사이드바 영역으로 건너뛰기

'2007/08/22'에 해당되는 글 2건

  1. 2007/08/22 Market Bondage (T. Palley)
  2. 2007/08/22 Money markets hit reverse (FT)

Newer Entries Older Entries

Market Bondage (T. Palley)

View Comments

With Wall Street beset by a crisis of confidence and the mortgage-backed securities market seizing up, there is urgent need for an immediate emergency Federal Reserve interest rate cut. This sudden need has also revealed how today’s financial system places monetary policy in bondage to markets. That system has evolved over the past twenty-five years with the Fed’s approval, and the current crisis starkly reveals need for reform.

An emergency rate cut is needed to prevent the sub-prime mortgage meltdown from spiraling into a full-blown recession. By immediately lowering the base cost of credit, a rate cut can make existing mortgage securities more attractive to investors and also encourage continued flows of mortgage finance for the housing market.

Such continued financing is critical. In its absence mortgage availability will shrink and mortgage rates rise, thereby deepening the housing market slump. That is likely to trigger additional mortgage defaults and reductions in construction activity, thereby perhaps even causing a recession. In this event, the spiral of credit deterioration stands to deepen, jumping from the sub-prime mortgage market to the entire housing sector and the economy more broadly.

In response to this threat the Fed has already moved to inject significant temporary additional liquidity into money markets, effectively lending billions of dollars to banks to prevent their having to make further asset sales under current distressed conditions. Central banks in Europe, Japan, and elsewhere have done the same. However, because the costs of recession promise to be so large, the Fed must also move to cut rates.

As recently as ten days ago Fed policy was focused on containing inflation. Now, within the blink of an eye, the evaporation of confidence among Wall Street lenders has created conditions warranting an emergency rate cut to save the economy. This power of financial markets is rooted in a new business cycle that emerged in the 1980s and which has made the economy increasingly dependent on debt to fuel expansions. The creation of debt in turn relies on highly leveraged financial intermediaries that package and re-package loans while promising liquidity they are unable to deliver. As a result, the system has become fragile.

Increased financial fragility is one feature of the new system. A second and worse feature is that increased debt is part of a complex for shifting value from the real sector to the financial sector - a phenomenon known as “financialization”. This increases profits in the financial sector at the expense of the real economy. Meanwhile, the new structure also implicitly compels monetary policy to rescue the financial sector if it gets into trouble. This amounts to a policy stick-up whereby the Fed is forced to provide the get away car for fear that not doing so will result in even greater economic damage.

Today’s system places monetary policy in a double bind. In good times the Fed is forced to raise interest rates to maintain lender beliefs that inflation will remain low. Those beliefs ensure investors are willing to make the loans needed to fuel the system. However, the result is higher interest rates and curtailed expansions that hold down wages and employment, thereby limiting the share of productivity growth going to working families.

In bad times, such as we are now experiencing, the Fed is obliged to come to the rescue of lenders for fear that if they stop lending the economy will tank. Moreover, this fear deepens the greater the level and burden of debts. Worse yet, such intervention creates a problem known as “moral hazard” that can aggravate the need for rescues. Having the Fed intervene to prevent financial meltdowns tacitly puts a floor under financial markets. That floor acts as a form of insurance for investors and speculators, who knowing that they are protected against large losses then channel more funds into even higher risk investments and loans.

The Fed has actively promoted the new system through deregulation. Its claim has been the risks of the financial system imploding are less because risk is spread. That claim is now being shown to be false.

For two decades working families have felt the effects of the policy head-lock imposed by financial market demands for ultra-low inflation. Now, financial markets are exercising their other demand for interest rate cuts to preserve asset values in order to prevent recession.

 

The threat posed by the current crisis is such that the Fed should meet this demand. That means immediately cutting rates and continuing to judiciously provide emergency liquidity. However, once the storm passes Congress and the Fed must address the systemic problems and policy distortions that have been exposed by the current crisis.

Copyright Thomas I. Palley

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2007/08/22 06:30 2007/08/22 06:30

댓글0 Comments (+add yours?)

트랙백0 Tracbacks (+view to the desc.)

Money markets hit reverse (FT)

View Comments

Money markets hit reverse on hopes for rate cut

By Krishna Guha in Washington and Saskia Scholtes n New York

Published: August 21 2007 15:39 | Last updated: August 21 2007 21:09

Money markets on Tuesday staged a dramatic reversal of Monday’s flight to safety, after an influential US senator fuelled expectations that the US Federal Reserve would soon cut interest rates.

Christopher Dodd, the chairman of the Senate banking committee, told reporters after a meeting with Ben Bernanke, the Fed chairman, and Hank Paulson, US Treasury secretary, that Mr Bernanke had told him he would use “all the tools” at his disposal to contain market turmoil and prevent it from damaging the economy.

The revelation helped turn around investor sentiment after an earlier warning by Mr Paulson that there was no quick solution to the problems in credit markets.

Mr Dodd said Mr Bernanke also indicated that he was not satisfied with the market’s response to the Fed’s decision on Friday to make direct loans available to banks on attractive terms through its discount window.

The meeting of the three men on Capitol Hill highlights the increasing political pressure on the Fed.

Fed insiders played down the significance of Mr Dodd’s remarks, indicating that there was no change in policy since Friday, when it put out a statement saying it was “prepared to act as needed to mitigate the adverse effects on the economy arising from the disruptions in financial markets”.

The Fed was not expecting market conditions to improve dramatically following Friday’s move, so it will not be too disheartened by the mixed developments since then.

Nonetheless, Mr Dodd’s comments helped sustain a pull-back in the short-term government debt market, where investors had pushed yields down to remarkable lows amid a desperate scramble for safe government paper.

The yield on the one-month Treasury bill showed the sharpest move, rising by 87 basis points to 2.98 per cent by late afternoon in New York, while the three-month bill yield was 43bp higher on the day at 3.61 per cent. Investors had initially poured into short-term government debt yesterday, extending a flight to quality as they shunned the commercial paper market.

The move had pushed yields in the market for Treasury bills around 30 basis points lower, driving the yield on one-month bills below 2 per cent and the three-month bill yield below 3 per cent. The flight to safety had also extended to the two-year Treasury note, which saw its yield fall below the psychologically significant level of 4 per cent yesterday.

In a further sign of investor risk aversion, the pricing differential between higher and lower-rated commercial paper issued by non-financial companies ex­panded to the widest levels since the aftermath of the terrorist attacks on September 11 2001.

“Credit is being repriced, reassessed across our capital markets,” Mr Paulson told CNBC television. “As the Fed addresses liquidity this makes it possible, this makes it easier, for the market to focus on risk and pricing risk. This will play out over time.”

Conditions in equity markets remained tense as convulsions swept through the money and credit markets. By midday in New York, the S&P 500 index was up 0.4 per cent at 1,451.59 while in Europe, leading shares ended the day flat after a late rally.

European shares were weighed down by fresh concerns about the exposure of the German banking sector to turmoil in the US subprime mortgage market.

Underlining the severity of US subprime woes on German banks following the near-collapse of lender IKB this month, Alexander Stuhlmann, chief executive of lender WestLB, said the sector was in a “not uncritical situation” overall.

But shares in Asia continued to rally from last week’s rout. The Morgan Stanley Capital International Asia-Pacific index was up 1.2 per cent in the early evening in Tokyo. This took its rise over the past two days to 5.3 per cent.

진보블로그 공감 버튼트위터로 리트윗하기페이스북에 공유하기딜리셔스에 북마크
2007/08/22 06:24 2007/08/22 06:24

댓글0 Comments (+add yours?)

트랙백0 Tracbacks (+view to the desc.)

Newer Entries Older Entries