In response to my
most recent post regarding the Fed and interest rates, I receive an email
query. Having received permission to
publish the email, here it is (with my thoughts / comments interspersed):
Thanks for today's article. I've
been waiting for someone to address IOER for a long time.
Please consider putting your mind
to this as it may benefit those of us trying to navigate the storm ahead. In reality, the Fed's dual mandate is: (1) to maintain and preserve the US dollar
hegemony/monopoly here and abroad; and (2) keep alive the US federal
government, its benefactor and protector.
In short, the Fed's primary goal is control and keeping the wheels on
the money cart…
This seems to be as good a job description as any – better
than the publicly available mumbo-jumbo.
…it doesn't care about profits or
losses of its MBS portfolio. The Fed
could (and may) take the trillions of worthless MBS securities on its balance
sheet and simply throw them in the furnace or hit the digital "delete"
button.
There are a couple of points I would raise: first, I am not
sure what it means if a central bank was to have a negative equity position on
its balance sheet; let’s just say I have never come to a settled view on the
ramifications of this. Certainly, if the
mortgage securities are / were not worth what the Fed paid for them, this
possibility becomes real. However, I
believe the Fed values its (claimed) gold holdings at $44 or some such. Properly valued, this could offset any
negative positions on the securities.
In any case, I don’t know if a negative equity position
matters at all for the Fed.
But the “throw them in the furnace” part is something I have
thought about for some time. The Fed
holds government securities, government backed securities, and securities the
government would bail-out if necessary.
At the same time, after covering a few billion dollars of expenses, the
Fed returns (off the top of my head) $50 - $70 billion per year to the treasury
– interest income and the like.
The Fed holds the bonds; the Fed returns the interest to the
creditors. Neither principal repayment
nor interest is expected from the debtor.
Doesn’t this suggest that the debtor (the government) has in essence
defaulted on the bonds being held by the Fed?
I am not sure what this means, but it means something. As long as price inflation is politically
tolerable, I continue to wonder why the Fed would ever shrink this portfolio – and
in fact why not keep buying. Borrowing
without repaying, paying no interest, defaulting without embarrassment for the
US government. This seems to me to be
the current situation for at least $4 trillion of US obligations.
It doesn't need to "unwind"
anything, as it is not a market player and doesn't care about its own losses or
bad purchases. It is a monopoly game
banker that will do anything within the confines of maintaining monetary
control. Wondering what the Fed will do
with its balance sheet may therefore be a red herring.
In many ways I agree.
I only began exploring this topic because I became curious about the
mechanism of how the Fed would raise rates – it always struck me as an issue
for the Fed to be able to raise rates with today’s level of excess
reserves. I wanted to understand the
mechanisms and possibilities, nothing more.
So, what it to prevent the Fed
from: (1) raising its
interbank/overnight rate 25 basis points (or even more); (2) delivering
helicopter money/inflation to mainstreet by, instead of paying IOER, charging
rent, thereby forcing banks to lend; and (3) tempering the mass inflation
potentially caused by 2 by raising reserve ratios?
Don’t 2 & 3 offset or neutralize each other? Setting this question aside, I think
helicopter money is possible, even likely if price inflation continues to
remain tame. Let’s see if commodities
push ever higher in price – it seems we have seen this bust and it isn’t clear
that anything on the near horizon will change this.
I suspect the reason it can't do
this is that it will negatively affect treasuries and potentially kill the US
gov's ability to borrow but I don’t' know how or why.
I have not figured out what ends this game as long as price
inflation stays politically acceptable.
We have had significant expansion of central bank balance sheets around
the world – and not all of the expansion is sitting in excess reserves;
trillions of dollars of central bank expansion globally, and no price inflation
to be found anywhere. Why can’t the game
continue – with further central bank balance sheet expansions and returning the
interest income to the Treasury? The Fed
increased its balance sheet to over $4 trillion. Why not $8 trillion? $12 trillion?
Default without embarrassment.
It is possible that the game doesn’t end until we reach a
point where the shrinking productive class can no longer support the growing
non-productive class. (This
post is two years old, so I won’t vouch for every word, but it will give
some idea of what I am getting at.)
Think about the inclusion of Mexico, China, India, Eastern
Europe, etc., into the division of labor economy. Yet, we have not seen corresponding price
deflation (as should have been expected); instead the added productivity
billions of newly-productive people has been consumed, introduced as feedstock
for the non-productive class.
Consider the almost unbelievable advances in technology and
communication – perhaps as valuable to productivity as the industrial
revolution. Where is the corresponding
price deflation? Again, consumed by the
non-productive.
Someday this must end…I think. But when and why? The best answer might be found in
demographics. This says we are still
decades away.
Also, helicopter money may be
pushing on string because average joe is tired of debt and won't take the bait
this time.
It doesn’t have to be debt.
Why not just deposit $1000 per month for every individual over 18? Why not charge demurrage to encourage
spending? Again, until price inflation
picks up, why not?
Further, Repos and reverse repos
sound like de minimus/at the margins monetary tools. IOER (and ROER, rent on excess reserves) are
the big guns and for some reason the fed hasn't used them to put money on main
street.
From my understanding, the problem with IOER is that it
doesn’t touch enough players – money market funds, etc. This is why they have to go also to reverse
repos.
Why hasn’t the Fed charged the banks – forcing the banks to
lend? I think for the reason I have
earlier offered: the main objective was to ensure liquidity in the system. But if inflation stays tame, they could do
this (of course, after further growing the balance sheet). There is a cost (negative interest) to
holding money in other countries at the moment – Switzerland comes to mind –
yet price inflation remains low.
Thanks again for your
analysis.
I hope I helped.
I know others, like Wenzel, believe we are on the cusp of
significant price inflation. I certainly
will not argue with him, and I certainly do not study the data the way he
does. If, a year from now, price
inflation moves to 4% or higher, it wouldn’t shock me.
But I look around and wonder why this game cannot continue
for some time. I have yet to find a
reason.
THis back and forth NAILED IT....IOER IS THE CANNON THAT THE FED can unleash to stop any kind of of monetary deflation and unleash it they will!
ReplyDeleteAnd...yes...this game can go on for many years to come and the dollar will still be the reserve currency of the world. There is no rival to the dollar as far as the eye can see. Too many reasons to list but suffice to say that our economy may have some friction to it but Europe Japan China India Brazil etc etc....are totally bound up and absolutely dysfunctional compared to good ole America
What I have learned about IOER is that its effectiveness could be limited due to the limited number of institutions that will have access. Of course, the Fed could change those rules, I suppose.
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