While the Japanese and Swiss central banks have turned themselves into hedge
funds by loading up on equities, the US Fed has stuck to supporting the
stock market indirectly, by buying bonds. It's worked, obviously, with all
major US indexes at record highs. But it won't work going forward, thanks to
two gathering trends.
First, the main way bond buying supports equities is by lowering interest
rates which, among other things, allows corporations to borrow cheaply and
use the proceeds to buy back their own stock. Companies avoid paying
dividends on the repurchased stock and the government gets capital gains tax
revenue from a bull market. From a short-sighted Keynesian perspective, it's
a win-win.
Alas, this New Age public/private partnership on running out of steam.
Interest rates have fallen about as far as they can fall and corporations have
borrowed about as much as they can borrow. So the buyback binge is topping:
Share
Buybacks Sink For Second Straight Year
(Forbes) – According to S&P Dow Jones Indices, companies of the
S&P 500 index in the fourth quarter pulled back on their share
repurchases by 7.2% from the fourth quarter 2015, although they accelerated
20.6% sequentially.
Companies spent $135.3 billion buying back their shares during the fourth
quarter, compared to $112.2 billion from the third quarter and $145.9 billion
in the fourth quarter 2015. For the full year, they spent $536.4 billion on
buybacks, a decline from $546.4 billion in 2015 and $553.3 billion in 2014 –
the first time the index saw two consecutive years of declines since the
financial crisis era or 2008 and 2009.
A longer-term but potentially much bigger problem for equities can be
found in the structure of US retirement savings accounts. At age 70, holders
of IRAs are required to start cashing them out, and as the number of Boomer
retirees soars the size of these required sales will rise commensurately.
Here's a snippet from a longer analysis by Economica's Chirs Hamilton. The
full article is here.
Required
Minimum Distributions Spell Disaster (& Even Greater Intervention) As
Sellers To Overwhelm Buyers
Simply put, investing for the long term had it's time but that time is
drawing to a close. The math is pretty easy...we'll have too many sellers and
too few buyers. Why? At age 70.5 years old, retirees are mandated by force of
law to sell tax deferred assets accumulated over their lifetime and do so in
a 15 year period. Conversely, buyers, incented by tax deferral (but not
forced to buy by law), generally have a 35yr window of accumulation. Over the
past 65 years (on a population basis), there were three new buyers for every
new seller. Over the next 25 years (on a population basis), there will be
three new sellers for every new buyer.
In the next downturn, corporations will stop buying -- as they always do
at bottoms -- and retirees will be forced by both necessity and law to
liquidate some of their nest eggs. Combined, these sales will put
unacceptable downward pressure on stock prices, leading to the kinds of
instability that over-leveraged systems can't handle.
The Fed – and probably the ECB – will then join the BOJ and SNB in buying
equities. Like QE and the other recent monetary experiments, this might be
seen by mainstream economists as a good thing. But it's not. For at least
three reasons why it's not, see We're All Hedge Funds Now,
Part 4: Central Banks Become World's Biggest Stock Speculators for at
least three reasons why it will make a bad situation infinitely worse.