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Deflation won't happen here; at least not if Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman's
Ben Bernanke's plan pans out. Deflation is considered a persistent decline
in prices of goods and services; in a speech
in 2002, Bernanke outlined the steps he would take if the U.S. ever faced
the threat of deflation. Deflation is suffocating anyone holding debt as the
debt burden becomes more difficult to finance with shrinking income; in contrast,
inflation bails out those who have a lot of debt. In our assessment, fighting
deflation is the Fed's top priority now; the latest
minutes from the Fed's Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting state: Indeed,
some [FOMC members] saw a risk that over time inflation could fall below levels
consistent with the Federal Reserve's dual objectives of price stability and
maximum employment. [..] the limited scope for reducing the [Federal Funds]
target further were reasons for a more aggressive policy adjustment; [..] more
aggressive easing should reduce the odds of a deflationary outcome.
To understand how "more aggressive" easing is possible when interest rates
are close to zero, a little background is required on how the Fed is "printing" money.
Until a few weeks ago, the Fed's main tool to control interest rates was to
manage the Federal Funds target rate by engaging in "open market operations" to
buy or sell short-term government securities, mostly Treasury Bills. These
operations are based on the principle that banks have cash deposits as reserves
to lend money; for any dollar on deposit, a multiple may be provided as loans;
the basic principal of modern banking assumes that not all depositors will
want their money back simultaneously; a 'run on the bank' would occur in such
a situation that would either result in the Fed coming to the rescue or the
bank's failure.
The Fed can now "tighten" monetary policy by selling, say, Treasury Bills,
to the bank; in return, the Fed will receive the cash; and the bank will have
less cash available to lend - because of the multiplier effect, small actions
by the Fed tend to have - albeit with a delay of a couple of months - significant
impact on lending and thus economic activity. There are no coins exchanging
hands; these are entries into the balance sheets at the bank and the Fed. By
making cash less available in the banking system, the cost of borrowing, i.e.
interest rates, goes up.
Conversely, the Fed can buy Treasury Bills from banks and supply them with
cash (providing liquidity) in return. This unleashes lending power at the banks
and lowering the cost of borrowing.
This world was shaken when Congress, as part of passing the TARP bank bailout
program, authorized the Fed to pay interest on deposits at the Federal Reserve.
Theoretically, even if the Fed provides massive amounts of liquidity, interest
rates should not go to zero as banks should always be able to go to the Fed
and receive interest on deposits there. The idea is that the banking system
could be flooded with liquidity while ensuring that interest rates don't go
down to zero. Fed officials are fairly miffed that the market hasn't quite
worked that way as short term Treasury bills have hovered close to zero with
the official target Federal Funds rate at 1% and the interest
paid on deposits at the Fed at or near 1%. Note that many of the new programs
the Fed has introduced have little or no historic precedent; as a result, the
programs may not be as effective or may have unintended consequences.
Aside from paying interest on deposits, the Fed, using the above model, can
do a lot more to provide "liquidity". Namely, the Fed is not limited to buying
and selling T-Bills; as recent announcements have shown, the Fed is free to
buy just about anything: mortgage backed securities (MBS), car loans, commercial
paper, to name a few; the Fed could also buy typewriters, cars, domestic or
international stocks, anything. In an announcement on November 25, 2008, the
Fed said it would buy up to $600 billion of mortgage-backed securities issued
by the government-sponsored entities (GSEs) Fannie and Freddie.
For example, a bank would like some cash, but cannot find a buyer for mortgage-backed
securities it holds. The Fed may step in, buy the securities and provide the
bank with cash. The bank in turn is now free to lend money - a multiple of
the cash received.
How does the Fed get its money? It doesn't need to borrow it; it merely creates
an entry into its balance sheet. All the Fed requires to "print" money is
a keyboard connected to a computer. The difference between the Fed and the
Treasury issuing money is that the Treasury needs to get permission from Congress
before selling bonds. In this context, it shall be mentioned that physical
cash (coins, bank notes) are entered as liabilities on the Fed's balance sheets;
they are rather unique liabilities, however, as you can never redeem your cash:
if you went to a bank, the best you can hope for in return for your dollar
bill is a piece of paper that states that the bank owes you one dollar. While
it is possible for central banks to remove cash in circulation, they are not
obliged to do so.
Until recently, the Fed would only temporarily park non-government securities
on its balance sheet: a bank would typically receive a temporary, often overnight,
loan for depositing top rated securities with the Fed; these "swap agreements" were
traditionally intended for very short-term loans, but the crisis has led the
Fed and other central banks around the world to engage in 60, 90 day or even
longer agreements. Since late September, the idea of swap agreements has been
supplemented by outright purchases.
When the Fed issues cash for debt securities it acquires, we talk about "monetizing
the debt".
This can be taken a step further, although this last phase has not yet been
implemented: when the government needs to raise money, the Treasury issues
debt in form of Treasury bills and Treasury bonds. To keep the cost of borrowing
for the government low, the Fed may step in and buy Treasury bonds. Whereas
traditionally, the Fed is actively managing short-term interest rates by buying
and selling short-term Treasury bills, the Fed may also buy, say, 10 or 30-year
bonds. It's a wonderful funding mechanism: if the Treasury needs to raise cash,
the Fed could come and provide it.
Isn't this extremely inflationary? Quite possibly, quite likely, but
not necessarily is the short answer. First of all, the Fed has the ability
to "sterilize" its debt monetization program. Take the situation where the
Federal Reserve buys "highly rated", toxic assets from the bank, but doesn't
want the bank to go out and lend a multiple of the cash it receives. What the
Fed can do is to sell the same bank, for example, some Treasury bills to "mop
up" the extra liquidity. This would have the impact of improving the bank's
balance sheet without supercharging the economy. Indeed, in late September
the Treasury instructed the Fed to do just that; they even invented "Supplementary
Financing Program" (SFP) bills for this purpose. On the chart below, the dark
blue line indicates the cumulative growth in the Fed's balance sheet, i.e.
the Fed's "printing of money"; the light blue line shows the cumulative activity
to mop up the added liquidity by selling SFP bills to banks. The Fed's balance
sheet has grown by about $1.2 trillion to currently over $2 trillion; Dallas
Fed President Richard W. Fisher said the Fed's balance sheet may reach $3 trillion
by January.

As even the untrained eye can see, the Fed has not mopped up all of its liquidity
injections; indeed, as of October 22, 2008, the Fed seems to have all but abandoned
the program. In our assessment, at least for the time being, the Fed is not
interested in mopping up, but to add massive amounts of liquidity.
Well, isn't that extremely inflationary? It depends on your definition
of inflation; if it's a growth in money supply, then, yes, this is already
extremely inflationary. But so far, this hasn't translated into higher price
levels or even higher long-term inflation expectations as measured by the spread
of 10 year TIPS versus 10 year Treasury bonds; TIPS are inflation protected
Treasuries that provide compensation for increases in the consumer price index
(CPI); it is this spread that the Fed is most concerned about when gauging
the market's inflation expectations.
Why has it not (yet) been inflationary? Well, the Fed can provide all
the money it wants, but it cannot force institutions to lend. Below is a chart
of the "excess reserves" in the banking system; these are the reserves banks
hold in excess of what they are required to maintain.(Fed
statistical release H3, table 1 column 4):

Until September, excess reserved hovered at or below about US $2 billion,
but have ballooned to over $600 billion as of November 19, 2008. Read in conjunction
with our discussion above on the Fed "printing money", the Fed has thrown money
at the banking system, but the banks are hoarding the cash, they do
not lend. For banks to lend money, two basic conditions must be bet: they must
feel strong enough to provide credit; and they must feel their customers -
be they consumers or businesses - are creditworthy enough.
Before we discuss the next step the Fed has taken in its undeterred will to
unlock credit in the economy, let's pause for a second to look at a potential
unintended consequence. If you are a bank and don't like to lend to the private
sector, but are awash in cash, what do you do? You can deposit the cash at
the Fed and earn 1% interest; you can buy Treasury bills and earn approximately
zero; or you can lend money to --- the government. In our view, it seems a
logical conclusion for banks to buy longer dated Treasury bonds. Banks are
in the business of borrowing short and lending long: typically, banks would
have deposits (short-term loans from depositors, callable at any time) and
lend to finance long-term projects. This may well be the greatest carry trade
of all times, except that it has neither credit, nor currency risk; it does
have interest risk, i.e. if long-term interest rates go up because the market
prices in the risk of inflation, then banks could lose money.
While Congress may be furious that banks are not lending, the Fed has an interest
in keeping the long-term cost of borrowing low. Under normal circumstances,
the cost of borrowing should group as unprecedented amounts need to be raised
to finance the various programs in the pipeline and additional spending programs
expected by Congress; the cost of borrowing has the potential of going dramatically
higher if Asian buyers don't increase their appetite for U.S. debt; Asian buyers
have, in recent years, purchased the majority of debt issued by the U.S. government.
Now, however, there's less trade with the U.S., and Asian governments need
to stimulate their domestic economies; while some may try to keep their exports
cheap, the Chinese approach of investing about US$ 600 billion into their domestic
economy is more efficient. And unlike the U.S. government, the Chinese is sitting
on over $2 trillion in foreign currency reserves and can afford to have a massive
domestic stimulus package. In our view, foreign governments are unlikely to
be able to step in and keep U.S. borrowing costs low.
Never underestimate the Fed. If the money thrown at the banking system doesn't
stick, i.e. doesn't result in easier credit for the rest of the economy, they
can also be more targeted. As of November 25, 2008, the Fed has announced it
will buy mortgage-backed securities in the open market to get the cost of borrowing
down. Specifically, debt securities issued by Fannie and Freddie, the government
sponsored entities, will be purchased. Almost immediately after the announcement,
the prices of these securities rose, causing the yields to go down. The goal
of the Fed in this program is to keep the cost of borrowing for homebuyers
low. While this will keep the cost of borrowing low for those who qualify for
a loan, this program may do little to provide access to the mortgage market
for those that have been shunned from it. This includes the difficulty for
many to refinance their homes when the value of their house is less than the
value of the mortgage.
In our assessment, the Fed will do anything to keep the cost of borrowing
low. This has included targeted purchases of mortgage-backed securities to
help homeowners; this has included purchases of commercial paper to help corporate
America; it has included providing banks with massive liquidity; and it may
include the outright purchase of government debt to help finance the spending
programs in the pipeline.
What happens if the Fed keeps the cost of borrowing artificially low, either
directly or indirectly? Traditionally, the Fed only controls the cost of short-term
borrowing, but recent Fed actions set the stage for more active involvement
throughout the yield curve, i.e. also for longer dated government bonds. Think
about it from the vantage point of the potential buyer of Treasury bonds or
Fannie and Freddie paper. If the yield offered is artificially low, then potential
buyers are likely to abstain; after all, there may be other investments whose
price are less, or not at all, manipulated. Investors don't require a high,
but a fair return on their money; they want to be compensated for the risk
they are taking. This includes those who lend to governments. In a world where
the cost of borrowing is artificially lowered, it may be up to the Fed to be
the backstop of all economic activity as other buyers may be more reluctant
to step in. Paradoxically, it's precisely government debt that investors are
looking for because of all the uncertainty in the private sector. However,
as the U.S. does not live in a vacuum, international flows of funds do need
to be considered. A foreign investor may think twice before buying U.S. government
bonds or agency papers if they are not fairly compensated for the risk they
are taking. Aside from our argument above that Asian buyers may not be able
to finance U.S. spending, they may be put off by unattractive yields.
After all, the massive stimuli under way should be highly inflationary; but
if the Fed helps to engineer that markets cannot price inflation into bond
prices, there has to be a valve. This valve, in our view, will be the U.S.
dollar; we cannot see the dollar hold up in face of the types of intervention
that are under way and that we see play out. Incidentally, a substantially
weaker dollar may be exactly what Fed Chairman Bernanke wants. He has repeatedly
praised Roosevelt for going off the gold standard during the Great Depression
to allow the price level to adjust to the pre-1929 level; this is Fed talk
for praising the pursuit of inflationary policies. His only criticism has been
that he didn't act fast enough. Similarly, his criticism of the Japanese encounter
with deflation has been that the Japanese have not acted forceful and fast
enough to fight it; what he may underestimate is that the Japanese have traditionally
financed their deficits domestically. In the U.S., these days, most of the
deficit is financed abroad; the U.S. is lucky that at least the debt is U.S.
dollar denominated so that it can, at any time, repay its debt by simply printing
more money. However, the value that foreigners may place on the U.S. dollar
may be substantially less the more inflationary the policies are the U.S. is
pursuing.
Many still believe in the infallibility of the Fed. Foremost, many support
the massive liquidity push because they are firmly convinced that the Fed will
mop up the excess liquidity when markets normalize. Indeed, without this confidence,
the markets might overwhelm the Fed and cause a disorderly outcome for inflation
or the dollar. Even we don't doubt that the Fed has the best of intentions.
The Fed believes that the end justifies the means; however, we doubt the end
will be as intended, thus questioning whether the means are justified. But
just as the past 22 months have shown that the markets do not act exactly as
Fed official have anticipated, we cannot see that the Fed, Treasury and other
government programs will work as designed. While we don't rule out that an
inflationary boom is possible, once the liquidity is starting to be mopped
up, we are afraid, economic growth is likely to collapse once again. Unless
real wages can be improved, consumers must de-leverage. Propping up a broken
system will simply make the later crash even more severe.
Similarly, if Asian governments continue to support the dollar, they will
seriously weaken their own position; in a best-case scenario, we will then
face the same challenges again in 10 to 15 years, but then a country like China
won't have $2 trillion in reserves, but have great difficulty to stabilize
its economy. The U.S. has taken the attitude that other countries must support
the dollar because it is in their interest. But there's a limit to what other
countries can do; there's also a limit when it seizes to be in their interest.
In particular, it is irresponsible for the U.S. to pursue a policy that is
destructive to the dollar while counting on Asian governments to prop it up.
In the meantime, responsible savers in the U.S. have their savings put at risk
due to all the bailouts.
A substantially weaker dollar may cause price levels to rise; as a result,
the dollar may be a better indicator of inflationary pressures to come than
the yield curve that is distorted because of the various Fed programs. Fed
Chairman Bernanke may want to have a weak dollar and inflation, but may ultimately
be getting more than he is bargaining for.
We manage the Merk Hard and Asian Currency Funds, no-load mutual funds seeking
to protect against a decline in the dollar by investing in baskets of hard
and Asian currencies, respectively. To learn more about the Funds, or to subscribe
to our free newsletter, please visit www.merkfund.com.
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