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For the week, the S&P500 added 0.8% (up 9.3% y-t-d), and the Dow gained
0.9% (up 4.5% y-t-d). The Morgan Stanley Cyclicals surged 5.5% (up 43.7%),
and the Transports added 0.9% (up 4.5%). The Morgan Stanley Consumer index
slipped 0.3% (up 6.1%), and the Utilities declined 2.4% (down 1.7%). The Banks
jumped 8.4% (down 8.8%), and the Broker/Dealers rose 3.7% (up 40.7%). The S&P
400 Mid-Caps increased 1.0% (up 16.7%), and the small cap Russell 2000 gained
1.5% (up 11.5%). The Nasdaq100 added 0.3% (up 32.3%), while the Morgan Stanley
High Tech index dipped 0.2% (up 44.7%). The Semiconductors increased 0.3% (up
42.2%), while the InteractiveWeek Internet index fell 1.3% (up 50.4%). The
Biotechs added 0.7% (up 34.5%). With Bullion gaining $2.10, the HUI gold index
slipped 0.2% (up 19.2%).
One-month Treasury bill rates ended the week at 11 bps, and three-month bills
closed at 17 bps. Two-year government yields rose 5 bps to 1.01%. Five-year
T-note yields declined 4 bps to 2.47%. Ten-year yields dropped 18 bps to 3.48%.
Long bond yields were 24 bps lower at 4.29%. Benchmark Fannie MBS yields sank
a notable 23 bps to 4.37%. The spread between 10-year Treasuries and benchmark
MBS narrowed 5 to 89. Agency 10-yr debt spreads declined 4.5 to a tiny 7 bps.
The implied yield on December eurodollar futures dipped 3 bps to 0.715%. The
2-year dollar swap spread declined 9 to 35.5 bps; the 10-year dollar swap spread
increased 1.75 to 24.25 bps; and the 30-year swap spread increased 7.5 to negative
13.25 bps. Corporate bond spreads tightened further. An index of investment
grade bond spreads narrowed 6 bps to 164 (2009 low), and an index of junk spreads
narrowed 13 to 822 bps.
Investment grade issuers included CitiBank $5.0bn, Northrop Grumman $850 million,
Nexen $1.0bn, and Colgate Palmolive $300 million.
Junk bond fund inflows were strong again at $531 million (from AMG). The list
of junk issuers included Ford Motor Credit $1.75 TN, HCA $1.25bn, Capital One
$1.0bn, Arch Coal $600 million, Peninsula Gaming $545 million, Pinnacle Entertainment
$450 million, Jabil Circuit $312 million, Duane Reade $300 million, USG $300
million, American Airlines $275 million, and Great Atlantic & Pacific $260
million.
I saw no converts issued this week.
International dollar debt issuers included ANZ National $2.2bn, Macquarie
Group $1.0bn, Brazil $500 million, Woori Bank $500 million, and Corporativo
Javer $180 million.
U.K. 10-year gilt yields sank 16 bps to 3.80%, and German bund yields dropped
18 bps to 3.30%. The German DAX equities index gained 2.0% (up 10.9%). Japanese
10-year "JGB" yields increased 3 bps to 1.41%. The Nikkei 225 surged 4.1% (up
16.9%). For the most part emerging markets remained strong. Brazil's benchmark
dollar bond yields dropped 12 bps to 5.61%. Brazil's Bovespa equities index
increased 0.7% (up 45.8% y-t-d). The Mexican Bolsa rose 1.5% (up 20.8% y-t-d).
Mexico's 10-year $ yields rose 14 bps to 5.77%. Russia's RTS equities index
was about unchanged (up 60.3%). India's Sensex equities index gained 1.9% (up
62.4%). China's Shanghai Exchange added 1.2%, increasing 2009 gains to 87.4%.
Freddie Mac 30-year fixed mortgage rates rose 5 bps to 5.25% (down 127bps
y-o-y). Fifteen-year fixed rates added one basis point to 4.69% (down 138bps
y-o-y). One-year ARMs added 3 bps to 4.80% (down 47bps y-o-y). Bankrate's survey
of jumbo mortgage borrowing costs had 30-yr fixed jumbo rates down 2 bps to
6.36% (down 120bps y-o-y).
Federal Reserve Credit slipped $0.6bn last week to $2.010 TN. Fed Credit has
declined $236bn y-t-d, although it expanded $1.117 TN over the past 52 weeks
(125%). Elsewhere, Fed Foreign Holdings of Treasury, Agency Debt this past
week (ended 7/29) jumped $6.2bn to a record $2.793 TN. "Custody holdings" have
been expanding at a 19.1% rate y-t-d, and were up $425bn over the past year,
or 18.0%.
M2 (narrow) "money" supply rose $8.9bn to $8.343 TN (week of 7/20). Narrow "money" has
expanded at a 3.2% rate y-t-d and 8.2% over the past year. For the week, Currency
gained $2.3bn, while Demand & Checkable Deposits dropped $15.1bn. Savings
Deposits surged $37.9bn, while Small Denominated Deposits declined $5.6bn.
Retail Money Funds fell $10.5bn.
Total Money Market Fund assets (from Invest Co Inst) declined $22.0bn to $3.634
TN (low since November). Money fund assets have declined $196bn y-t-d, or 8.9%
annualized. Money funds expanded $132bn, or 3.8%, over the past year.
Total Commercial Paper outstanding dropped $27.6bn to $1.066 TN. CP has declined
$616bn y-t-d (64% annualized) and $662bn over the past year (38%). Asset-backed
CP was little changed at $437.8bn, with a 52-wk drop of $306bn (41%).
International reserve assets (excluding gold) - as accumulated by Bloomberg's
Alex Tanzi - were up $31bn y-o-y to a record $7.025 TN. Reserves have now increased
$260bn year-to-date.
Global Credit Market Watch:
July 28 - Bloomberg (Anna Rascouet): "The Libor-OIS spread, a gauge of banks'
reluctance to lend, dropped below 30 bps for the first time in 18 months, adding
to evidence that the two-year freeze in credit markets is thawing."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Jennifer Ryan): "U.K. mortgage approvals climbed to a
14-month high in June, adding to signs the housing market is recovering as
the recession eases and banks become more willing to lend."
Government Finance Bubble Watch:
July 29 - Bloomberg (Hui-yong Yu and Sarah Mulholland): "Commercial property
companies may sell about $3 billion of mortgage-backed bonds starting in September
as part of the U.S. program to revive lending for shopping malls, skyscrapers
and hotels. More than a dozen real estate investment trusts are likely to participate
in the Federal Reserve's Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF..."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Elizabeth Stanton): "PennyMac Mortgage Investment Trust,
which plans to raise $400 million in a stock offering today, is betting that
the people who helped create the housing crisis will know how to profit from
the cleanup. Chief Executive Officer Stanford L. Kurland... was president and
chief operating officer of Countrywide... whose co-founder, Angelo Mozilo,
was sued by the Securities and Exchange Commission. Ten other senior officials
also worked at Countrywide, whose subprime loans have suffered from a 39% delinquency
rate..."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Kateryna Choursina): "Ukraine expects to receive a $3.3
billion loan installment from the International Monetary Fund by the end of
the week that will 'fully balance' the country's finances, Prime Minister Yulia
Timoshenko said. The money is the third tranche under an agreement that calls
for a total of $16.4 billion in loans..."
July 30 - Bloomberg (Adam Brown): "Romania's government said it will ask the
International Monetary Fund to allow it to widen its budget deficit limit for
2009 to make up for dwindling revenue. The Balkan nation, which has agreed
to a budget-gap ceiling of 4.6% of gross domestic product this year, is holding
talks with the IMF this week..."
July 28 - Bloomberg (Emma Ross-Thomas): "Spain's central government posted
the largest first-half budget deficit in at least nine years... The central
government had a deficit of... ($55.1 billion) in the first half... or 3.64%
of gross domestic product..."
July 27 - Bloomberg (Paul Abelsky): "Russia may borrow 1.61 trillion rubles
($52 billion) on the domestic and international capital markets next year to
cover part of a 3.19 trillion-ruble budget deficit, Vedomosti reported."
Currency Watch:
July 28 - Bloomberg (Rob Delaney and Rebecca Christie): "Treasury Secretary
Timothy Geithner pledged to rein in the U.S. deficit as China underscored concern
about preserving the value of its $801.5 billion of Treasury holdings. The
U.S. will ensure a 'sustainable' deficit by 2013, Geithner said... China is
'concerned about the security of our financial assets,' Assistant Finance Minister
Zhu Guangyao said."
July 27 - Market News International (Denny Gulino): "The Federal Reserve agrees
with Treasury's 'strong dollar' policy and the way to get there is to have
a strong economy, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said in a PBS network special...
The Sunday night videotaping showed a contained and unflustered Bernanke enthusiastically
answering questions... 'As far as the Fed and the dollar is concerned, the
Fed supports the Treasury's strong-dollar policy. We think the dollar should
be strong. And the best way we think to get a strong dollar is to get a strong
economy. When the economy's strong then there's a lot of good investment opportunities,
foreigners want to invest here, and that causes the dollar to rise.'"
The dollar index declined 0.6% this week to a 2009 low 78.31. For the week
on the upside, the Swedish krona increased 3.9%, the Australian dollar 2.2%,
the Norwegian krone 1.9%, the South Korean won 1.7%, the British pound 1.7%,
the Brazilian real 1.7%, the euro 0.4%, the Swiss franc 0.3%, and the Japanese
yen 0.1%. On the downside, the South African rand declined 0.2% and the Taiwanese
dollar 0.1%.
Commodities Watch:
July 28 - Bloomberg (Thomas Kutty Abraham): "Raw sugar prices may reach a
28-year high in the next six months as a production shortfall in India, the
world's biggest user, worsens a global deficit for a second year, the nation's
largest producer said."
Gold ended the week up 0.2% to $953 (up 8.1% y-t-d). Silver added 0.3% to
$13.92 (up 23.2% y-t-d). August Crude gained $1.00 to $69.05 (up 5% y-t-d).
August Gasoline jumped 6.7% (up 92% y-t-d), while September Natural Gas fell
5.3% (down 35% y-t-d). September Copper jumped 4.0% (up 86% y-t-d). September
Wheat rallied 2.3% (down 13% y-t-d), and August Corn surged 7.4% (down 17%
y-t-d). The CRB index increased 2.2% (up 12.2% y-t-d). The Goldman Sachs Commodities
Index (GSCI) rose 2.1% (up 31% y-t-d).
China Reflation Watch:
July 27 - Financial Times (Jamil Anderlini): "Chinese regulators... ordered
banks to ensure unprecedented volumes of new loans are channelled into the
real economy and not diverted into equity or real estate markets where officials
say fresh asset bubbles are forming. The new policy requires banks to monitor
how their loans are spent and comes amid warnings that banks ignored basic
lending standards in the first half of this year as they rushed to extend Rmb7,370bn
in new loans, more than twice the amount lent in the same period a year earlier.
Beijing's concerns are echoed in other countries across the region, most notably
South Korea, where the government says it is taking steps to cool a real estate
bubble, and Vietnam, where the government has ordered state banks to cap new
lending to head off inflation. The situation in much of Asia is very different
from most Western economies, where governments have flooded the financial system
with liquidity to encourage unwilling banks to lend more."
July 30 - Bloomberg (Chia-Peck Wong): "Home prices in China will rise 20%
by the end of 2010, boosted by economic growth and loans to property developers,
UBS analyst Eric Wong told reporters..."
July 27 - China Knowledge: "China's power generation declined 1.7% to 1.64
trillion kilowatt hours in the first half of this year... In June, power generation
rose 5.2% year on year, ending a string of eight consecutive monthly drops."
July 29 - Bloomberg: "China State Construction Engineering Corp. jumped 56%
on its first trading day in Shanghai as confidence in the nation's economic
recovery stoked demand for the world's largest initial public offering in 16
months."
July 31 - Bloomberg (Michael Patterson): "The value of shares traded in China
surpassed the combined amount in the U.S., U.K. and Japan for the first time
on record, a sign of 'speculative mania' among investors who pushed the Shanghai
Composite Index up 82% this year, according to Grantham Mayo Van Otterloo & Co.'s
Edward Chancellor."
July 29 - Bloomberg: "China, the world's largest steelmaking nation, said
71 of its largest mills posted a combined profit of 3.55 billion yuan ($520
million) in June, the second monthly gain after seven straight months of losses."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Sophie Leung): "China Development Bank Corp., the state-run
bank for public works projects, opened its first branch outside the mainland
in Hong Kong... and plans offices in Russia, Egypt and Brazil as part of a
global expansion push... The... bank agreed in May to lend $10 billion to Brazil's
state-controlled oil company, helped finance a fund in Africa and extended
loans in June to Russia's development bank."
July 27 - Bloomberg (Nipa Piboontanasawat and Chia-Peck Wong): "New mortgage
loans approved in Hong Kong jumped to a record HK$38.4 billion ($5 billion)
in June... The value of new home loans rose 36.5% last month from May..."
July 27 - Bloomberg (Chia-Peck Wong): "Hong Kong's home prices may rise 32%
by the end of 2010 as ample liquidity and low interest rates drive investors
to buy property, UBS AG analysts said... Office prices may increase by 29%..."
Japan Watch:
July 29 - Bloomberg (Toru Fujioka): "Japan's retail sales fell for a 10th
month in June, extending the longest losing streak since 2003... Sales slid
3% from a year earlier..."
July 30 - Bloomberg (Jason Clenfield): "Japanese manufacturers increased production
for a fourth month in June, capping the fastest quarterly output expansion
in more than half a century... Production rose 2.4% from May... Output gained
8.3% last quarter from the first three months of 2009, the most since 1953."
India Watch:
July 27 - Bloomberg (Cherian Thomas): "India's economy may grow at a faster
pace than earlier forecast this year, the central bank said... Asia's third-largest
economy may expand 6.5% in the year ending March 31... 'The macroeconomic outlook
of the Indian economy, based on various business expectation surveys indicates
that the earlier decline in overall business sentiment has reversed,' the central
bank said..."
Asia Bubble Watch:
July 30 - Bloomberg (Sangim Han): "South Korea plans to keep its expansionary
fiscal policies in place, the nation's Strategy and Finance Ministry said.
'It's premature to discuss measures to absorb excessive liquidity' and the
government will stick to policies supporting growth 'for the time being,' the
ministry said..."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Clarissa Batino): "The Philippine central bank said it
has started to consider ending more than half a year of monetary policy easing
and pledged to act 'deftly' in response to changing inflation conditions."
Latin America Watch:
July 28 - Bloomberg (Telma Marotto and Iuri Dantas): "Brazilian outstanding
bank lending expanded at the fastest pace this year last month signaling economic
growth is picking up, the central bank said. Total outstanding loans rose 1.3%
to a record 1.28 trillion reais ($679 billion) in June from 1.26 trillion reais
in May... Lending climbed 19.7% from the same month last year. 'Yesterday,
I was saying Brazil would be the first out of this crisis, today I say we are
out,' Planning and Budget Minister Paulo Bernardo said..."
Unbalanced Global Economy Watch:
July 31 - Bloomberg (Alexandre Deslongchamps): "Canada's economy contracted
for a 10th month in May because of falling manufacturing output, and declines
in the mining and energy industries. Gross domestic product dropped 0.5% during
the month..."
July 29 - Dow Jones (Natasha Brereton): "Holdings of M4 by the U.K. household
sector and lending to it grew at the lowest rates in June since records began
in 1997, while M4 lending to businesses shrank at its fastest pace, showing
little trace of the central bank's money creating policy."
July 28 - Bloomberg (Milda Seputyte): "Lithuania's economy plunged a preliminary
22.4% in the second quarter, the worst recession since 1990 independence, as
output crashed and retail sales slumped."
Bursting Bubble Economy Watch:
July 31 - Bloomberg (Shobhana Chandra): "The U.S. economy shrank at a better-
than-forecast 1% annual pace in the second quarter as a jump in government
spending masked a deeper retrenchment by consumers."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Dina Bass): "Microsoft Corp., coping with its first annual
sales drop, will make frugality a new way of life, CFO Chris Liddell said.
'This is not a crash diet where you stop eating for a couple of quarters --
this is a new diet regime where you slim down and stay slim... It's actually
about dialing up the importance of costs.'"
Central Banker Watch:
July 27 - Dow Jones: "The central bank's ability to pay interest on reserves
means it won't have to resort to a hasty rate hike to head off inflation, New
York Federal Reserve President William Dudley said... 'We're not going to be
in a situation where we have to tighten prematurely,' Dudley told a breakfast
meeting... Questions from the audience focused in part on concerns that the
Fed's balance sheet, which Dudley expects to peak around $2.5 trillion, could
stoke inflation... 'The expansion of the balance sheet isn't inflationary in
an environment where we can pay interest on reserves,' he said. This payment
gives banks an economic incentive to keep funds out of the system, that is,
not extend credit, unless the interest rate on their lending exceeds the Fed's
rate on their deposits."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Scott Lanman and Michael McKee): "New York Federal Reserve
Bank President William Dudley said officials should dispel any concerns that
their policies may spur inflation, while asserting it's 'premature' to discuss
when to raise interest rates. 'Policy makers need to take seriously any concerns
that the Fed's actions might conceivably lead to an inflation problem,' Dudley
said... Still, 'concern about 'when' the Fed will exit from its current monetary
policy stance is, in my view, very premature," he said."
July 29 - Bloomberg (Craig Torres): "The financial-overhaul plan before Congress
leaves the Federal Reserve in the business of lending to everyone from General
Electric Co. to investors in student loans. That makes it harder for Chairman
Ben S. Bernanke to keep Congress from second-guessing what he does. Bernanke
is trying to deflect a bill, co-sponsored by 276 members of the House of Representatives,
that would require audits of central bank operations, including monetary policy
decisions, by the Government Accountability Office. Audits wouldn't be 'consistent
with independence,' Bernanke said... 'I don't think the American people want
Congress running monetary policy.'"
Real Estate Bust Watch:
July 30 - Bloomberg (David M. Levitt): "About $2.2 trillion of U.S. commercial
properties bought or refinanced since 2004 are now worth less than the original
price, raising the threat of more foreclosures, Real Capital Analytics said.
Prices have fallen so far that about $1.3 trillion of properties have either
lost their owners' down payment or are close to it...the... firm said..."
MBS/ABS/CDO/CP/Money Funds and Derivatives Watch:
July 24 - Bloomberg (Jody Shenn): "Standard & Poor's downgraded $235.2
billion of Alt-A mortgage bonds amid increasing delinquencies and falling home
prices. Ratings were lowered on 6,198 classes of 611 deals... Rating companies
have cut at least once about 92% of the $593 billion of Alt-A mortgage securities
outstanding excluding bonds backed by 'option' adjustable-rate mortgages..."
July 27 - Bloomberg (Abigail Moses): "Collateralized debt obligations experienced
a 'significant increase' in downgrades in Europe in the second quarter, according
to Standard & Poor's. The... firm cut grades on 1,706 structured finance
products, primarily CDOs... S&P also lowered its outlook to negative on
2,458 deals..."
GSE Watch:
July 30 - Bloomberg (Dawn Kopecki): "Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, operating
under a federal conservatorship since September, won't be able to repay all
of the $84.9 billion in federal aid they have received, the companies' regulator
said. 'Some assets and senior preferreds will have to be left behind as they
come out of conservatorship, and that means some of those losses will never
be repaid,' Federal Housing Finance Agency Director James Lockhart said...
With Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac owning or guaranteeing almost half of the U.S.
residential mortgage debt, the government seized the companies in September
as losses mounted and pledged $100 billion for each to keep them afloat. In
February, the government doubled its capital commitment for each company to
$200 billion..."
Speculator Watch:
July 29 - Bloomberg (Shamim Adam and Jonathan Burgos): "Temasek Holdings Pte...
said the value of its assets slumped by more than S$40 billion ($27.7bn) and
that Singapore's sovereign fund may allow public investment for the first time."
Crude Liquidity Watch:
July 30 - Bloomberg (Arif Sharif): "Bahrain's central bank took over administration
of Awal Bank BSC and The International Banking Corp. after the lenders, owned
by Saudi Arabia's Saad and Algosaibi groups, defaulted on loans. The central
bank 'has assumed the administration' of Awal Bank and TIBC, the Manama...
The Algosaibi group owes a total of 34 billion Saudi riyals ($9 billion) in
syndicated and bilateral loans..."
Facets of Bubble Analysis
A couple years back I received an email from a unimpressed reader with the
following message: "Doug, when you're a hammer everything looks like a nail." He
was referring to my thesis back then that Bubbles had sprung loose from the
U.S. Credit system and had begun propagating around the world.
Months back I posited that a Government Finance Bubble had emerged from the
smoking ashes of the Wall Street/mortgage finance Bubble. I understand why
some might see me as a dreary hammer out searching for nails. All the same,
the backdrop merits further discussion of facets of Bubble analysis.
Many see Bubbles in terms of an unsustainable overvaluation of asset prices.
And many would view today's "post-Bubble" landscape and find my ongoing Bubble
premise borderline ridiculous. But I've always viewed Bubbles as a Credit phenomenon.
Inflating assets prices are actually only one of many consequences of an overexpansion
of Credit. Rapid asset inflation is almost a sure sign of underlying Credit
excess, though analysts should downplay asset prices while focusing keenly
on underlying Credit and speculative dynamics. Huge Credit growth, market price
distortions (especially the under-pricing of risk), highly speculative markets,
and prolonged asset inflation are inevitably indicative of some underlying
monetary/Credit disorder.
I want policymakers out of the business of targeting or tinkering with the
asset markets and market yields. Instead, the focus should be on creating a
backdrop of stable money and Credit. The problem today is that central bankers
for years ignored a historic expansion of Credit (much of it directed to the
asset markets) and the resulting Monetary Disorder. Now, to avert systemic
implosion central bankers at home and abroad have resorted to unprecedented
measures to expand Credit and intervene in the markets' pricing of Credit.
Instead of a movement toward constructing a more stable global Credit system
and backdrop, policymakers have instead jumped farther into the uncharted waters
of unconstrained Credit expansion. Such a backdrop is ultra-conducive for ongoing
speculation, Bubbles, and general disorder.
Again, Bubbles are first and foremost a Credit phenomenon. Fundamental to
the nature of Credit, expansion generally fosters more expansion. Credit excess
begets only greater Credit excess. And Credit excess notoriously begets speculative
excesses. Importantly, Credit is inherently self-reinforcing - both on the
upswing and downswing. In today's "system" of unrestrained Credit, rising demand
for borrowings does not dictate an increasing price for this Credit. Indeed,
an unlimited supply of Credit will tend to satisfy rising demand at a lower
price. And this gets right to the heart of a huge Bubble - and policymaking
- dilemma.
The bottom line is that unrestrained Credit is inherently unstable, and few
seem to appreciate the unique nature of today's unfettered global Credit environment.
There is no international gold monetary regime for which to discipline lenders,
central banks, governments or economies. The dollar reserve system self-destructed
over decades of undisciplined Credit expansion. And the breakdown of U.S. discipline
- and the resulting massive dollar devaluation - has unleashed domestic Credit
systems from China to Brazil. Never have "developing" Credit systems (and currencies)
enjoyed such freedom to inflate financial claims.
It's with this backdrop in mind that I contemplate the likelihood that we
have entered an especially dangerous period of Credit excess and attendant
Bubbles. Fundamentally, the massive intrusion of the Treasury and Federal Reserve
into the marketplace has only further distorted the pricing of finance throughout
our economy - as well as globally. Despite record debt issuance, the market
will lend the Treasury three-month money at about 11 basis points. Two-year
borrowings come at cost of about 100 bps. The price of Treasury notes and bonds
inflates in spite of enormous deficits as far as the eye can see. Moreover,
the marketplace is happy to lend to Fannie and Freddie at only a slight premium
to the U.S. Treasury, with the prices of their obligations inflating in the
face of these institutions' ongoing financial implosions. Today's price distortions
go right to the heart of system "money."
Fannie Mae's Book of Business (mortgage holdings and MBS guaranteed) jumped
$43.9bn during June to $3.194 TN. This was the biggest growth since December
2007. Freddie's Book of Business increased $12.2bn last month. According to
Bloomberg's issuance tally, the GSEs (Fannie, Freddie and Ginnie) issued $168bn
of MBS in July, down somewhat from June's huge $236bn and May's $212bn. At
$1.102 Trillion, year-to-date agency MBS issuance has already almost matched
2008 and 2007. The government is quietly accumulating dangerous Credit and
interest rate risk in its ongoing mortgage operations.
During the Wall Street/mortgage finance Bubble, seemingly no amount of Credit
creation and debt issuance would place upward pressure on the cost of borrowings
(or reduced the price of the underlying debt instruments). Importantly, the
bigger this Bubble inflated the more confident the savvy market operators became
that an inevitable crisis would force policymakers to explicitly back GSE obligations
and aggressively slash interest rates. Market yields remained artificially
low and increasingly detached from escalating risks. Fundamentally, a market
trapped in Bubble dynamics had lost is capacity for adjustment and self-regulation.
The massive expansion of GSE obligations, coupled with a speculative marketplace's
anticipation of yet another major government-induced reflation, severely distorted
the marketplace and provided the bedrock for a historic mortgage finance Bubble.
Today, the government's intrusion into the marketplace is greater than ever.
The markets readily accommodate a couple Trillion of annual issuance - as if
the U.S. economy and Credit system were on solid footing. And I would argue
that today's mispricing of government finance reinforces the market's perception
that U.S. policymakers will successfully reflate the economy. This Bubble distortion,
then, fosters a problematic explosion of government debt issuance - and a most
dangerous case Minskian "Ponzi finance."
There are a number of reasons why the government finance Bubble is even more
dangerous than the Wall Street/mortgage finance Bubble. First of all, the $2
TN or so of "government" issuance over the past year is greater than the $1.4
TN peak total mortgage Credit growth during 2005 and 2006. I would expect another
$2 TN next year and the year after. Government debt enjoys the attribute of "moneyness" in
the marketplace to a much greater capacity than mortgage securities did during
the boom. The risks associated with debasing this "moneyness" are momentous.
And there is, as well, the dynamic where the greater the government finance
Bubble inflates the more convinced the marketplace becomes that the Federal
Reserve will do everything within its power to accommodate the debt markets
(ultra-loose monetary conditions for the duration). And destabilizing speculation
can return to all markets...
The government finance Bubble is a global dynamic. There were pertinent Bubble-related
comments out of China this week:
July 30 - Dow Jones (J.R. Wu): "China's central bank will emphasize market-based
systems, rather than administrative controls, in guiding the appropriate growth
of credit, People's Bank of China Vice Governor Su Ning said. The statement...
came just hours after Chinese shares posted their biggest one-day percentage
fall in over eight months on fears that loan growth may start to pull back...
'We should pay attention to the use of market-oriented means - rather than
controlling the size - and flexibly use various monetary policy tools to guide
the appropriate growth of credit,' Su said... He said 'the mind and action'
of all financial institutions should 'be as one' with the government's goal,
and financial institutions should properly handle the relationship between
supporting the economy's development and preventing financial risks. Su's comments
appeared to signal the PBOC wasn't about to set loan curbs in the second half
of this year to cool explosive lending growth, as it did in 2008 when it used
the blunt tool of loan quotas for banks to hold down inflationary pressures
that were building at the time... But Su said the central bank will resolutely
maintain its moderately loose monetary policy. He said the foundation for China's
economic recovery isn't firm yet and many uncertain factors still exist in
both the external and domestic environment."
Similar to the Federal Reserve, I see Chinese authorities increasingly held
hostage to Bubble Dynamics. I found it fascinating that a top People's Bank
of China official would mention emphasizing "market-based systems" for guiding
Credit growth. I suspect this may be a most inopportune time to begin relying
on market mechanisms. As we have witnessed, market-based processes can be particularly
unreliable Credit regulators after Bubbles have reached an overheated state.
It is my view that only decisive action by Chinese policymakers will at this
point have much impact at restraining excess. Central to the analysis of unfolding
precarious Bubble Dynamics is my view that few, if any, policymakers anywhere
around world will be willing to act decisively to tighten Credit conditions
and address increasingly speculative financial markets.
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