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.



Interpolated Yield Curve report for July



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.



All of the talk from the Fed is of rates staying low for a long time to come. Just recently Janet Yellen said that the Fed could conceivably leave the overnight rate at zero for “years”. Recent statements from the Fed also say that if we weren’t already at zero on Fed Funds then they’d be lowering rates right now…the economic picture is just that bad.



With a recovery nowhere in sight it looks like the only thing that could change the Feds mind on leaving rates at current levels is inflation. While the Fed would love to keep rates low long enough to let the economy work through its problems, the government continues to spend money like a drunken sailor on a 72 hour liberty. How long that can continue without igniting inflation concerns is another matter.



The Fed for its part insists that if inflation reignites they will have the political independence necessary to raise interest rates…even in the face of an economy that is still stalled. It will be a very interesting story to watch if we have 10% unemployment and the Fed has to begin tightening. The terms “stagflation” and “double-dip recession” have been getting more air time recently…“recovery” not as much. The economy is in such poor shape that even the politicians are pushing back talk of recovery. Now we hear statements like “it may take years” for a recovery to take place.



The survey data below are the latest estimates from economists surveyed by Bloomberg. This can serve as a useful sounding board as we move into the second half of 2009.



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


Thursday, July 9, 2009

Market Update 7 09 09 _ How many unemployed?

It’s another beautiful summer morning here in Memphis, Tennessee. On my way in to work this morning it was 72 degrees, no humidity, clear skies, and the windows were down. The big decision was “do I turn right and go to work, or do I turn left and go bass fishing?” Work always gets the nod but asking the question at least makes me feel better. So on the way in I was thinking about today’s pending economic releases and the plans I’ve heard from the government on how to “fix” the economy. More specifically I had been pondering the government’s plan to reduce unemployment by putting people to work on infrastructure projects funded by the stimulus plan. We frequently joke about the wisdom of using unemployed people from non-construction industries to build roads and bridges as it doesn’t seem efficient or safe. For instance, how many unemployed waitresses have ever tied rebar for pouring a reinforced concrete slab? I’m certain it’s not many. However, on the drive in this morning I was waiting for my turn to go through a construction zone that had funneled a two-lane road down to one-lane. As I sat there it hit me…every job site like this one has at least two people that don’t need any skill at all…these are the guys holding the “stop/slow” signs. In theory you could put all 7 million unemployed to work if you had 3.5 million construction sites that needed “stop/slow” sign holders (one guy at each end). In reality this is likely a union job anyway so we’d need 5 people per sign to get a full 8 hours of sign holding done…so 10 people per site. All we need is 700,000 construction sites like this and the government can get the unemployment rate to zero percent. I’m writing my congressman this morning…then I’m going fishing.

Initial Claims

Initial jobless claims were released at a lower level than expected this morning. This is a series that tracks the number of first time applications for jobless benefits. This number has been running north of 600,000 per week for 22 consecutive weeks. The pace has been quite dramatic. Today the number broke below 600,000 and posted a 565,000 reading. The estimate from the Bloomberg Survey was for 603,000 people to file. The series has definitely seen a slow decrease in filings over the last several weeks, today’s number was a larger drop than the trend would have indicated. It’s interesting to note that last week was a short week…how many people can you fire in a short week? And of those fired they have 1 less day to file for benefits if the government office that takes the applications is closed on Friday. It will be interesting to see if this number bounces back up next week.



Continuing Claims

Even though the pace of Initial Jobless Claims has dropped a bit, we still have a huge stockpile of unemployed people. The Continuing Claims number was expected to show 6.7 million receiving unemployment benefits, the actual release was 6.88 million. Where will these almost 7 million Americans find jobs? We still have close to 600,000 a week losing their jobs. It must be a surreal scene at the unemployment office. 6.8 million people picking up unemployment checks with the TV in the background telling them that things are getting better…the line will only be 580,000 people longer next week.

How long does it take to put 7 million Americans back to work? Where will the economic growth come from to create jobs? When you step back from the day to day process of being involved in the market and you look out over a longer horizon you don’t see a lot of factors that scream “growth”. I see massive deficit spending, higher taxes, and more government regulation; none of these things causes growth…they work against it.

Below is a graph of Continuing Jobless Claims going back to 1967. If you have any questions on this material or if there is anything I can be doing for you just let me know.




















Monday, July 6, 2009

An ominous jobs number

Jobs lost

The most interesting event of the day was a Bloomberg story that showed the relationship between jobs created and lost over the business cycle. The article pointed out that at this point in the recession the economy has lost more jobs than were created during the previous expansion.

Over the last expansion (say 2000 to 2006, I don't have the article in front of me so my dates may be off a bit) the economy created 5.2 million jobs. Since the downturn, the economy has shed 6.3 million jobs. That is the first time this has happened since...you can guess this one....come on...the great...the greaaaat....depression, that's right. One more thing to add to the "worst since the great depression" list.

I think the worst part about the metric is that the job loss figures are still in freefall. There doesn't seem to be any POSITIVE news that would indicate a bottom...a stabilization of some sort. We just blew past a record with no sign of slowing down.

Right now everyone is grasping and reaching for a leg of hope. There doesn't seem to be any truly "good" news out there. There is an abundance "less bad" news...but that hardly qualifies as "good" does it?

It's a bit like the doctor telling you he has "good news", then he says that you'll likely live 3 more years instead of just the 2 years he initially thought. It's tough to spin that as good news but plenty in the media seem ready to do so.

Muni problems

Moving on from that...how is California NOT rated as junk? THEY CAN'T PAY THEIR BILLS!!!

If California were a company (a different company than Fannie or Freddie who don't operate under the rules of the real world...or even AIG...but I digress) their debt would be trading with junk ratings and junk prices. If a company is handing out IOU's to their suppliers in lieu of cash it's a pretty big warning sign.

So far Fitch is the only rating agency that has even come close. They downgraded California GO paper to BBB...just two notches above junk. It makes you wonder how much political pressure is being put on Moody and S&P to keep their ratings levels articifially high. Just what we need on the heels of ratings agencies misleading people on CDO deals (remember the AAA rated CDO deal that dropped 17 ratings notches in ONE DAY?)...doing it again on Muni's.

The political pressure on the ratings agencies is likely to come due to the fact that so many regulated depositories hold California paper. If that debt gets downgraded to junk there will necessarily be a massive wave of OTTI writedowns associated with the debt in bank investment portfolios. If a bank holds $1 million of a California GO that they bought at par ($100) and the paper subsequently gets cut to junk and trades at $45, the bank has to write the value of the bond down to it's market value. They will see a $55 write-down go through the income statement (ruining earnings) and then hit the capital account on the balance sheet.

The last thing a bank needs in this environment is anything that erodes earnings and capital. This could be enough to push some marginal banks over the edge. It will certainly prolong the time it takes to get the financials back on solid footing and therefore stall any hope of economic recovery. This is why I expect there is a lot of political pressure on the ratings agencies. If you think there isn't take a look back at how the Treasury twisted Ken Lewis' arm at Bank of America when he thought about backing out of the Merril Lynch purchase. I'm sure there is dirty pool being played all over right now.

This will be an interesting train wreck to watch.