Monday, November 30, 2009

Market Update _ My neighbor fixes cars like the government fixes economies

Economics and turning wrenches

My neighbor Dave bought his son a car recently.  The car is a used BMW and the plan was that they could get some good father and son time while working on it.  The car was having some problems recently so Dave came over to my house to borrow a set of car ramps. The idea was that he’d get the car up on the ramps, get a good look at the problem and then fix it.  About two minutes after he borrows the ramps the neighborhood was filled with the sounds of chaos.  There was lots of shouting and the sound of metal on metal contact…the type of scraping, smashing and grinding that would make survivors of the Titanic cringe. 

After borrowing the ramps Dave drove the car up them and then straight off the back.  At this point his son began screaming “NO NO NO!” as he watched his new chariot (along with his dreams of first dates) come crashing down right in front of him in a horrific show of automotive carnage.

A few minutes later Dave was back.  This time he wanted to borrow my 3-ton floor jack.  OK.  He drags the floor jack over to his house and at some point realizes it’s going to take more than he thought to fix this problem. 

A few minutes later Dave was back…again.  This time he wanted to borrow my jack-stands.  He was now just reaching for solutions.  He didn’t look like a man that was thinking things through…he was in full bore “reaction mode”.  Rather than think through the problem, he was just doing the first thing that came to mind and then dealing with the fallout of that action in the next round.

I haven’t seen Dave since the last round of borrowing but as I worked in the garage last night I glanced over at Dave’s house and chuckled when it hit me.  There are some similarities between Dave fixing that car and the government’s attempts at fixing the economy.  When it was first learned that there was a problem they both decided they could “fix” it.  They didn’t really have the tools they needed though so they borrowed stuff and decided they’d figure it out as they went.  The problems actually got worse once they started trying the fix them, then they got stuck and had to borrow some more, then that didn’t work and they had to borrow still more.  Now they’ve got all of the original problems to deal with plus a few more that they created along the way, and sooner or later the lenders will need their stuff back.

When I left for work this morning he still had car problems and he still owed me a bunch of tools.  I just shook my head as I drove past his house because I knew I’d be seeing the same story play out on my Bloomberg when I got to work…we’re still trying to “fix” the economy and we owe a lot of people a lot of money. 

Recent news

The economic news of the day surrounds the pace of business activity.  The Chicago Purchasing Managers index was in positive territory and beat the estimate, signaling a bit more growth than expected.  The NAPM-Manufacturing numbers behaved similarly, and the Dallas Fed Manufacturing Activity report eaked out a very small increase posting a 0.3% increase vs. an expectation of 0% change.  The market has not moved much this morning on the economic data.  In fact it rallied a bit after those releases, pushing prices a bit higher and yields lower.

 

Much of the news seems to be overshadowed by equity market concerns over the fallout of the Dubai debt situation.  Treasury levels are currently near their recent low-water mark.  The 10-year is trading at a 3.23%...close to the 3.17% level it posted back in October.  MBS spreads remain fairly tight as well with the spread between the 15-yr MBS and the 5-year Treasury running at 126 basis points.  This spread was well over 300 bps at the height of the crisis. 

 

So right now the market is fairly quiet and seems to be awaiting the fallout of both the Dubai situation as well as the Tiger Woods situation.  This morning we were trying to figure out if a

5-iron or a 6-iron is more appropriate for busting out the rear window on an Escalade.  If anyone has the answer to that please let me know because we’re trying to settle a bet.

 

If you have any questions or if there is anything we can be doing for you just let me know.

 

Steve Scaramastro

800-311-0707

 

Friday, November 6, 2009

Market update 11 6 09 _ Unemployment at 10.2%



Ten Percent

The news of the day is the Unemployment Rate. Today it posted at 10.2%, breaching the psychological 10% threshold, posting higher than the Bloomberg estimate, and hitting a level we haven’t seen since April 1983. This isn’t a terrible shock…we’ve had a number of economists and even a Fed Governor forecast that we’d go north of 10% at some point. What is really disturbing about the number is that despite all of the stimulus that has been pumped into the economy the Unemployment Rate is still on a steep upward trajectory. Scarier still is that this data series doesn’t come close to capturing the true nature of the employment picture. There are a number of “groups” left out of this number. Discouraged workers that have given up looking for a new job aren’t counted in the unemployment rate and full-time workers forced into part-time hours aren’t represented. If you lump these groups in with the total unemployed you get what the NBER calls the Under-Employment figure or their U6 Figure.


The “under-employment” rate takes into account Total Unemployed, plus all marginally attached workers, plus total employed part-time for economic reasons, as a percentage of the civilian work force. The “work force” in the US is currently in the neighborhood of 150 million people. The Under-Employment number for October hit 17.5%. That percentage on a work force of 150 million means that over 26 million people are in the U6 category of Under-Employed.


The question then becomes when and how will they get back to work? We need some serious economic growth to re-employ 26 million people on a full time basis. The lack of growth prospects for the economy is what leads many firms to forecast that jobs won’t return to their pre-recession levels until 2013. The combined bursting of a credit bubble and an asset bubble along with an over-leveraged and now under-employed consumer has created a very ugly landscape for growth prospects. This is why the Fed continues to state that they will keep rates low for a long time.

The Fed can keep the short end low…they have a lot of power there. However, the market controls the long end and if investors begin to lose faith they will demand more yield and the curve will steepen. For now the 10-year is settling in to a trading range around the 3.50% level…a much better place than the 3.17% we had a few weeks ago. Treasury prices are up on the day, as are mortgage prices, leading to lower yields than were available earlier in the week. The long end of the market is experiencing a lot of volatility this morning as it gets whip-sawed between up a point an down a point. After the release this morning the 30year jumped up 22/32’s immediately, ten minutes ago it was off a full point, and now it’s rallied back to almost flat on the day…this is volatility with a capital “V”. The short end of the curve where most banks buy (2-yr to 10-yr) is up in price.






Will the consumer show up?


I was watching Game 6 of the World Series the other day…mainly because I couldn’t find anything else to do…and I saw the strangest commercial. I saw a commercial advertising a “layaway” program at a big national retailer. When is the last time you saw a “layaway” program? Much less saw anyone advertising that they have a layaway program? This is a huge sign from one of the largest retailers in the country that times are tough and that they are going to new lengths to accommodate a battered consumer. The same shoppers in prior years didn’t need “layaway” as they could just charge it. The times they are a changin’.


The layaway commercial made me try to recall the last time I heard someone say “I’m going to save up and buy (insert your consumer good here)”. I haven’t heard it in years. Over the last few years nobody has had to “save up” for anything. Easy credit and rising asset prices made saving “unnecessary”. If you wanted it you just charged it or you took equity out of your house to get it. No problem. Our national savings rate as a percentage of disposable income dropped down close to zero right before the bubble burst. Suddenly people “get” the whole savings thing. Increased savings in the US means some pain over the short to mid-term as people square away their balance sheets, reduce their excesses, and readjust to living within their means…but long term it will mean greater stability and less reliance on foreign capital. For reference I’ve attached a graph of Personal Savings as a Percentage of Disposable Income below.


Now-a-days the rules have changed. Maybe we’ll be seeing the return of this powerful phrase as we digest the lessons from our most recent economic troubles. Until then I’m saving up for retirement…if it still exists when I get there.


If you have any questions or if there is anything I can be doing for you just let me know.


Steve Scaramastro, SVP

Vining Sparks, Portfolio Mgmt. Group

800-311-0707









Wednesday, November 4, 2009

FOMC Press release - no change in rates, some language chage

A very brief summary of the FOMC statement is:  No change in rates, very little change in verbiage.  Treasuries are selling off a bit pushing yields slightly higher.

 

One bit of verbiage that will likely see get some headline status is that the Fed has lowered its Agency purchase amount from $200 Billion down to $175 Billion.  This is based solely on availability.  The GSE’s have reduced funding needs and are therefore issuing fewer bonds…this means there are fewer bonds available to purchase.  An example of this reduced issuance was that last Friday FNMA closed their desk mid-morning…a very unusual event but one that points to the fact that they aren’t in the market as much as they were when the housing market was booming. 

 

The Treasury curve is steepening at the moment.  The 30 year is off over a point, the 10 year about a half, and the short end is virtually unchanged.  As I type the market is rallying back a bit.  It looks to be one of those days where some news comes out that causes a nice pullback in prices…but half an hour later prices begin creeping back up.  Many times in the last month the “creep” has undone most of the sell off by days-end. 

 

The full statement is attached.  If you have any questions, or if there is anything I can be doing for you just let me know.

 

Steve Scaramastro

800-311-0707

 

 

 

 

Vining Sparks Portfolio Management Group
800-786-1282 / PMG@viningsparks.com
Will Taylor; George Hancock; Cheri Dye; Steve Scaramastro; John Pender; Sandy Berlin; Lisa Butler

 

 

____________________________________________________________________________

News
NOTE: Some links require registration or paid subscription Banking News | Consumer Finance News | Financial Service News | Forex Market News

The next Fed meeting is scheduled for Dec. 16, 2009.

____________________________________________________________________________

Release Date: November 4, 2009

For immediate release

Information received since the Federal Open Market Committee met in September suggests that economic activity has continued to pick up. Conditions in financial markets were roughly unchanged, on balance, over the intermeeting period. Activity in the housing sector has increased over recent months. Household spending appears to be expanding but remains constrained by ongoing job losses, sluggish income growth, lower housing wealth, and tight credit. Businesses are still cutting back on fixed investment and staffing, though at a slower pace; they continue to make progress in bringing inventory stocks into better alignment with sales. Although economic activity is likely to remain weak for a time, the Committee anticipates that policy actions to stabilize financial markets and institutions, fiscal and monetary stimulus, and market forces will support a strengthening of economic growth and a gradual return to higher levels of resource utilization in a context of price stability.

With substantial resource slack likely to continue to dampen cost pressures and with longer-term inflation expectations stable, the Committee expects that inflation will remain subdued for some time.

In these circumstances, the Federal Reserve will continue to employ a wide range of tools to promote economic recovery and to preserve price stability. The Committee will maintain the target range for the federal funds rate at 0 to 1/4 percent and continues to anticipate that economic conditions, including low rates of resource utilization, subdued inflation trends, and stable inflation expectations, are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate for an extended period. To provide support to mortgage lending and housing markets and to improve overall conditions in private credit markets, the Federal Reserve will purchase a total of $1.25 trillion of agency mortgage-backed securities and about $175 billion of agency debt. The amount of agency debt purchases, while somewhat less than the previously announced maximum of $200 billion, is consistent with the recent path of purchases and reflects the limited availability of agency debt. In order to promote a smooth transition in markets, the Committee will gradually slow the pace of its purchases of both agency debt and agency mortgage-backed securities and anticipates that these transactions will be executed by the end of the first quarter of 2010. The Committee will continue to evaluate the timing and overall amounts of its purchases of securities in light of the evolving economic outlook and conditions in financial markets. The Federal Reserve is monitoring the size and composition of its balance sheet and will make adjustments to its credit and liquidity programs as warranted.

Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Ben S. Bernanke, Chairman; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Elizabeth A. Duke; Charles L. Evans; Donald L. Kohn; Jeffrey M. Lacker; Dennis P. Lockhart; Daniel K. Tarullo; Kevin M. Warsh; and Janet L. Yellen.

____________________________________________________________________________

Historical Yield Curve Video and Overview at Fidelity.com

Composite Bond Rates | Bloomberg Bond Rates

____________________________________________________________________________
 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

Thursday, October 29, 2009

Market Update 10 29 09: We got the car moving but we're a long way from home

 

On the economy

 

After 4 Quarters of negative growth we got a 3rd Quarter GDP figure that posted positive…and it beat the estimates.  The Bloomberg survey expected GDP to increase at a 3.2% rate on a quarter-over-quarter basis and the actual number was 3.5%.  Treasury prices are retreating on the news, pushing yields a bit higher across the length of the curve but so far this is a very measured pullback.  The 10-year Treasury is trading at a 3.46%...about 10 basis points below the high water mark that it hit earlier this week.  The number is being treated with a healthy (and well deserved) amount of caution rather than as a sign that this economy is off to the races. 

 

While positive GDP is always a welcome sight, this number hardly means we are back on the road to prosperity.  After our economic engine sputtered and then stalled, the government pulled out their stimulus jumper cables in an attempt to force a restart.  Government spending is largely responsible for the increase in the 3Q GDP number.  We saw the cash-for-clunkers program and the new-home-buyers credit among other things that subsidized activity into happening.  The question now centers on whether this recovery is sustainable without more government spending…can they put the jumper cables away and let us get this thing back on the road under its own power?  Based on the numbers I’m seeing I would guess that it is nowhere close to sustainable at this point. 

 

I would suspect that they know it too.  Congress just extended the first-time-home-buyer program…not a sign that the recovery is off and running under its own power.  Those that are forecasting a double-dip recession are going to be on the edge of their seats over the next few months as this GDP number provides a real cliff-hanger moment for them.  If we can generate positive GDP numbers that aren’t propped up by government spending and we see the number of initial jobless claims fall off dramatically then I will get excited about seeing a real “honest-to-goodness-consumers-in-the-streets-with-fist-fulls-of-cash” recovery…I don’t think anybody is putting the jumper cables away until that starts to materialize.

 

In the mean-time you still have highly leveraged consumers who are very concerned about keeping their jobs and homes.  I wrote about the behavioral effects of this psychology last week.  Fear changes behavior.  It would seem at this point that personal savings rates should at least continue at their current levels and likely increase.  This is a necessary and positive thing but the flip side is that a dollar saved is a dollar that is not spent. 

 

On jobs

 

There are still close to 6 million people on the “official” unemployment rolls.  This doesn’t count the impact of workers who have run out of benefits and are no longer on the rolls, who have become discouraged and quit looking for work, full time workers who have been forced to work part time, or workers that were forced to take pay cuts to keep their jobs.  3.5% GDP growth isn’t enough activity to put this number of people back to work anytime soon.

 

One factor that will muddy the waters on the jobs front in any recovery is that there are many workers who have been forced from full-time position to part-time positions.  This situation will likely be reversed before any new hiring is done.  As the economy begins to recover businesses will ramp up production using what is basically idle “human capacity”…bringing part-time workers back to full time status.  There is no need to hire new people until you have enough work for the guys that were forced into part-time status.  This is but one factor that will slow our return to “full employment” when the economy begins to recover.  Again this points to the need for something much more robust than a 3.5% growth rate for us to return to full employment. 

 

To provide some perspective it helps to note that many firms are forecasting that we won’t return to “full employment” until sometime in 2013.

 

On The Fed

 

Today is officially the last day of the Feds $300 billion Treasury repurchase program.  This program has been one leg of their effort to keep rates artificially low to help stimulate the economy.  The idea here was that if you force Treasury yields lower you will lower loan rates, making credit more accessible to borrowers.  This was done in conjunction with the $1.25 trillion MBS and Agency purchase program which aimed to crush mortgage spreads…which it did.  The combination of the two programs was aimed at reducing mortgage rates.  Lower mortgage rates would help stimulate the housing market and the broader economy in general.  The thoughts at the start were that this would support housing prices by making loans more affordable to new buyers, enable people to refi into lower cost mortgages (and have extra spending money due to the lower monthly payment), and also allow some borrowers in exotic and unaffordable ARM structures to refinance into a traditional mortgage (which would in theory help stem some of the foreclosures). 

 

Writing on the effectiveness of this program would be beyond the scope of today’s letter.  The main point to take away from this today is that that the $300 billion purchase program just ended...on-time no less.  The Fed has been a big player in the Treasury market and tomorrow they will not be there with a fat wallet and a desire to manipulate yield levels.  This is a good development.  The immediate thought it that yields could begin to drift higher in their absence.  Time will tell.  Offsetting this to some extent is that there has been no shortage of new money chasing Treasuries at this weeks auctions.  The auctions have gone well so far and we’ll see what type of demand there is today for the 7-year auction.  If the market decides it doesn’t like the longer dated Treasuries today and the Fed isn’t there to pick them up we could see a decent steepening of the yield curve as the long end of the curve begins to rise.

 

On superstitions

 

I was once told that it’s bad luck to be superstitious…so I try to avoid it.  However, with the Phillies playing the Yankees in the World Series I feel the need to bring this up.  There was a nice Bloomberg article this morning that pointed out that the last time a Philadelphia team won two back-to-back World Series titles was in 1929 and 1930 respectively.  The Phillies won the title last year and they are up on the Yankees 1-0 so far in the current series.  Given our current economic conditions and the Phillies strong showing thus far it has some analysts in the investment world pointing out the obvious correlation between the Phillies winning and our returning to another Great Depression.  I don’t want to influence who you root for, I just want you to know that if the Phillies win and you rooted for them, and we get a double-dip recession…then it’s your fault.  Full disclosure requires that I disclose that I have NO money on this game…honestly I don’t.  If I did have any money on the Yankees I’d tell you…really I would.

 

As always, feel free to call or e-mail with any questions, comments or complaints.

 

Steve Scaramastro, SVP

Vining Sparks

800-311-0707

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Wednesday, October 28, 2009

Market Update 10 27 09: The Treasury auctions are going well

 

The Auction

 

The US Treasury is in the process of auctioning $123 billion worth of securities in 4 separate auctions this week.  The size of this auction was a cause for concern in the market recently and provided some fuel for the selloff we experienced along the length of the Treasury curve.  Yesterday the 10-year Treasury traded above the 3.50% level for the first time since August, and traded as high as a 3.57% on the day. 

 

So far the auctions have gone very well.  From the activity we’ve seen thus far it would appear that the market has a bottomless appetite for Treasuries.  The first two auctions were very well attended, so well in fact that our lead trader couldn’t remember a 2-year auction with such strong activity.  They auctioned a record $44 Billion in 2-year notes with demand that far exceeded the average for the last 10 auctions.  So the market rallies today, erasing much of yesterday’s gains in yield.  The 10-year Treasury at a 3.47%, around 10 bps lower than yesterdays high. 

 

What’s on deck?

 

There are more auctions to go and we’ll have to wait and see if all maturities receive the same type of welcome or if there is just huge demand for the short stuff.  Tomorrow we see the sale of $41 Billion in 5-year notes, and Thursday brings the sale of $31 Billion of 7-year notes.

 

The next Fed meeting is November 4th, with results released at 2:15 PM Eastern time. 

 

If you have any questions or if there is anything I can be doing for you just let me know.

 

Friday, October 23, 2009

Market Update 10 22 09 _ My pre-schooler got 8 grand from the government to buy a house

 

We’re with the government and we’re here to help

 

There is an old phrase that says “That guy couldn’t find his backside with two hands and a map”.  It’s a great saying because conveys both humor and information at the same time.  Upon hearing it you know exactly the type of person that you’ll be dealing with.  This phrase reminds me of the government’s actions lately.  There has been a lot of meddling in the markets as the bureaucrats try to “fix” things and we’re starting to see a few unintended consequences.  I don’t generally need reminders that the government isn’t  good at running things, but sometimes you get one that is so funny that it hurts.  Today a report is out on the governments “First Time Home Buyers” program.  This program gives up to an $8,000 tax credit to first time home buyers under the theory that this will stimulate demand for houses (more on this later).

 

The latest headline news on government efficiency reads “Treasury says that Four-Year old child received homebuyer tax credit.”  Now that headline really makes me smile.  It’s not the kind of smile you get when you hear of some hard working American experiencing the pride that comes with buying their first home…it’s more the smile of the experienced veteran watching the head-strong rookie stumble blindly from one bad situation to another that could have easily been avoided if only he’d asked for some advice.  Treasury dryly noted in their testimony before congress that “Some key controls were missing to prevent an individual from erroneously or fraudulently claiming the credit and receiving an erroneous refund of up to $8,000”.  Classic government operations at their best.  Can you imagine the press conferences on capitol hill if a BANK had done this?

 

Low rates for “an extended period”

 

The government is bending over backward to keep rates low to support a broad based economic recovery.  The Fed took short rates to zero and has been buying heavily in the MBS and Agency sectors to keep spreads low.  If you push the Treasury curve down and then push MBS spreads down too you will generate lower mortgage rates…which is exactly what the Fed has done.  However, just because you make rates artificially low doesn’t mean that people will magically qualify for loans.

 

The first obstacle to this plan is that we are in the middle of a bad recession.  People are scared and generally don’t want to take on more debt…as witnessed by the declining consumer debt figures and the increasing consumer savings figures.  It’s a pretty natural development…if you’re worried about losing your job and your home, your behavior changes.  You shed debt and you increase your savings.  Cash becomes king and living within your means is cool again.  Suddenly you don’t feel the burning desire to go out to eat every night, buy big screen TV’s, and look for a new house complete with a big payment attached.  So behavior is the first obstacle.  And this obstacle doesn’t look likely to change any time soon. 

 

The next obstacle is the credit quality of the prospective buyers that do exist.  Just because someone likes current mortgage rates doesn’t mean that they qualify for a loan.  Credit standards have tightened…and rightfully so.  Now, if you multiply the remaining prospective buyers times the percent that actually qualify under current credit standards your pool of potential buyers is beginning to shrink in a material way.

 

Another consideration is oversupply and foreclosures.  These factors need time to work themselves out.  Many willing and able buyers are going to stay on the sidelines until they feel confident that factors like foreclosures won’t continue pushing home prices down immediately after they buy.  Who wants to be underwater the month after you buy?  A recent story on CNN Money states that the national median home price is expected to drop 11% by June 2010.

 

No amount of short cuts and government programs can change the fundamentals in this sector.

 

First time homebuyers

 

The first time homebuyers program is designed to stimulate demand by giving up to $8,000 to qualifying buyers.  Obviously this will draw some people into the market, which will support home prices to an extent, which will have far reaching effects down the line.  So easy a bureaucrat can do it.  What could be easier? 

 

The problem is that at its best this program is simply pulling future consumption into the present.  So the question becomes what happens to this demand when the program stops?  It’s not too difficult to reach the conclusion that when the free money stops demand will slow down.  The problem with this type of demand is that it’s not sustainable.  The government simply can’t spend enough on these tax credits to “fix” the housing sector.

 

Two big hurdles for the housing sector are approaching.  The first is going to be the end of the first time homebuyer credit program.  This program is due to expire in November.  At the least this will reduce demand from new home buyers, at worst it might have already sucked future activity into the present…leaving a gaping hole where that demand would have been absent the program.  Yogi Bera was at a pizza shop one time and they asked him if he wanted his pizza cut into six slices or eight.  He responded “six slices…there’s no way I could eat eight.”  The government will find this same situation in the housing market.  You can pull future buyers into the present with a tax credit but you’re really just shuffling buyers around…you can slice it any way you want but the market is still the same size.  So that’s the first hurdle.

 

The second hurdle USED TO BE THE FIRST HURDLE…in that it was supposed to have already happened.  The Fed was supposed to terminate their MBS purchase program in October.  That didn’t happen.  They realized that there was nobody there to take the baton from them.  If they quit buying then MBS spreads would widen out until they reached a level that enticed new buyers.  I talk to a lot of investors and I don’t have even ONE investor that is clamoring for more low coupon 30 year MBS.  The Fed currently owns 34% of the MBS pass through market…they are the only ones willing to buy long MBS at these levels.  And they NEED these levels for their plans to work…they must keep borrowing costs low.  They couldn’t quit the program in October because doing so would have caused mortgage rates to rise…so they kicked the can down the road to 1Q 2010. 

 

Will they be able to exit in 1Q 2010?  Who will step in to buy at these levels?  If they exit and nobody steps in to buy then MBS spreads will widen until the market finds them attractive…water will seek its own level so to speak.  The Fed is looking at a tough set of choices.  If organic market liquidity hasn’t returned by March 2010, then they are either going to have to extend their buying program again or find a way to get comfortable with higher mortgage rates….but who knows…maybe they’ll come up with another new and efficient government-run plan.

 

Tax Credits for kids

 

I guess tonight I’ll go home and ask my 6-year old daughter and 9-year old son what they would do with $8,000 apiece.  I think I know the answers…and it involves a lot of Chuck E. Cheese and video games.  Maybe this government program fraud stuff is the way to go…it would surely stimulate the economy better than any government program I’ve seen so far.

 

As always if you have any questions or if there is anything I can be doing for you just let me know.

 

Steve Scaramastro

800-311-0707

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Market Update 10 1 30 _ Not Halloween yet but the market is spooked

 

 

From: Steve Scaramastro [mailto:SScaramastro@Viningsparks.com]
Sent: Saturday, October 03, 2009 4:54 PM
To: sscaramastro@viningsparks.com
Subject: FW: Market Update 10 1 30 _ Not Halloween yet but the market is spooked

 

 

 

From: Steve Scaramastro [mailto:SScaramastro@Viningsparks.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 2:14 PM
To: 'Sandy Berlin'
Subject: FW: Market Update 10 1 30 _ Not Halloween yet but the market is spooked

 

 

 

From: Steve Scaramastro [mailto:SScaramastro@Viningsparks.com]
Sent: Thursday, October 01, 2009 1:31 PM
To: sscaramastro@viningsparks.com; 'Will Taylor'; 'Lisa Butler'
Subject: Market Update 10 1 30 _ Not Halloween yet but the market is spooked

 

Yesterday on the way in to work I passed a guy in traffic that was heading out of town in the opposite lane.  It was 65 degrees that morning, the air was crisp, the skies were bright blue, it was the type of weather that could even make a swine-flu victim feel great about being alive.  Attached to the top of his vehicle he had two kayaks and a mountain bike…and he wore a big smile.  The first thought through my head was “there’s a guy that’s not shorting the 20 year Treasury”.  At that point I started thinking that maybe I need to cover my short position and take some time off.  You can see that I didn’t though because I’m here writing this….and I’m still short the 20 year Treasury.

 

This morning we have yet another big rally in the Treasury market.  This time we’ve pushed the 10-year Treasury down to levels it hasn’t seen since May.  The 10 year is trading at a 3.21% right now and the 30-year yield is under 4.00% again.  There was a lot of economic data released this morning and it was a mixed bag.  Market sentiment has taken another seismic shift over the last month or so. 

 

Back in the spring-time hope was welling up everywhere as many people placed bets that this economy was staging a comeback.  In early 2009 the markets began to shake loose from the vice-like grip of fear that had haunted them for so many months.  Buyers returned and spreads narrowed in as it became apparent that the financial system would not experience a catastrophic melt down.  As we stabilized in early spring there were largely two views on the future.  One was the optimistic view that we’d see a “V” shaped recovery and quickly return to normal economic growth.  The other was in my view more realistic that this economy would limp along sideways for some time.  By the time May rolled around it looked like the optimists had the ball and were moving it down the field.  Talk of deflation and economic disaster gave way to talk of “green shoots” and perhaps some inflation. 

 

The optimism that took root over the spring and summer is under some pressure as we move into the 4th quarter.  If you looked at a chart of the markets movement this year and you weren’t told what you were looking at, you might think you were observing the activity of a bipolar gambler.  The trend has been way up one minute, way down the next, and wildly unpredictable the whole while.  Below is a screenshot of this morning’s activity showing Treasury prices moving up sharply.  The major domestic equity indices are all off, the 10-year Treasury is up over ¾’s of a point and the long bond is up almost a point and a half. 

 

 

BTMM 10 1 09.png

 

 

Below is a chart of the 10-year Treasury yield.  I marked this morning’s level in the cross hairs.  The graph points out that the last print we had at a 3.21% level was way back in May when the short-lived optimism phase was just kicking in.  We’re now approaching that level again from the opposite direction as Mr. Optimism gets introduced to Mr. Reality.  The economy is not heating up, initial jobless claims are still running well above 500k a month, despite massive government stimulus GDP is still negative, auto sales have dropped now that the government isn’t funding them anymore, the housing market is still a mess, and (drum roll please) deflation concerns are back in the news.  What “positive” news there is comes to us in the form of numbers that are LESS NEGATIVE than expected.  While that is a necessary pre-condition to get things turned around it doesn’t mean that things will go positive any time soon.  That is what has this market spooked…there is little faith that robust economic growth will return any time soon.

 

 

10 yr Treas.png

 

 

 

Today’s data

 

Below is the list of economic data that we got this morning.  Numbers going the wrong direction are highlighted in red, those going the right direction are in green, and those that are unchanged or didn’t have a survey estimate are in white.

 

You can see that it’s a mixed bag this morning.  Personal income and spending were both up a bit,  as was construction spending, but the job losses just keep piling up.  If you monitor the headlines you’ve likely seen an increase in the references to the unemployment rate staying elevated for quite some time...perhaps years at the current levels.  If the prognosticators calling for high unemployment for years are correct then it would seem even more likely that the Fed is also correct in saying that rates will remain low for an “extended period”. 

 

 

eco 10 1 09.png

 

 

When will rates rise?

 

2010 is only 3 months away.  The forecasts for rising rates in 2010 look like more of a long-shot every week.  The economy is still in the ditch and the Fed missed its first deadline to exit its role as the largest buyer in the MBS market.  The whole idea of the Fed cutting rates and buying bonds was to keep rates low so that consumers and small businesses could have adequate access to credit.  They cut the overnight rate to zero which anchors the short end of the curve, then they bought Treasury bonds on the open market to push yields lower still, then they bought 34% of the mortgage market to absolutely crush the spread that existed between MBS and Treasuries.  Mission accomplished.  They got rates really low and spreads really tight.  Now however they own a lot of MBS product that nobody else wants at current levels and they can’t exit this role without causing spreads to widen again.  The original deadline to cease MBS purchases was October…this got extended to the first quarter of 2010.  The Fed understands that if they quit buying then spreads will blow back out quickly by some degree.  With the economy in its current condition they really aren’t excited about seeing borrowing costs skyrocket so they continue the program…they will keep rates artificially low through the magic of the Feds Balance Sheet.  I’ve attached a graph of the Feds balance sheet for reference; it’s an interesting sight.

 

Fed balance sheet 10 1 09.png

 

 

In addition to the weekly economic data, prepare yourselves to start hearing about retail sales heading into the holiday season.  High unemployment and limited access to credit cards paint a sad picture of a 4th quarter consumer.  I hope I’m wrong but it’s difficult to see a strong bout of sales to help the retailers finish off 2009.  This is the type of thing that could cause the mood of the market to stay depressed through year end.

 

I realized while proof reading this update that there isn’t a lot of good news to report.  I too need a break from it all so I think I’ll put in a full day tomorrow then take the next two days off.

 

If you have any questions on this material just let me know. 

 

Steve Scaramastro, SVP

Vining Sparks – Portfolio Management Group

800-311-0707

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Market Update 10 1 30 _ Not Halloween yet but the market is spooked

Yesterday on the way in to work I passed a guy in traffic that was heading out of town in the opposite lane.  It was 65 degrees that morning, the air was crisp, the skies were bright blue, it was the type of weather that could even make a swine-flu victim feel great about being alive.  Attached to the top of his vehicle he had two kayaks and a mountain bike…and he wore a big smile.  The first thought through my head was “there’s a guy that’s not shorting the 20 year Treasury”.  At that point I started thinking that maybe I need to cover my short position and take some time off.  You can see that I didn’t though because I’m here writing this….and I’m still short the 20 year Treasury.

 

This morning we have yet another big rally in the Treasury market.  This time we’ve pushed the 10-year Treasury down to levels it hasn’t seen since May.  The 10 year is trading at a 3.21% right now and the 30-year yield is under 4.00% again.  There was a lot of economic data released this morning and it was a mixed bag.  Market sentiment has taken another seismic shift over the last month or so. 

 

Back in the spring-time hope was welling up everywhere as many people placed bets that this economy was staging a comeback.  In early 2009 the markets began to shake loose from the vice-like grip of fear that had haunted them for so many months.  Buyers returned and spreads narrowed in as it became apparent that the financial system would not experience a catastrophic melt down.  As we stabilized in early spring there were largely two views on the future.  One was the optimistic view that we’d see a “V” shaped recovery and quickly return to normal economic growth.  The other was in my view more realistic that this economy would limp along sideways for some time.  By the time May rolled around it looked like the optimists had the ball and were moving it down the field.  Talk of deflation and economic disaster gave way to talk of “green shoots” and perhaps some inflation. 

 

The optimism that took root over the spring and summer is under some pressure as we move into the 4th quarter.  If you looked at a chart of the markets movement this year and you weren’t told what you were looking at, you might think you were observing the activity of a bipolar gambler.  The trend has been way up one minute, way down the next, and wildly unpredictable the whole while.  Below is a screenshot of this morning’s activity showing Treasury prices moving up sharply.  The major domestic equity indices are all off, the 10-year Treasury is up over ¾’s of a point and the long bond is up almost a point and a half. 

 

 

BTMM 10 1 09.png

 

 

Below is a chart of the 10-year Treasury yield.  I marked this morning’s level in the cross hairs.  The graph points out that the last print we had at a 3.21% level was way back in May when the short-lived optimism phase was just kicking in.  We’re now approaching that level again from the opposite direction as Mr. Optimism gets introduced to Mr. Reality.  The economy is not heating up, initial jobless claims are still running well above 500k a month, despite massive government stimulus GDP is still negative, auto sales have dropped now that the government isn’t funding them anymore, the housing market is still a mess, and (drum roll please) deflation concerns are back in the news.  What “positive” news there is comes to us in the form of numbers that are LESS NEGATIVE than expected.  While that is a necessary pre-condition to get things turned around it doesn’t mean that things will go positive any time soon.  That is what has this market spooked…there is little faith that robust economic growth will return any time soon.

 

 

10 yr Treas.png

 

 

 

Today’s data

 

Below is the list of economic data that we got this morning.  Numbers going the wrong direction are highlighted in red, those going the right direction are in green, and those that are unchanged or didn’t have a survey estimate are in white.

 

You can see that it’s a mixed bag this morning.  Personal income and spending were both up a bit,  as was construction spending, but the job losses just keep piling up.  If you monitor the headlines you’ve likely seen an increase in the references to the unemployment rate staying elevated for quite some time...perhaps years at the current levels.  If the prognosticators calling for high unemployment for years are correct then it would seem even more likely that the Fed is also correct in saying that rates will remain low for an “extended period”. 

 

 

eco 10 1 09.png

 

 

When will rates rise?

 

2010 is only 3 months away.  The forecasts for rising rates in 2010 look like more of a long-shot every week.  The economy is still in the ditch and the Fed missed its first deadline to exit its role as the largest buyer in the MBS market.  The whole idea of the Fed cutting rates and buying bonds was to keep rates low so that consumers and small businesses could have adequate access to credit.  They cut the overnight rate to zero which anchors the short end of the curve, then they bought Treasury bonds on the open market to push yields lower still, then they bought 34% of the mortgage market to absolutely crush the spread that existed between MBS and Treasuries.  Mission accomplished.  They got rates really low and spreads really tight.  Now however they own a lot of MBS product that nobody else wants at current levels and they can’t exit this role without causing spreads to widen again.  The original deadline to cease MBS purchases was October…this got extended to the first quarter of 2010.  The Fed understands that if they quit buying then spreads will blow back out quickly by some degree.  With the economy in its current condition they really aren’t excited about seeing borrowing costs skyrocket so they continue the program…they will keep rates artificially low through the magic of the Feds Balance Sheet.  I’ve attached a graph of the Feds balance sheet for reference; it’s an interesting sight.

 

Fed balance sheet 10 1 09.png

 

 

In addition to the weekly economic data, prepare yourselves to start hearing about retail sales heading into the holiday season.  High unemployment and limited access to credit cards paint a sad picture of a 4th quarter consumer.  I hope I’m wrong but it’s difficult to see a strong bout of sales to help the retailers finish off 2009.  This is the type of thing that could cause the mood of the market to stay depressed through year end.

 

I realized while proof reading this update that there isn’t a lot of good news to report.  I too need a break from it all so I think I’ll put in a full day tomorrow then take the next two days off.

 

If you have any questions on this material just let me know. 

 

 

 

 

Monday, September 21, 2009

Market Update 9 21 09: The plan to drive MBS spreads lower has succeeded

The Fed and MBS Spreads

You all remember the Fed’s plans to buy over a trillion dollars worth of MBS and Agency bonds. I heard my MBS trader this morning quote that the Fed now owns around 34% of the all outstanding Fannie and Freddie pass through securities. I’ll give you a minute to let that one soak in…34% of all pass through MBS are now owned by the Fed.

A whirlwind review of how MBS spreads blew out so wide goes as follows: Hedge Funds begin to falter as sub-prime CDO’s start to fail, big creditors issue margin calls, funds sell good MBS to satisfy margin calls, prices on MBS drop as sustained selling occurs to fund an ever increasing amount of margin calls, fear enters the market and now people begin to balk at buying even high quality MBS as they know there is more forced selling coming down the pike and they don’t want to buy ahead of it. Why buy a bond today that you know will be cheaper tomorrow? Now there are fewer buyers and an increasing volume of sellers; the law of supply and demand tells us how this story will end. Huge volumes of MBS product are dumped on the market as big funds and big firms begin to fail, there are not enough buyers and prices plummet causing spreads on MBS to rise like a rocket. Current coupon 15 year MBS trade at a long term average of roughly 116 basis points over treasuries. This spread blew out to 311 basis points at the height of the crisis.

Through the entire episode we spoke of mean reversion and counseled buyers to take as much MBS product at these spreads as your position would allow. This strategy has paid off very, very well. Bonds that were purchased with spreads of 200 to 300 basis points of spread have delivered both high yields and large price gains as spreads have tightened in over time.

What was the Fed thinking?

I think it makes sense to occasionally go back and look at WHY the Fed started down this road. There is so much going on that sometimes the genesis of this program can get lost in the fray. The Feds plan was to keep borrowing rates for households and small businesses affordable and accessible. These two factors are very important parts of the lessons that Bernanke learned from the Great Depression (see the market update from Jan 8, 2009 to review Bernanke’s thoughts on the Great Depression…if you don’t have it just let me know and I can resend it). They’ve achieved their goal of keeping rates low. Every time a Fed governor gets in front of a microphone they tell us that they plan to keep rates low for a long time. OK so rates are low…but how accessible is credit?

Credit is not as accessible as Uncle Ben would like it to be. While he can control the short end of the curve very well he can’t control who banks lend to (I feel the need to add the qualifier “YET” to the end of this statement…scary times). The Feds view of how much credit should be accessible and a banks view of the same can be quite different.

In an era where individuals are highly leveraged AND they are losing their jobs it is obviously a good time for caution to be involved in the underwriting process. While the Fed sees the solution a little differently than banks do, deep down the Fed must understand that banks will begin making large volumes of loans when they get large volumes of qualified credits coming in the front door. This will take time…plain and simple. Consumers need time to clean up their personal balance sheets. It takes a while to pay off the credit cards and the car loans and to build up some cash savings in the bank. It will also take a while to get past the fear of losing one’s job or a spouse losing theirs. All of these factors act as constraints on consumer spending. Fear is a powerful thing.

Where are we today?

After all of the buying by the Fed where are we today? The Feds plan has certainly had its intended effect on the level of rates. Spreads on MBS product have been absolutely crushed. This morning the spread on current coupon 15 yr MBS sits at 125 basis points. OK…now what?

Now our attention must turn to how the Fed will exit this role as the provider of liquidity to the mortgage market. There is tremendous concern that if they just turn off the magic liquidity faucet at the deadline date then spreads will blow out in a big way. Nobody expects a reversal to the high water mark of 311 bps because the fundamentals aren’t in place to cause a run like that…the fear that drove those levels is gone. We are no longer seeing large firms and hedge funds going bust after waves of margin calls and forced liquidations. However it is widely expected that we will have some material amount of widening as the Fed tries to exit this role. The official stop date for the Feds MBS purchase program is in October. There has been a fair amount of talk that they may have to extend this deadline to early 2010 to avoid killing the housing recovery. This is a tricky piece of business. How long do you kick this can down the road? How much more will you have to spend? Is anyone comfortable with the Fed owning 50% of the mortgage market? 60%? Is supporting the recovery in housing a large enough issue to justify owning a larger chunk of the mortgage market? We all cautioned that it could prove to be a very difficult thing to disentangle yourself from so we are watching intently to see if it goes as smoothly as the Fed thought it would.

The flip side of this coin is that a lot of buyers are sitting on cash and when the fed backs out it will cause yields will pop up, which will in turn lure buyers back to this sector, who will in effect replace the Fed as the major liquidity provider, which by definition moves us toward a more normal market. That’s the best case scenario…the Fed steps out and the normal market participants step back in. We might have to start calling this “The Bernanke Two Step”.

The ultimate question here is “when will the buyers step in?” We all know when the Fed is going to quit buying at some point. We’re all going to be watching spreads too. As spreads rise there is a tendency to not get in the way…after all prices are falling and with the 800 pound gorilla no longer in the room they might fall a good ways before they stop. Who wants to try to catch a falling knife? The fact is that if people expect the market to go one way then they tend to wait until it gets there before doing anything.

In closing

Who knows which scenario we’ll get but the facts as we know them currently are that we are approaching the end-date for the MBS purchase program, the Fed owns 34% of the pass through market, and we appear to be a long way from seeing a recovery.

If you are considering selling MBS then this is a very good time to do so. Treasury yields are very low and spreads are very tight...this combination is your friend if you are selling bonds.

If you have any questions on this material just let me know.



Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Yield curve forecast _ September 2009


Each month Bloomberg surveys 60 to 70 economists to get their estimates of where Fed Funds, the 2-year Treasury, and the 10-year Treasury will be over the next several quarters. I take this data and interpolate for the points in between the survey data to create the attached report. This allows us to get a broad view of where various economists see interest rates going over the coming quarters.


Interestingly enough the forecasts are lower this month for almost every spot on the curve through 2011.



If you have any questions on this material just let me know.












Market Update 9 16 09 _ What is going on in the market

What’s up with the market?

When I look at recent bond market activity I can hear Jerry Seinfeld’s voice in my head asking “WHAT is the DEAL with THAT?” His signature line could be used almost daily in this market. Yesterday a good friend of my summed it up nicely by describing the markets behavior as “schizophrenic”. This morning is a perfect example. When I came in this morning the 30 year was up 21/32’s...a few minutes later it was back to flat…a few more minutes and it was DOWN 21/32’s…and finally a few short minutes after that it was back to flat.

There has been tremendous volatility in the bond market recently, much of which seems counterintuitive. There are days that we get economic data that should cause a huge selloff in Treasuries, yet the market rallies hard driving yields to new lows. It’s very difficult to make sense of the activity. In a way I think this confusion is itself a sign that we’re at the bottom of this cycle. It’s the first time in a long time that the market seems conflicted about what to make of the numbers. Prior to this recent period there was almost a universal agreement that every number we got showed that the recession was still getting worse.

We went through a brief period in May where the clinically optimistic made their bets that recovery was just around the corner. There will always be a rush among some big money managers to be the first one diving back in when the sentiment begins to swing. They need to get those few extra basis points to beat the index and beat the competition. As we moved from the “recession is getting worse every month” mode to the “we seem to be near the bottom” mode there were a lot of people that started placing bets on a “V” shaped recovery. We saw a good bit of this type of activity in May. My opinion on this has been that we’re not going to see a “V” shaped recovery. (The Market Update piece from May 7th, 2009 reviews the various recovery shapes along with a colorful example…if you can’t find that e-mail let me know and I can resend it).

I’ve been saying for quite some time that even if the bad news tapers off and we find a bottom, it’s not a great thing to stabilize at multi-decade lows of activity. The economy needs people spending money in order to grow. Consumers making purchases keep other people employed doing everything from importing the goods, shipping them, stocking shelves, ringing up the goods etc. There are millions former consumers that are playing a very defensive game right now. Now it’s about staying power. At this point in the business cycle I think the average consumer would rather have $3,000 more in the bank (or less on a credit card) than a 65 inch plasma TV in the living room. In times of uncertainty liquidity is your friend…the consumer gets that now. Many households have been hit directly by unemployment, most others know people that have lost jobs, still others have taken pay cuts to KEEP their jobs (FedEx is a prime example of this…reducing pay for everyone to minimize the number of firings that must be done). This is an episode that the consumer won’t soon forget…fear is a powerful thing.

Given a consumer that is more focused on rebuilding a cash cushion and paying down debt than continuing the spending spree, where will the growth come from? More one-time hits like cash-for-clunkers programs where we pull future consumption into the present using borrowed money? That is exactly the type of game that consumers played for the last several years. This just leads to more leverage, more risk, and slower growth in the future. Econ 101 tells us it’ll take time for this to get better. The consumer needs time to pay off car loans and credit cards and helocs, he needs time to build up a few months worth of cash, and he needs time to get past the concern of losing his job…and don’t get me started on the 401K.

Today’s numbers

Today’s economic data showed inflation in check with CPI numbers generally in line with the estimates. Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization for August were slightly better than expected. I wish I could tell you that the economic data had some effect on today’s activity but if it did it was impossible to discern amid the noise.

Tomorrow we see Housing Starts, Building Permits, Initial Jobless Claims, Continuing Claims, and the Philadelphia Fed Index. These are big numbers that could have a significant impact on Treasury yields. Below I’ve attached a review of today’s economic releases along with tomorrow’s scheduled releases.









Wednesday, August 5, 2009

I took a break. 3 or 4 days on the Gulf of Mexico. Fishing, beer, family. It was time well spent away from the market, the phone, the Bloomberg, the government spending spree, everything.

I come back and it seems like half the people have money to spend but don't like what they're seeing, and the other half are out of cash but like the bonds I'm sending. It's just a strange market.

Treasuries were all over the map today...prices down in the morning only to rally back and then be up on the day, then in the afternoon a decent sell off was underway pushing Treasury prices back down the lows of the day.

This market has a bad feel to it. Everyone wants "value". It's tough to tell them, and nobody wants to believe it but "value" is dead. There is no more "value". "Value" means "cheap" and there are no more cheap bonds. Everything is efficiently priced...and the yields suck.

One of the very nice side effects of the meltdown we saw over the last two years was inefficiency in the capital markets. Liquidity concerns drove fear into every corner of the market. Falling asset prices triggered margin calls at firms around the globe. When you get a margin call your creditor wants more cash to cover your positions...and they want it NOW. This means you have to sell something RIGHT NOW. You don't sell the junk because you can't take the loss...so you sell the good stuff to get the best price you can. The problem is that there are a lot of other folks in the same boat as you, there aren't as many buyers and the few out there know that you're under pressure to sell. The more you have to sell to satisfy the margin calls the lower the prices go on the items you're selling. It's a self defeating plan...but it's what happens in a market like the one we've had over the last two years. It's a terrible thing if you have to sell...but if you have cash...oh what a time to be a buyer.

SO...we had lots of opportunities to buy "cheap" bonds. "Value" was easy to find. MBS spreads blew out to 300 bps over Treasuries...historically these spreads run around 128 bps over. Screaming cheap they were. We sold them by the boat load and those that bought them got big yields, and now that the markets have calmed down spreads have tightened in and they have big gains too.

Therein lies the problem. The markets have calmed down. The government has propped people up, provided insurance, guaranteed liquidity, directly intervened in the market by purchasing over a trillion dollars of Agency debt...the list almost has no end. All of these things combined have absolutely crushed spreads. When is the last time you heard of someone getting a margin call? Of a money market fund breaking the buck? Of a large firm failing? You don't hear of that stuff anymore. The market is operating in a much more efficient manner than it did from 2007 to early 2009. The fundamentals that provided "value" over the last two years simply aren't there anymore. The fear is gone and everyone has the liquidity they need to operate.

It sucks...I hate it as much as you do. It's not anymore fun to buy a 3 year non-call 1 year at a 2-something yield than it is to sell it. If Bernanke is telling the truth and he has no intention to raise the overnight rate any time soon then it looks like these yields could be the norm for a while.

What would cause this to change? Inflation certainly would but where is it going to come from? From consumers and businesses that can't get loans to buy stuff? From Americans that are now far more interested in SAVING than in buying big screen TV's? The US Savings rate is on a pretty steep trajectory right now. Rising up from roughly zero percent to north of 7%. People get it now. They understand that they can't live on credit forever. They understand that their job may not be there tomorrow, and that if that happens and they have no money saved up they will be in a world of hurt.

Econ 101 tells us there are only two things you can do with a dollar...save it or spend it. Americans are beginning to save...this is a very positive thing. BUT every dollar saved is a dollar that isn't spent. Every dollar that isn't spent means less stuff needs to be manufactured, shipped, stocked on a shelf, and rung up at a register. Fewer jobs are needed to support the lower demand for goods. This is by necessity a painful adjustment to make. The current powers in Washington are trying desperately to make this a painLESS episode. They are spending money like there is no tomorrow. It's like they are all sitting around reading John Maynard Keynes and smoking crack.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Market update 7 21 09 _ Bernanke testifies


Bernanke testified before the House Financial Services Committee this morning. The short story is that Bernanke has reiterated for the umpteenth time that rates will remain low for an extended period, and that the Fed has the ability to take liquidity out of the system in the future to prevent runaway inflation. Bernanke penned an article for the Wall Street Journal today that does a very good job of explaining his case.

I was going to write that the appearance before the House Financial Services Committee was a colossal waste of time but upon further reflection I realized just how important it was. For the last three hours I watched as people who are arguably the most qualified Congressmen in the country regarding banking and finance issues, ask questions of the Federal Reserve Chairman. The meeting began with a series of statements from various politicians on both sides of the aisle. These are actually just long winded speeches that are prone cliché and rhetorical questions. As far as I can tell they serve no purpose other than to provide a platform from which the congressman can bloviate. Listening to these opening remarks is literally enough to make you bang your head on your desk.

From there the meeting moves on to the question and answer session. I didn't catch all of the questions but I caught a lot of them. The biggest revelation of the day was just how ignorant most of these people are with regard to the problems at hand. Bernanke comes across as a 150 watt bulb in a room full of night-lights. Very few of these congressman appeared to have even a basic understanding of the problems we face, much less the solutions. I hope they know more about healthcare then they do about banking…these people frighten me.

The longer Bernanke spoke the higher Treasury prices rose. When I came in this morning the 10-year Treasury was off 12 tics to yield north of 3.60%. It is now up over a point to yield 3.48%. The message from the Fed is unchanging to the point of monotony…they will keep rates low for an extended period. They say it every chance they get, and they appear to mean it. Rather than try to summarize Bernanke's article I've attached it in its entirety. It's a good read.

If you have any questions or if there is anything I can be doing for you just let me know.


WSJ: Opinion: Bernanke: The Fed's Exit Strategy


ByBEN BERNANKE


The depth and breadth of the global recession has required a highly accommodative monetary policy. Since the onset of the financial crisis nearly two years ago, the Federal Reserve has reduced the interest-rate target for overnight lending between banks (the federal-funds rate) nearly to zero. We have also greatly expanded the size of the Fed's balance sheet through purchases of longer-term securities and through targeted lending programs aimed at restarting the flow of credit.


These actions have softened the economic impact of the financial crisis. They have also improved the functioning of key credit markets, including the markets for interbank lending, commercial paper, consumer and small-business credit, and residential mortgages.


My colleagues and I believe that accommodative policies will likely be warranted for an extended period. At some point, however, as economic recovery takes hold, we will need to tighten monetary policy to prevent the emergence of an inflation problem down the road. The Federal Open Market Committee, which is responsible for setting U.S. monetary policy, has devoted considerable time to issues relating to an exit strategy. We are confident we have the necessary tools to withdraw policy accommodation, when that becomes appropriate, in a smooth and timely manner.


The exit strategy is closely tied to the management of the Federal Reserve balance sheet. When the Fed makes loans or acquires securities, the funds enter the banking system and ultimately appear in the reserve accounts held at the Fed by banks and other depository institutions. These reserve balances now total about $800 billion, much more than normal. And given the current economic conditions, banks have generally held their reserves as balances at the Fed.


But as the economy recovers, banks should find more opportunities to lend out their reserves. That would produce faster growth in broad money (for example, M1 or M2) and easier credit conditions, which could ultimately result in inflationary pressures—unless we adopt countervailing policy measures. When the time comes to tighten monetary policy, we must either eliminate these large reserve balances or, if they remain, neutralize any potential undesired effects on the economy.


To some extent, reserves held by banks at the Fed will contract automatically, as improving financial conditions lead to reduced use of our short-term lending facilities, and ultimately to their wind down. Indeed, short-term credit extended by the Fed to financial institutions and other market participants has already fallen to less than $600 billion as of mid-July from about $1.5 trillion at the end of 2008. In addition, reserves could be reduced by about $100 billion to $200 billion each year over the next few years as securities held by the Fed mature or are prepaid. However, reserves likely would remain quite high for several years unless additional policies are undertaken.


Even if our balance sheet stays large for a while, we have two broad means of tightening monetary policy at the appropriate time: paying interest on reserve balances and taking various actions that reduce the stock of reserves. We could use either of these approaches alone; however, to ensure effectiveness, we likely would use both in combination.


Congress granted us authority last fall to pay interest on balances held by banks at the Fed. Currently, we pay banks an interest rate of 0.25%. When the time comes to tighten policy, we can raise the rate paid on reserve balances as we increase our target for the federal funds rate.


Banks generally will not lend funds in the money market at an interest rate lower than the rate they can earn risk-free at the Federal Reserve. Moreover, they should compete to borrow any funds that are offered in private markets at rates below the interest rate on reserve balances because, by so doing, they can earn a spread without risk.


Thus the interest rate that the Fed pays should tend to put a floor under short-term market rates, including our policy target, the federal-funds rate. Raising the rate paid on reserve balances also discourages excessive growth in money or credit, because banks will not want to lend out their reserves at rates below what they can earn at the Fed.


Considerable international experience suggests that paying interest on reserves effectively manages short-term market rates. For example, the European Central Bank allows banks to place excess reserves in an interest-paying deposit facility. Even as that central bank's liquidity-operations substantially increased its balance sheet, the overnight interbank rate remained at or above its deposit rate. In addition, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of Canada have also used their ability to pay interest on reserves to maintain a floor under short-term market rates.


Despite this logic and experience, the federal-funds rate has dipped somewhat below the rate paid by the Fed, especially in October and November 2008, when the Fed first began to pay interest on reserves. This pattern partly reflected temporary factors, such as banks' inexperience with the new system.


However, this pattern appears also to have resulted from the fact that some large lenders in the federal-funds market, notably government-sponsored enterprises such as Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, are ineligible to receive interest on balances held at the Fed, and thus they have an incentive to lend in that market at rates below what the Fed pays banks.


Under more normal financial conditions, the willingness of banks to engage in the simple arbitrage noted above will tend to limit the gap between the federal-funds rate and the rate the Fed pays on reserves. If that gap persists, the problem can be addressed by supplementing payment of interest on reserves with steps to reduce reserves and drain excess liquidity from markets—the second means of tightening monetary policy. Here are four options for doing this.


First, the Federal Reserve could drain bank reserves and reduce the excess liquidity at other institutions by arranging large-scale reverse repurchase agreements with financial market participants, including banks, government-sponsored enterprises and other institutions. Reverse repurchase agreements involve the sale by the Fed of securities from its portfolio with an agreement to buy the securities back at a slightly higher price at a later date.


Second, the Treasury could sell bills and deposit the proceeds with the Federal Reserve. When purchasers pay for the securities, the Treasury's account at the Federal Reserve rises and reserve balances decline.


The Treasury has been conducting such operations since last fall under its Supplementary Financing Program. Although the Treasury's operations are helpful, to protect the independence of monetary policy, we must take care to ensure that we can achieve our policy objectives without reliance on the Treasury.


Third, using the authority Congress gave us to pay interest on banks' balances at the Fed, we can offer term deposits to banks—analogous to the certificates of deposit that banks offer their customers. Bank funds held in term deposits at the Fed would not be available for the federal funds market.


Fourth, if necessary, the Fed could reduce reserves by selling a portion of its holdings of long-term securities into the open market.


Each of these policies would help to raise short-term interest rates and limit the growth of broad measures of money and credit, thereby tightening monetary policy.


Overall, the Federal Reserve has many effective tools to tighten monetary policy when the economic outlook requires us to do so. As my colleagues and I have stated, however, economic conditions are not likely to warrant tighter monetary policy for an extended period. We will calibrate the timing and pace of any future tightening, together with the mix of tools to best foster our dual objectives of maximum employment and price stability.


—Mr. Bernanke is chairman of the Federal Reserve.