap and easy credit, by
making credit cheaper and easier to access, there is another negative aspect
to the Fed's actions. During the recent global credit crisis, financial
markets underwent a massive dose of deleveraging, in which there was a
drastic selling of almost all assets in an attempt to increase core capital
ratios. This reduced the risk in the system, which had grown to unstable
levels as evidenced by the leverage in some financial institutions, which was
running at around 30-1. However current Fed policies are creating strong
incentives for institutions to increase their risk, and therefore the risk in
the financial system.
As the Fed lowers interest rates by purchasing US
Treasury bonds, which would be the common benchmark of a risk free asset, or
at least the lowest risk possible for a US dollar investment, it lowers the
incentive for investors to invest in these bonds. With one month Treasuries
yielding just 0.13% and the real rates on even 5 year bonds being negative,
there is not much return to be had in holding these bonds. This is of great
concern to the management of highly competitive investment firms, all anxious
for their performance to be substantially positive to secure bonuses not and
to lag behind others. Therefore there is now a higher incentive to place
funds in riskier investments, with money flowing not only into US equities,
but gold, commodities and emerging markets as well, as shown by surges in
their respective prices recently.
This shift in trading incentives has been dubbed
"risk on/risk on" by many in the investment community, summarising the pattern of looser monetary policy leading
to rises in the prices of riskier assets, risk on, and if monetary policy
appears to be tightening or even becoming slightly less accommodating, risk
is off and risky assets will be falling in price. The fact that the Fed
actions are fueling the "risk on" trade should be of grave concern
to all market stakeholders, as it is increasing the risk in the financial
markets and therefore increasing the probability of a crisis caused by
deleveraging as we saw in 2008, since the same policies that brought about
that crisis are in full swing yet again.
The rise in commodity prices spurred by the Fed's
actions has further negative repercussions, which are both economic and
social in nature. Firstly, rising commodity prices risks stifling already
fragile global economic growth. For example, soaring cotton prices have
caused issues for many clothing business, and all are aware of the negative
effect rising oil prices can have on economic growth. At best this could lead
to some cost push inflation, but more serious consequences could include
business shutting down their operations due to the rising cost of their raw
materials. It may not be possible for businesses to increase their prices in
accordance with the increase in costs to maintain profit margins, especially
when most consumers are already reluctant to spend. Secondly there is the
social impact of rising food and energy costs, which hit the poorest in
society the hardest, since these items make up a larger proportion of their
expenditure. The poorest 20% of Americans spend over 50% of their income on
food and energy, whereas the richest 20% only spend 10%. One may think that
the wealth effect of rising stock prices would then be counterbalanced by the
rise in food and energy costs for Americans, but the reality is that the
poorest 20% are being hit the hardest by rising commodity prices and likely
do not have any meaningful investments in the stock market, if any at all. In
comparison, the richest 20% are being affected the least by the rise in
commodities and benefiting the most from rising stock prices since they are
more likely to have meaningful investments in the market.
Another major goal of current Federal Reserve policy is
apparently to devalue the US dollar, and the decline in the US dollar has
also contributed significantly to the rise in commodity prices recently. The
Fed believes that devaluing the dollar will lead to an increase in net
exports, as American goods become cheaper in foreign currency terms, and this
will lead to an increase in GDP and therefore a decrease in unemployment.
Whilst this sounds like a reasonable argument at first glance, the argument
loses credibility when one acknowledges that Bernanke is not the only central
banker to have recognised this relationship, and
the Federal Reserve isn't the only central bank trying to devalue its
currency in order to boost growth.
Since all currencies trade relative to one another,
devaluation of the greenback can be canceled out by the weakening of
currencies that it trades against. Countries including Japan, Brazil, Peru,
Taiwan and Korea have all intervened in an attempt to weaken their currencies
against the US dollar. Brazil has gone even further and increased its tax on
foreign inflows into fixed income and investment funds from 2% to 4%, in an
attempt to reduce demand for the Brazilian Real. China has the most effective
means of ensuring that their currency does not strengthen against the US
dollar, simply by pegging the Yuan to the greenback and refusing to allow the
Yuan to appreciate to a level which Bernanke and many others believe it
should be trading at. The calls for China to allow their currency to
appreciate, and Bernanke saying that their refusal to do so is hampering
global growth, are falling on deaf ears. The Chinese are ultimately only interested
in Chinese growth and the health of the Chinese economy, exhibiting the self
interest quality that is indeed present in all countries. Therefore the
theory that devaluing the dollar boosts exports and growth is not valid in
this case, since there are too many players trying the same move.
A more serious threat is presented by these common
policies of currency devaluation, being that a currency devaluation war will
ensue as countries attempt to beat one another's devaluation efforts and
fight to have the weakest currency. This bares uncomfortable similarities to
the infamous tariff war of the 1930s. Currency devaluation aims to make
exports cheaper to foreign consumers and imports more expensive to domestic
consumers, thereby increasing net exports. This has the same effect that
trade tariffs had in the 1930s, as countries are still exhibiting
protectionism, albeit using a different method. Therefore a currency
devaluation war risks damaging global trade in a similar fashion to the way
it was damaged by tariffs in the 1930s, something which is a serious threat
given the consequences of such polices during the Great Depression.
One major currency that has yet to seriously enter this
devaluation battle is the Euro, with the EU currently far too preoccupied with
sovereign debt issues and trying to maintain the credibility of this
relatively new currency in the global financial marketplace. In reality, the
sovereign debt issues have caused plenty of downwards pressure on the Euro,
so the ECB has not yet been forced to deal with the issue of a weakening US
dollar causing the Euro to appreciate and harm European exporters. Whether or
not the ECB will follow the Fed and embark on quantitative easing in the
future is a topic best left to another essay, but the Fed actions are perhaps
increasing the incentive for the ECB to do so since they are devaluing the US
dollar and therefore strengthening the Euro relative to the greenback.
Regardless of how detrimental one thinks current
Federal Reserve actions are, the reality is that
Bernanke and his colleagues cannot do much else. The true problem does not
lie in the actions of the Federal Reserve, it lies
in the motive for these actions. The Federal Reserve has a mandate of using
monetary policy to promote the objectives of full employment, price
stability, and moderate long-term interest rates. Therefore their job is not
to decide whether these goals are in the best interest of the economy, their
function is simply to use monetary policy to achieve these goals. The goal of
full employment is the problem here, since we are going through a slump in
the business cycle, so the reality is that the unemployment rate should be
fairly high. Attempting to bring this unemployment rate down, when market
forces are dictating that it should remain high for some time, is not
possible, at least not without causing additional problems that will most
probably be more severe.
Therefore the solution for current challenges facing
the American and indeed global economy is not quantitative easing, lower
interest rates, higher stock prices or currency devaluation. The solution is
to change the mandate of the Federal Reserve so that the only goal is price
stability, allowing the Federal Reserve to step back from the current
environment where inflation is low and under control, and thereby letting
natural market forces to begin working to bring about a sustainable economic
recovery built on solid fundamentals. Businesses should be focusing on to how
to make their operations more efficient and competitive, rather than hoping a depreciation in the exchange rate will to this for them.
A high unemployment rate is not the end of the world, recessions and slumps
in the economic cycle are to be expected and taken in ones stride. It is the
fear of these declines that is the more dangerous, since it leads to reckless
and ineffective policy making in an effort to avoid them. This produces more
significant negative consequences than if the economic cycle was simply left
to run its course, with the free market dictating its movements.
Sam Kirtley
SKkoptionstrading
Mr. Kirtley manages
www.skoptiontrading.com and offers real time trading signals to subscribers. To stay updated on his marrket commentary, which gold stocks we are buying and
why, you can subscribe to The Gold Prices Newsletter, completely FREE of
charge. Simply click here and enter your email address. (Winners of the GoldDrivers
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