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In the longer term, the risk of the U.S. suffering through a bout with hyperinflation
is very real. However, in the short term what we most likely face is a protracted
period of stagflation first because of our record debt and the Fed's decision
to pay interest on excess bank reserves.
What is clear is that despite government's best efforts, the rate of increase
in bank lending is falling off a cliff. According to the St. Louis Federal
Reserve, Total Commercial and Industrial Loans are up 3% from the year ago
period and Total Loans and leases are up just 2% Y.O.Y. While that's still
an increase in lending those rates are down from 22% and 13% respectively from
their 2007 level.
So why are banks not pushing more money out the door even at record low interest
rates? It's a fairly well known fact that Household debt (97% of GDP) and total
debt (360% of GDP) are dampening the general desire to borrow. But what is
less talked about is the decision by the Federal Reserve to pay the same interest
rate on both commercial banks' excess and required reserves held at the Fed.
In October of 2008, the Fed decided to pay interest on the money it holds
for commercial banks because it wanted to place a floor under the Funds Rate,
which is the rate banks charge each other for overnight loans. At that time,
the spread between the interest paid on required reserves and the interest
paid on excess reserves was .75%. Banks still had plenty of incentive to lend
their money held at the Fed as they received a much higher rate on required
reserves (money-backing loans) than excess reserves. But on December 24th,
2008, the Fed lowered the interest paid on all reserves to .25%.
Although that may seem like a paltry rate, it is still averaging about .10%
above the Effective Federal Funds Rate and .16% above the 3 month Treasury
bill. Banks now have little reason to lend to each other and can earn more
loaning risk free to the Fed for 3 months than by lending money to the Treasury.
The Monetary Base now stands at $1.78 trillion, but the amount of excess reserves
has also grown to $862 billion -- both all-time record highs. So, while many
(including myself) fret over the tremendous build up in the Base, much of that
increase is currently laying dormant at the Fed. The question is: why does
the Fed continue to pay banks not to make loans?
Its rational for performing a levitation act on the Funds rate seems a bit
futile as it now stands at just .15%. One can only hope that the Fed is actually
fearful of its own monetary creation and does not want banks to deploy the
full force of the Base as that would lead to hyperinflation in short order.
Until banks begin to increase lending and the money multiplier kicks into
full gear we will not experience surging inflation. However, because of our
record deficit spending, the Fed will be huge factor in funding Treasury's
ballooning debt. Thus, Mr. Bernanke is now forced to be a major participant
in Treasury auctions because of his desire to keep rates artificially low.
The most likely outcome is for economic growth to remain well below trend because
of the massive deleveraging that the economy still must endure while inflation
simultaneously becomes more salient as the Fed monetizes the national debt.
The Fed's challenge in the long term will be to remove that liquidity without
destroying the economy in the meantime, a nearly impossible task as I outlined
in a previous
commentary. If Bernanke and company cannot shrink the balance sheet once
banks begin to lend with abandon once again, the likelihood of hyperinflation
skyrockets. Or if the government continues to print trillion-dollar deficits
as far as the eye can see, the Fed will eventually create intractable inflation
in order to diminish the value of that debt. But for investors the current
challenge will be to hedge their portfolio against insidious inflation that
should not be of the "hyper" variety -- at least for now.
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