Showing posts with label Market Reactions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Market Reactions. 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.

Tuesday, August 9, 2011

Market Reaction To FOMC Announcement





(Before data was taken at 2:00 pm, After data was recorded at market closing prices)

S&P 500
Before : 1138.64
After : 1172.53

Treasuries
2 year
Before : 0.27
After : 0.20
10 Year
Before : 2.33
After : 2.26
30 Year
Before : 3.68
After : 3.64


Inflation Expectations
2 year inflation swaps
Before : 1.43
After : 1.39

5 Year TIPS Breakeven rate
Before : 1.81
After : 1.78

10 Year TIPS spread
Before : 2.27
After : 2.22

30 Year TIPS spread
Before : 2.64
After : 2.61


Bloomberg Commodity Index
Before : 1601.42
After : 1598.48


EUR USD
Before : 1.4221
After : 1.4339


(Data from bloomberg.com)


The market reaction to the Fed announcement today was certainly interesting. Fed Funds Futures unsurprisingly fell in reaction to the commitment to leave them at 0% until 2013. Equities took a while to figure out how they felt, seesawing up and down before finally rising about 3% from their pre-meeting rallies. Treasury yields fell, especially at the medium end of the curve (only because the short end can't fall any further). Inflation expectations also fell slightly as well, along with commodities and the dollar. 

Personally I think the Fed announcement was underwhelming. Committing (whether loosely or strictly, no one really knows how serious they are about this commitment, or even whether it is a commitment at all - are they simply predicting they will need to do this?) to leaving rates at 2013 is another way of telling us that they predict a significant output gap will remain at least until then and won't take the necessary actions to do anything about it. Is there anyone who isn't thinking about Japan now?

The dissents are puzzling... if 3 members are going to dissent, why not do something more like lower interest on reserves? Maybe they would have had even more dissents if they did, if so, we are in serious trouble... if not, they obviously should have tried more. Christina Romer said the dissents might be a sign Bernanke is now more willing to work without unanimous approval of policies, but why not do more right now?


I don't blame markets for their "confusion"... I'm not really sure how to read this either. It was certainly better than nothing, but not much better. Much more stimulus is needed. Still, today once again demonstrated that markets don't buy either liquidity trap or easy money stories.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Fed Funds and Aggregate Demand 8/4/2011



S&P 500
May 11 : 1342.08
June 8 : 1279.56
July 7 : 1353.22
August 4 : 1200.07

Treasuries
2 year
May 11 : 0.55
June 8 : 0.38
July 7 : 0.47
August 4 : 0.26

10 Year
May 11 : 3.18
June 8 : 2.94
July 7 : 3.16
August 4 : 2.42

30 Year
May 11 : 4.29
June 8 : 4.19
July 7 : 4.38
August 4 : 3.69

Inflation Expectations
2 year inflation swaps
May 11 : 2.16
June 8 : 2.01
July 7 : 1.92
August 4 : 1.65
5 Year TIPS Breakeven rate
May 11 : 2.19
June 8 : 2.02
July 7 : 2.10
August 4 : 1.79
10 Year TIPS spread
May 11 : 2.42
June 8 : 2.27
July 7 : 2.49
August 4 : 2.22
30 Year TIPS spread
May 11 : 2.53
June 8 : 2.45
July 7 : 2.67
August 4 : 2.58

Bloomberg Commodity Index
May 11 : 1672.35
June 8 : 1713.68
July 7 : 1717.93
August 4 : 1660.55

EUR USD
May 11 : 1.4249
June 8 : 1.4577
July 7 : 1.4351
August 4 : 1.4105

(Data from bloomberg.com)

Expectations have fallen dramatically the last couple weeks. Fed intervention of some kind is likely, but we still don't exactly know what the Fed's goal is. Will they react to past inflation rates? Commodities? Job growth? Financial markets? Inflation expectations? Only the FOMC knows. We also don't know how they'll intervene exactly. Hopefully they'll try something more flexible than QE2 was.

Here are predictions I made a couple of months ago. I think they've held up pretty well. The only thing I was off on was underestimating the importance of Europe's debt troubles. Although Europe's woes are also caused by tight money (the European Central Bank seems more concerned with what's good for Germany than what's good for Europe as a whole), there's no reason they should be lowering U.S. NGDP unless the Fed doesn't respond to higher dollar demand... but the Fed isn't responding (at least not until things get really bad), so Europe's woes are lowering U.S. NGDP.

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. 

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

How QE2's Announcement and Premature End Affected Asset Prices

Firstly, let me justify the beginning and end dates for QE2.

I consider August 27, 2010 to be the effective beginning of QE2. On this day Bernanke delivered the Jackson Hole speech in which he first hinted at another round of quantitative easing for the purpose of stimulating aggregate demand.

I consider April 27, 2011 to be the effective end of QE2 (although it would be more accurate to say "the end of any chance for additional easing of any kind unless things get much much worse"). The key quote by Bernanke was this :

“The trade-offs are getting — are getting less attractive at this point. Inflation has gotten higher. Inflation expectations are a bit higher. It’s not clear that we can get substantial improvements in payrolls without some additional inflation risk."

He hasn't given any indication he has changed his mind since, or that he plans to pursue any other form of easing.

Now that you know where I'm coming from, let's look at some asset prices!


No form of assets responded more clearly to the announcement and effective end of QE2 than equities did. Higher equity prices reflect better economic expectations and those expectations can become a self fulfilling prophecy through Tobin's q and wealth effects. Perhaps more importantly, higher stock prices also partially reflect a lower demand for dollars and that decreased demand immediately increases nominal spending. Also note the fall after QE2's "end".



Similarly, inflation expectations seem to have been strongly influenced by QE2's announcement. Again note the fall since QE2's end.


Treasury yields also noticeably rose in response to QE2. Many have pointed out that QE2 was supposed to reduce yields and have pointed to their rise as evidence against QE2's effectiveness (ignoring equity prices and inflation expectations), but higher yields were actually reflecting higher inflation real growth expectations. As Milton Friedman and Frederick Mishkin have pointed out, interest rates are NOT a reliable indicator of monetary policy and low interest rates can (and do) signal that money is tight. Higher interest rates usually reflect a healthier economy when rates are this low. Unsurprisingly, the lower rates of the past month have been associated with worsening economic conditions.


Finally, the dollar has almost certainly fallen as a result to QE2. A falling dollar can be a bad sign if it is associated with high inflation (or supply side issues), but high inflation is still not a concern. In this case, a falling dollar helped increase net exports (by cheapening domestic goods) and as reflected less dollar hoarding (which is associated with lower V and more NGDP at any given supply of money). And once again, just as any prospects for additional easing ended the dollar began to rise.

Several excellent economists including John Cochran and James Hamilton have expressed doubts about the effectiveness of QE2. It's true that from a purely mechanical perspective, QE2 was likely irrelevant. So why the impact on markets?

The most likely explanation is that QE2 impacted medium term (2-10 years in the future) NGDP expectations. Anything the Fed can do to convince people that they will push for a higher NGDP in the future will improve expectations. Improved expectations have immediate effects on NGDP as they raise expected inflation/real growth and reduce the demand for dollars (thereby increasing V) today.

If this is the case, why does the Fed seem so uncomfortable with higher future NGDP? I think it's mostly a year over year % change issue versus a level targeting one. The Fed is worried that even temporarily higher rates of inflation and NGDP growth (to catch up to past trends) will be hard to push back down. That would be reasonable if expected inflation was above 3%, but at barely 2% these concerns are completely unjustified. The Fed is also likely concerned about bubbles, but with unemployment at 9% and a tremendous amount of slack in the economy, those concerns need much more justification and evidence backing them before they can be legitimately used to prevent easier policy.

(Half way through creating this post I saw that Marcus Nunes beat me to it and posted something very similar. He makes somewhat different -- although equally valid -- points)

In the next few days I'll post something similar regarding the impact of QE2 on economic data.

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.