domingo, 17 de abril de 2016

domingo, abril 17, 2016

The Fed Can't Save Us

by: Mises Institute

By Robert P. Murphy
[This article first appeared in the March-April issue of The Austrian.]
 
 
In December, the Fed hiked its target for the Federal Funds rate, which is the interest rate banks charge each other for overnight loans of reserves. Since 2008, the Fed's target for the Fed Funds rate had been a range of 0-0.25 percent (or what is referred to as 0-25 "basis points"). But last month, they moved that target range up to 0.25-0.50 percent, ending a seven-year period of effectively zero percent interest rates.
 
From our vantage point, we already see carnage in the financial markets, with the worst opening week in US history. This, of course, lines up neatly with standard Austrian business cycle theory, which says that the central bank can give an appearance of prosperity for a while with cheap credit, but that this only sets the economy up for a crash once rates begin rising.
 
However, there is something new in the present cycle. The Fed is trying to raise rates, while simultaneously maintaining its bloated balance sheet. It is attempting to pull off a magic trick whereby it can keep all of the "benefits" of its earlier rounds of monetary expansion (i.e., "quantitative easing" or "QE"), while removing the artificial stimulus of ultra-low interest rates. As we'll see, this attempt will not end well for the Fed officials or for the rest of us. In the meantime, Ben Bernanke will look on with concern, writing the occasional blog post and perhaps giving a speech about poor Janet Yellen's tough predicament.
 
Austrian Business Cycle Theory
 
One of the seminal contributions of Ludwig von Mises was what he called the circulation credit theory of the trade cycle. In our times, we simply call it Austrian business cycle theory, sometimes abbreviated as ABCT. The Misesian theory was subsequently elaborated by Friedrich Hayek, and it was partly for this work that Hayek won the Nobel Prize in 1974.
 
In the Mises/Hayek view, interest rates are market prices that perform a definite social function. They communicate vital information about consumer preferences regarding the timing of consumption. Entrepreneurs must decide which projects to start, and they can be of varying length. Intuitively, a high interest rate is a signal that consumers are "impatient," meaning that entrepreneurs should not tie resources up in long projects unless there are large gains to be had in output from the delay. On the other hand, a low interest rate reduces the penalty on longer investments, and thus, acts as a green light to tie capital up in lengthy projects.

So long as the interest rate is set by genuine market forces, it gives the correct guidance to entrepreneurs. If consumers are willing to defer immediate gratification, they save large amounts of their income, and this pushes down interest rates. The high savings frees up real resources from current consumption - things like restaurants and movie theaters - and allows more factories and oil wells to be developed.
 
However, if the interest rate drops not because of genuine saving, but instead, because the central bank electronically buys assets with money created "out of thin air," then entrepreneurs are given a false signal. They go ahead and take out loans at the artificially cheap rate, but now, society embarks on an unsustainable trajectory. It is physically impossible for all of the entrepreneurs to complete the long-term projects they begin.
 
In the beginning, the unsustainable expansion appears prosperous. Every industry is growing, trying to bid away workers and other resources from each other. Wages and commodity prices shoot up; unemployment and spare capacity drop. The economy is humming, and the citizens are happy.
 
Yet, it all must come crashing down. In a typical cycle, price inflation eventually rises to the level that the banks become nervous. They halt their credit expansion, allowing interest rates to start rising to a more correct level. The tightening in the credit markets causes pain initially for the most leveraged operations, but gradually, more and more businesses are in trouble. A wave of layoffs ensues, with large numbers of entrepreneurs suddenly realizing they were too ambitious. The painful "bust," or recession, sets in.
 
This Time Is Different (Sort of)
 
Since the financial crisis of 2008, the stock market's surges have coincided with rounds of QE, and the market has faltered whenever the expansion came to a temporary halt. The sharp sell-off in August 2015 occurred when investors thought the first rate hike was imminent (it had been scheduled for September 2015). That particular hike was postponed, but after it went into effect in December, we soon saw the market tank to the 2014 levels.

As we would expect in times of Fed tightening, the official monetary base has fallen sharply in recent months, but this doesn't mean the Fed is selling off assets (as it would in a textbook tightening cycle).
 
Indeed, the Fed's assets have been constant since the end of the so-called taper in late 2014.
 
This is unusual, since the monetary base and the Fed's total assets typically move in tandem.

Yet, since late 2014, there have been three major drops in the monetary base that occurred while the Fed was dutifully rolling over its holdings of mortgage-backed securities and Treasuries, keeping its total assets at a steady level.
 
The explanation is that the Fed has been testing out new techniques to temporarily suck reserves out of the banking system, while not reducing its total asset holdings.
 
Meanwhile, in December, it bumped up the interest rate that it pays to commercial banks for keeping their reserves parked at the Fed. I like to describe this policy as the Fed paying banks to not make loans to their customers.
 
What Does It All Mean?
 
So why is the Fed trying to tighten the money supply without selling off assets as it has done in the past? It boils down to this: In order to bail out the commercial and investment banks - at least the ones who were in good standing with DC officials - as well as greasing the wheels for the federal government to run trillion-dollar deficits, the Federal Reserve, in late 2008, began buying trillions of dollars worth of Treasury debt and mortgage-backed securities (MBS). This flooded the banking system with trillions of dollars of reserves, and went hand in hand with a collapse of short-term interest rates to basically zero percent.
 
Now, the Fed wants to begin raising rates (albeit modestly), but it doesn't want to sell off its Treasury or MBS holdings for fear that this would cause a spike in Uncle Sam's borrowing costs and/or crash the housing sector. So, it has increased the amount it is paying commercial banks to keep their reserves with the Fed (rather than lending them out to customers), and - for those institutions that are not legally eligible for such a policy - the Fed is effectively paying to borrow the reserves itself. By adjusting the interest rate it pays on such transactions, the Fed can move the floor on all interest rates up. No institution would lend to a private sector party at less than it can get from the Fed, since it can create dollars at will and is thus the safest place to park or lend reserves.

We thus have the worst of both worlds. We still get the economic effects of "tighter monetary policy," because the price of credit is rising as it would in a normal Fed tightening. Yet, we don't get the benefit of a smaller Fed footprint and a return of assets to the private sector.
 
Instead, the US taxpayer is ultimately paying subsidies to lending institutions to induce them to charge more for loans, while the big banks and Treasury still benefit from the effective bailout they've been getting for years.
 
It Can't Last
 
Will the Fed be able to keep the game going? In a word, "No." We've already seen that even the tiniest of interest rate hikes has gone hand in hand with a huge drop in the markets.
 
Furthermore, the Fed's subsidies to the banks are now on the order of $11 billion annually, but if they want to raise the Fed Funds rate to, say, 2 percent, then the annual payment would swell to more than $40 billion. That is "real money" - in the sense that the Fed's excess earnings would otherwise be remitted to the Treasury. Therefore, for a given level of federal spending and tax receipts, increased payments to the bankers implies an increased federal budget deficit.
 
Janet Yellen and her colleagues are stuck with a giant asset bubble that her predecessor inflated. If they begin another round of asset purchases, they might postpone the crash, but only by making the subsequent reckoning that much more painful.
 
You don't make the country richer by printing money out of thin air, especially when you then give it to the government and Wall Street. The Fed's magic trick of raising interest rates without selling assets can't evade that basic reality.

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