Showing posts with label Fed. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fed. Show all posts

Thursday, September 22, 2011

Yes, Monetary Policy is Important!

That's what markets are screaming right now. If monetary policy was out of bullets, the markets wouldn't react to a disappointing Fed meeting.

As I said previously,

Any kind of a long term anchor (explicit NGDP/CPI targeting) or adjustable policy (changing IOR or asset purchases monthly based on the latest data) will be more effective  than ambiguous and rigid policies (QE2, keeping the Fed Funds rate at 0% for "an extended period of time")

"Operation Twist" is even worse than QE2 or commitments to keep the Fed funds rate at 0%. Is it any wonder stocks, commodities, interest rates, and inflation expectations are plummeting?

We are in scary territory.

Why Yesterday's Meeting was so Disasspointing

Here's the full statement

Markets were hoping for lower interest on reserves, or a mention of other policies the Fed could enact at a future date. Instead, they got a policy most agree was previously ineffective and a very negative outlook about the economy, implying the Fed isn't willing to take the necessary steps to boost aggregate demand.

Saturday, August 6, 2011

The Disaster That Is Federal Reserve policy.

Tim Duy nicely sums up how incompetent Fed policy has been over the past few years.
Bottom Line:  The market nosedive does not yet guarantee Fed action in the near future.  History has shown the Fed tends to react with a lag.  They should have learned better by now, but if they had learned anything, they would not have pushed forward with hawkish rhetoric earlier this year.  Arguably, they will hold firm, let the markets think they are out of the game and further bid down implied inflation expectations, and then, once the damage is done, up the level of stimulus.  Terrible way to run an economy, I know.
I think this is exactly right, and it shows how misguided the Fed is right now. If the Fed is looking at market inflation expectations (and they have made it clear they are) they seem to be forgetting that those expectations have expected monetary policy built into them. To the extent that expectations deviate from the Fed's implicit goal (2-3%), they already represent policy failure.

To use a "Sumnerian" analogy, it would be like the captain of the Titanic looking at market expectations of their eventual destination and saying "Expectations say we'll be in New York City on time, looks like my job is done!", without realizing those expectations exist because he is expected to appropriately react to changing conditions (and avoid icebergs!).

It's actually worse than this though, because the Fed will never make up for "lost" NGDP growth. They've already made it quite clear they aren't comfortable with inflation above ~2% under any circumstances, and so we are left with a permanently lower NGDP and 
price level trend.

To put this into perspective, in 2008, when the financial crisis began, a good guess for 2018 NGDP would have been about $26 trillion. Right now, even if we get 5% NGDP from this point forward it will be just over $22 trillion! Over the course of a decade this will have added up to a $27 trillion* difference in nominal income! Too bad for anyone paying wage contracts, but at least employees got a nice real wage boost! And sure, it hurts debtors, but investors have done fantastically! 
You may detect a hint of sarcasm. So much for the "trade offs" of inflation/deflation between creditors and debtors that some are pushing.

* I originally mistakenly wrote it would result in a $105 trillion difference because I forgot I was dealing with quarterly annualized numbers.

Wednesday, July 13, 2011

No Surprises Here - Let's Hope Bernanke Has Learned His Lesson

Stocks, commodities and long term bond yields all rose in response to Bernanke's testimony today. Expected fed funds rates fell, which suggests any more stimulus is more about postponing tightening than anything else.

If the Fed does need to engage in additional asset purchases (and I think it's extremely likely it will) it should use more flexible policies than it did in QE2. Instead of announcing in advance it will purchase $X in bonds over a certain time period, the Fed should purchase or sell (if the economy improves rapidly) as many bonds as it needs on a month to month basis in response to changing economic circumstances. This would allow them to seamlessly transition between tightening and easing as if they were controlling the fed funds rate.

Better late than never...

Thursday, June 30, 2011

Fed Funds and Aggregate Demand 6/30/2011



S&P 500
April 27 : 1357
May 26 : 1325.69
June 22 : 1287.14
June 30 : 1320.64

Treasuries
2 year
April 27: 0.64
May 26 : 0.48
June 22 : 0.36
June 30 : 0.45
10 Year
April 27 : 3.35
May 26 : 3.06
June 22 : 2.96
June 30 : 3.15
30 Year
April 27 : 4.45
May 26 : 4.22
June 22 : 4.19
June 30 : 4.36

Inflation Expectations
2 year inflation swaps
April 27 : 2.65
May 26 : 2.12
June 22 : 1.83
June 30 : 1.84
5 Year TIPS Breakeven rate
April 27 : 2.35
May 26 : 2.07
June 22 : 1.89
June 30 : 2.03
10 Year TIPS spread
April 27 : 2.60
May 26 : 2.34
June 22 : 2.24
June 30 : 2.48
30 Year TIPS spread
April 27 : 2.68
May 26 : 2.47
June 22 : 2.39
June 30 : 2.65

Bloomberg Commodity Index
April 27 : 1766.98
May 26 : 1684.28
June 22 : 1665.53
June 30 : 1667.7

EUR USD
April 27 : 1.4738
May 26 : 1.4129
June 22 : 1.4268
June 30 : 1.4496

(Data from bloomberg.com)

The potential resolution of the Greece crisis pushed markets in a positive direction this week. European debt problems could have potentially caused a flight from Euros into Dollars and since a higher demand for dollars could only have been offset by a larger supply, this would have required fed action... and we know how hesitant they are to act at a 0% fed funds rate.

If the economy can avoid any negative shocks the Fed might be able to get by without actions stimulus, but the recovery will likely continue at a "frustratingly slow pace" (to borrow a phrase from Bernanke) unless the Fed becomes willing to "put up with" higher NGDP growth.

One could put a positive spin on current events by pointing out that inflation pressures are non-existent and another commodity boom seems unlikely (given that the "boom" last year really just returned prices to pre-crisis levels). Year over year inflation should fall and it will be harder for inflation hawks to argue for tighter money under this scenario.

The problem with that argument is that the Fed already knows these things and still can't agree that money is too tight. The Fed has also shown how eager it is to tighten if things get even marginally better. I hope I'm wrong.

Friday, June 24, 2011

Fed Funds and Aggregate Demand Watch 6/22/2011



S&P 500
April 27 : 1357
May 26 : 1325.69
June 15 : 1265.42
June 22 : 1287.14

Treasuries
2 year
April 27: 0.64
May 26 : 0.48
June 15 : 0.38
June 22 : 0.36
10 Year
April 27 : 3.35
May 26 : 3.06
June 15 : 2.97
June 22 : 2.96
30 Year
April 27 : 4.45
May 26 : 4.22
June 15 : 4.20
June 22 : 4.19

Inflation Expectations
2 year inflation swaps
April 27 : 2.65
May 26 : 2.12
June 15 : 2.00
June 22 : 1.83
5 Year TIPS Breakeven rate
April 27 : 2.35
May 26 : 2.07
June 15 : 2.01
June 22 : 1.89
10 Year TIPS spread
April 27 : 2.6
May 26 : 2.34
June 15 : 2.29
June 22 : 2.24
30 Year TIPS spread
April 27 : 2.68
May 26 : 2.47
June 15 : 2.44
June 22 : 2.39

Bloomberg Commodity Index
April 27 : 1766.98
May 26 : 1684.28
June 15 : 1674.20
June 22 : 1665.53

EUR USD
April 27 : 1.4738
May 26 : 1.4129
June 15 : 1.4172
June 22 : 1.4268

(Data from bloomberg.com)

Expectations for aggregate demand continue to slowly deteriorate as the Fed maintains a "neutral" policy. 

Monday, June 20, 2011

QE2 and the Economy

QE2 clearly impacted asset prices, but how was the actual economy affected? 

It should be noted that the recovery had basically lost all momentum in the summer of 2010 and that claims that the economy was "already on the road to recovery" before QE2 seem questionable, especially given the impact QE2 seemed to have on asset markets.

Starting with employment:

\


Employment based on the Establishment Survey (the survey used to measure month to month changes in employment) clearly did better during the "QE2 period" than during the period before QE2. If employment growth continues at a 150,000+ pace over the next couple months this may just be momentum but if it remains weak (and I predict it will) it seems pretty clear QE2 positively affected employment growth.


The Household Survey (The survey used to measure unemployment) basically gives the same result. Simply put, the only time we've had adequate employment growth since the recession was during the period of QE2.


Since unemployment claims are measured on a weekly basis they provide a somewhat clearer picture of the impact of QE2 on employment. Unemployment claims sharply refute the claim that things were improving without QE2 (notice the "flatness" of claims from late 2009 to mid 2010) or that QE2 didn't help stimulate aggregate demand. This, along with the other employment data seem to strongly suggest QE2 positively affected the employment situation.


It's much harder to argue the turnaround in consumer credit was the continuation of the recovery before QE2. Consumer credit clearly fell until QE2 was hinted at and it started rising steadily immediately afterwards.



Both ISM surveys give the same basic result; the economy slowly gained momentum from late 2008 to early 2010 when it began to stall until QE2 began.


Industrial production is somewhat less clear, but it too seems to have slowed to a crawl in 2010 until a few months after QE2 began. It should once again be noted that economic expectations fell off a cliff before QE2 (very similar to the way they have today), so even a continuation of the previous trend is a success of some kind.



At no point since the recession did retail and auto sales grow so consistently and so strongly than they did during the "QE2 period". Also note the drop-off since QE2 effectively ended.
It will be interesting to see how data turns out the next few months. The weaker it is, the stronger the evidence that QE2 was effective. 

In summary : The evidence that QE2 worked is enormous, but it wasn't enough. If the fed engages in further asset purchases, it should include an explicit target (inflation, NGDP) and should adjust their size according to changes in the performance of the economy.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

An Unsurprisingly Unsurprising Press Conference

But Bloomberg gets it. It can't be any more obvious markets want easier money. That's a pretty clear refutation of the US being in a liquidity trap. If markets believe monetary policy can work, then monetary policy can work (by reducing the demand for money).

That only leaves those who believe additional monetary stimulus will cause undesirably high inflation... But inflation expectations remain low, and prices are still below their long term trend.

One-Year Chart for BE 5 Year (USGGBE05:IND)

In addition, whatever Bernanke means by "faster growth" isn't fast enough, and I don't expect stronger growth until the Fed takes additional actions.

Thursday, May 19, 2011

What is Bernanke thinking?

Many good economists have expressed dismay at Bernanke's behavior during this recession. If they could have picked any man to preside over a financial crisis and zero interest rate policy at the Fed, Ben Bernanke would have been their first pick. So were they wrong?

I don't think so. While the chairman of the Federal Reserve is undoubtedly the most powerful member of the Fed, he certainly doesn't make policy decisions by himself. The Federal Reserve failed miserably in the crisis by letting NGDP fall dramatically, but that doesn't mean Bernanke hasn't done everything he can have to ease policy.

Here's a simple model of how the Fed Chairman might think about how he really affects policy. (In my examples I'm assuming the chairman wants easier policy than the median Fed voter but this could easily work in the other direction as well).

M = C – Dx

"M" is the easiness of the Federal Reserve as a whole, "C" represents the individual easiness of the chairman (Through statement wording, policy instruments and public statements) and "D" represents the number of dissents from official Federal Reserve policy. The variable "x" represents how strongly dissents serve to push policy in the opposite of the direction desired by the fed chairman.

Here's an illustration of the model:
(As Bernanke individually becomes more dovish he quickly runs into diminishing returns with regard to changing the Fed's overall stance)

The implications of this model are:
  • The chairman individually promoting easier policy will ease actual Fed policy until it leads to dissents.
  • At some point, the chairman attempting to ease policy will actually make policy tighter because it decreases the likelihood the chairman will have the votes in the future to continue current policy, and undermines his perceived power which decreases the likelihood he will be reappointed (and his replacement will likely be closer to the median board voter).
  • If the chairman is going to ease his position enough to get a dissent, he should ease as much as possible without causing an additional dissent.
  • The chairman needs to guess the value of x, although he will likely know the effect of C on D

So Bernanke is essentially keeping policy and his public statements much more hawkish than he really wants in order to prevent dissents from the board. He could ease policy, but doing so would cause board members to dissent and those dissents would undermine any additional easiness in policy. If you believe, as Bernanke does, that the expected path of monetary policy is monetary policy then this makes a lot of sense.

One question might be why there aren't more dissents than there already are. There is only one (Hoenig) and in addition to him not being a voting member this year, he is leaving the board in October.

A possible answer is that other voting members have formed a voting coalition with each other. If each member simply dissents when policy becomes too extreme according to their own individual opinion, the chairman would be left with a great deal of power to maneuver overall policy in his desired direction. If, on the other hand, they form an agreement to threaten dissent at the same time, they would ensure policy could become no tighter than their mutually agreed point of dissent. Since transactions costs are low with so few members, such negotiations seem highly plausible.

But where are the doves?A single dissent could theoretically make perceived policy easier and Bernanke wouldn't have to push past such a dissent in the same way he does a hawkish dissenter.

This is all speculation of course, but does anyone really think Bernanke isn't being constrained by other Fed board members? 

So maybe a better question than "Why hasn't Bernanke done more?" is "Why haven't Fed doves done more... by dissenting?"

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Fed Funds Trajectory - Before and After the Fed Annoucement

Fed Funds futures fell very slightly in response to today's speech and Q&A with Bernanke. Take a look at the response in other markets.

S&P 500
Before : 1347
After : 1357

Treasuries
2 year
Before : 0.66
After : 0.64
10 Year
Before : 3.35
After : 3.35
30 Year
Before : 4.42
After : 4.45

Inflation Expectations (based on 2 year inflation swaps)
Before : 2.66
After : 2.65

Bloomberg Commodity Index
Before : 1764.38
After : 1766.98

There's nothing shocking here because there was nothing shocking about the Bernanke's speech. Still, all of these moves are entirely consistent with the view that 1) The Fed can increase AD -- and that 2) Higher AD won't push prices significantly higher, even in the short run.

It's also worth noting that 30 Year Treasury yields rose 6.9 basis points today, while 30 Year TIPS rose 5.6 basis points. 10 Year Treasury yields rose 4.8 basis points and 10 year TIPS rose 4.5 basis points. That strongly implies that higher interest rates (as well as higher equity and commodity prices) are not a result of higher expected inflation, but of higher expected real growth.