Saturday, June 22, 2013

Why Bernanke’s Taper Talk is another Poker Bluff

Since 2010, I have been saying that FED “exit strategies” or the du jour “taper talk” represents no more than “poker bluffs”.  Each time the FED signaled about “exit”, the eventual consequence has been to expand easing policies.

Today’s “taper talk” by the Bernake-led US Federal Reserve essentially signifies as the same dynamic.

Bernanke’s “Taper talk” is really a tactical communication maneuver to REALIGN their actions with that of the current developments in the US bond markets. The FED wants the public to believe that they are in control of the markets when they are not.


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As one would note, yields of the 10 year note has been ascendant since July 2012.

The Fed expanded unlimited QE 3.0 which only had a 3 month effect of bringing down rates.

Last May, yields began to move sharply upward a month after Kuroda’s announced one of the three arrows of Abenomics. Even the interest rate cut by the ECB had no effect on the global trend of rising yields

The impact from such polices has been one of narrowing durations, and this has been expressed by rising yields amidst unlimited and boldest monetary experiments which are indications of diminishing returns. 

Global central banks, led by the FED, will need another “shock and awe”, but effects of which may also be short-term.

The "Taper talk" as aggravating factor has only intensified the ascent of the treasury yields.

All these only reveals of the growing contradictions between monetary policies aimed at  maintaining “downward pressure on longer-term interest rates, support mortgage markets, and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative” and rising rates as indicated by the bond markets. 

So in order to maintain credibility, the exigency by the FED has been to recalibrate policies to reflect on market’s actions, thus the taper talk.

In short, Bernanke’s taper talk really is a “face saving” act for the US Federal Reserve. Unfortunately face saving has been met by a dramatic revulsion in the marketplace.

Peter Schiff at the Euro Pacific Capital articulates why Bernanke’s Taper Talk is another Poker Bluff (bold mine)
As usual the Federal Reserve media reaction machine has fallen for a poorly executed head fake. It has fallen for this move many times in the past, and for its efforts, it has tackled nothing but air. Yet right on cue, it took the bait once more. Somehow the takeaway from Wednesday's release of the June Fed statement and Chairman Ben Bernanke's press conference was that the central bank is likely to begin scaling back, or "tapering," its $85 billion per month quantitative easing program sometime later this year, and that the program may be completely wound down by the middle of next year.

Although this scenario is about as likely as an NSA-sponsored ticker tape parade for whistle blower Edward Snowden, all of the market segments reacted as if it were a fait accompli. The stock market - convinced that it will lose the support of ultra-low, long-term interest rates and the added consumer spending that results from a nascent housing bubble - sold off in triple digits. The bond market, sensing that its biggest and busiest customer will be exiting the market, followed a similarly negative trajectory. The sell-off in government and corporate debt pushed yields up to 21 month highs. In foreign exchange markets, the dollar rallied off its four-month lows based on the belief that Fed tightening will support the currency. And lastly, the gold market, sensing that an end of quantitative easing would eliminate the inflationary fears that have partially fueled gold's spectacular rise, sold off nearly five percent to a new two-and-a-half year low.

All of this came as a result of Bernanke's mild commitments to begin easing back on permanent QE sometime later this year if the economy continued to improve the way he expected. The chairman did not really elaborate on what types of improvements he had seen, or how much farther those unidentified trends would need to go before he would finally pull the trigger. He was however careful to point out that any policy shift, be it for less or more quantitative easing, would not be dependent on incoming data, but on the Fed's interpretation of that data. By stressing repeatedly that its data goalposts were "thresholds rather than triggers," the chairman gained further latitude to pursue any stance the Fed chooses regardless of the data.
Yet the mere and obvious mention that tapering was even possible, combined with the chairman's fairly sunny disposition (perhaps caused by the realization that the real mess will likely be his successor's problem to clean up), was enough to convince the market that the post-QE world was at hand. This conclusion is wrong.  

Although many haven't yet realized it, the financial markets are stuck in a "Waiting for Godot" era in which the change in policy that all are straining to see will never in fact arrive. Most fail to grasp the degree to which the "recovery" will stall without the $85 billion per month that the Fed is currently pumping into the economy.

What exactly has convinced the Fed that the economy is improving? From what I can tell, the evidence centered on the rise in stock and real estate prices, and the confidence and spending that follow as a result of the wealth effect. But inflated asset prices are completely dependent on QE and are likely to reverse course even before it is removed. And while it is painfully clear that expectations about QE continuance have made a far bigger impact on the stock, bond, and real estate markets than any other economic data points, many must be assuming that this dependency will soon end.

Those who hold this belief have naively described QE as the economy's "training wheels." (In reality the program is currently our only wheels.) They are convinced that the kindling of QE will inevitably ignite a fire in the larger economy. But the big lumber is still too dampened by debt, government spending, regulation, and high asset prices to catch fire - all we have gotten is smoke instead. A few mirrors supplied by the Fed merely completed the illusion. The larger problem of course is that even though the stimulus is the only wheels, the Fed must remove them anyways as we are cycling toward the edge of a cliff.

Although Bernanke dodged the question in his press conference, the Fed has broken the normal market for mortgage backed securities. While it's true that the Fed only owns 14% of all outstanding MBS (the "small fraction" he referred to in the press conference), it is by far the largest purchaser of newly issued mortgage debt. What would happen to the market if the Fed were no longer buying? There are no longer enough private buyers to soak up the issuance. Those who do remain would certainly expect higher yields if the option of selling to the Fed was no longer on the table. Put bluntly, the Fed is the market right now and has been for years.

A clear-eyed look at the likely consequences of a pull-back in QE should cause an abandonment of the optimistic assumptions behind the Fed's forecast. Interest rates are already rising rapidly based simply on the expectation of tapering. Imagine how high rates would go if the Fed actually tried to sell some of the mortgages it already owns. But the fact is the mere anticipation of such an event has already sent mortgage rates north of 4%, and without a lifeline from the Fed in the form of more QE, those rates will soon exceed 5%. This increase will greatly impact the housing market. Speculative buyers who have lifted the market will become sellers. More foreclosure will hit the market, just as higher home prices and mortgage rates price any remaining legitimate buyers out of the market. Housing prices will fall to new post bubble lows, sinking the phony recovery in the process. The wealth effect will work in reverse: spending and confidence will fall, unemployment will rise, and we will be back in recession even before the Fed begins to taper.

In fact, the rise in mortgage rates seen over the last month has already produced pain in the financial world, with banks reporting a rapid decline in refinancing applications. By the time rates hit 5%, the current rally in real estate will have screeched to a halt. With personal income and wage growth essentially stagnant, individual buyers are extremely dependent on the affordability allowed by ultra-low rates. A near 50% increase in mortgage rates, which would result from an increase in rates from 3.25% to 5.0%, would price a great many buyers out of the market. Higher rates would also cool much of the housing demand that has been coming from the private equity funds that have been a factor in pushing up real estate prices in recent years. Falling home prices would likely trigger a new wave of defaults and housing related bankruptcies that plunged the economy into recession five years ago.

A similar dynamic would occur in the market for U.S. Treasury debt. Despite Bernanke's assurances that the Fed is not monetizing the government's debt, the central bank has been buying nearly 70% of the new issuance in recent years. Already, rates on 10-year treasury debt have creeped up by more than 50% in less than two months to over 2.5%. Any actual decrease or cessation in buying - let alone the selling that would be needed to unwind the Fed's multi-trillion dollar balance sheet - would place the Treasury market under extreme pressure. Since low rates are the life blood of our borrow and spend economy, it is highly likely that higher rates will lead directly to lower stock prices, lower GDP growth, and higher unemployment. Since rising asset prices and the confidence and spending they produce is the basis for Bernanke's rosy forecast, new lows in house prices and a bear market in stocks will likely reverse those forecasts on a dime.

Lost on almost everyone is the effect higher interest rates and a slowing economy will have on federal budget deficits. As unemployment rises, tax revenues will fall and expenditures will rise. In addition, rising rates will not only make it more expensive for the Fed to finance larger deficits, it will also make it more expensive to refinance maturing debts. Furthermore, the profit checks Fannie and Freddie have been paying the Treasury will turn into bills for losses, as a new wave of foreclosures comes tumbling in.

It's fascinating how the goal posts have moved quickly on the Fed's playing field. Months ago the conversation focused on the "exit strategy" it would use to unwind the trillions in bonds and mortgages that it had accumulated over the last few years. Despite apparent improvements in the economy, those discussions have given way to the more modest expectations for the "tapering" of QE. I believe that we should really be expecting a "tapering" of the tapering conversations.

As a result, I expect that the Fed will continue to pantomime that an eventual Exit Strategy is preparing for a grand entrance, even as their timeline and decision criteria become ever more ambiguous. In truth, I believe that the Fed's next big announcement will be to increase, not diminish QE. After all, Bernanke made clear in his press conference that if the economy does not perform up to his expectations, he will simply do more of what has already failed.

Of course, when the Fed is forced to make this concession, it should be obvious to a critical mass that the recovery is a sham. Investors will realize that years of QE have only exacerbated the problems it was meant to solve. When the grim reality of QE infinity sets in, the dollar will drop, gold will climb, and the real crash will finally be upon us. Buckle up.
Bottom line: High interest rate amidst a greatly leveraged system will sink asset prices heavily dependent on Fed steroids. This will impair the balance sheets of 1) politically privileged banking industry, main financing intermediaries of the US government, and 2) most importantly the heavily indebted US government.

The FED is trapped. Fed policies can now be said as “damned if you “taper”, damned if you “ease”.  

Yet like Mr. Schiff, since 2010 my bet has been on the latter. Crashing markets will only give the FED the eventual justification to ease. But again the potential outcome will hardly be a risk ON environment.

1 comment:

theyenguy said...

You write, Yet like Mr. Schiff, since 2010 my bet has been on the latter. Crashing markets will only give the FED the eventual justification to ease.


I disagree, because the rise in the Interest Rate on the US Government Note, ^TNX, has been so fast, and the steepening of the 10 30 US Sovereign Debt Yield Curve, $TNX:$TYX, has been so vertical, that credit, currencies, and money literally died instantaneously. Fiat money is now longer trustworthy. People will be placing their confidence in diktat money.


The jump on the Interest Rate on the US Ten Year Note to 2.01% on May 24, 2013, constituted an "extinction event", that is a cataclysm, which literally destroyed investment choice as the way of life, and terminated the paradigm of Liberalism. The A[postle Paul communicates that Jesus Christ is operating at the helm of the Economy of God, Ephesians 1:10. He is now pivoting the world into Authoritarianism, where diktat is the way of life.


Fiat money died, and diktat money has been coming to life.


Monetary policy such as stimulus like you are suggesting were Banker regime schemes of the bygone era of inflationism.


The Beast regime schemes of diktat make up monetary policy in today’s era of destructionism.


With that as a premise, I see integration of Banks, Government, Industry, Commerce and Trade, establishing statist private partnerships in new governance, which will be working in mandates for regional security, stability and sustainability.


In the North American continent, the governance providing monetary policy of diktat will be called the North American Union, that is the NAU, or what I call CanMexAmerica, that being the amalgamation of Canada, Mexico, and the United States of America.


In Europe, the governance will be what some call the EU Superstate, or what Angela Merkel has called the New Europe, or what Robert Wenzel of Economic Policy Journal once termed the One Euro Government.


The economy of God, Ephesians 1:10, is powered by the many grand economic promises of God. The Apostle John presents God's promised dynamo of regionalism in Revelation 17:12; that being the formation of ten kingdoms: “The ten horns of the beast are ten kings who have not yet risen to power. They will be appointed to their kingdoms for one brief moment to reign with the beast.”

So new governance and new monetary policy of diktat, no more stimulus.