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It was another unsettled week for the U.S. equity market. For the week, the
Dow finished largely unchanged, while the S&P500 added about 1%. The Morgan
Stanley Cyclical index was marginally higher, the Morgan Stanley Consumer index
marginally lower, and the Transports and Utilities ended both down about 1%.
The broader market was slightly in the negative column, with the small cap
Russell 2000 and the S&P400 Mid-Cap indices both declining about 1%. The
technology sector was mixed, with the NASDAQ100 adding 2% and the Morgan Stanley
High Tech index declining 1%. The Semiconductors dropped 4%, the NASDAQ Telecommunications
index dipped 2%, and The Street.com Internet index declined 1%. The Biotech
index added 1%. The financial stocks performed strongly this week, the S&P
Bank index jumping 5% and the AMEX Securities Broker/Dealer index adding 4%.
Although gold added a dollar this week, the gold stocks took it on the chin,
with the HUI index sinking 8%.
The credit market rally continued this week, with 2-year Treasury yields dropping
7 basis points to 3.90%. Five-year Treasury yields dropped 9 basis points to
4.60%, while the key 10-year yield declined 11 basis points to 5.12%. The long-bond
saw its yield drop 10 basis points to 5.58%. Mortgage-back securities underperformed,
with yields declining 8 basis points. Agency yields declined about 12 basis
points. Corporate bonds underperformed, with Junk bond yields generally widening
six to eight basis points. The dollar gained marginally this week. The benchmark
10-year dollar swap spread widened 3 to 86. Commodities suffered another poor
week, with the CRB index declining almost 2%.
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency reported this week that total
U.S. commercial bank derivative positions increased $3.4 trillion (8%) to $43.9
trillion during the first quarter, the largest increase since the tumultuous
fourth quarter of 1998. Interest rate derivative positions increased $2.8 trillion
to $35.7 trillion, including swaps that increased $1.7 trillion to $23.6 trillion.
Total interest rate derivative positions grew 18% during the past year. J.P.
Morgan Chase easily leads the pack, with total derivative positions of $24.6
trillion, including $14.3 trillion of swaps. Bloomberg quoted Michael Brosnan,
OCC comptroller for risk evaluation: "These numbers are rather eye-popping.
It's difficult to grow at that pace when you have such a large underlying base." Yes
it is, although derivative growth is necessarily consistent with the continued
expansion of financial sector borrowings.
During May, Freddie Mac expanded its portfolio at an 18% annualized rate to
$438 billion. Total outstanding Freddie Mac mortgage exposure also increased
at an 18% rate to $1.026 trillion. With the ultra-availability of mortgage
credit, housing starts are on pace for the second-strongest performance since
1986. So far this year, over $350 billion of mortgage-backed securities have
been issued, on track to challenge 1998's record $727 billion. Yesterday, the
Commerce Department reported a $110 billion current account deficit for the
first quarter (more than 4% of GDP), up from the $105 billion during last year's
first quarter.
"Personal savings has been a major problem in this country for a protracted
period of time. As you know, as a consequence we are effectively borrowing
a significant amount of savings from abroad, which is our current account deficit.
The reason it hasn't shown up as a significant economic problem is that we
have really an extraordinary degree of productivity from our savings in the
sense we have managed to use it in a very - our limited amount of savings in
very effective ways. The type of capital that we are producing tended to be
the high productivity-producing capital. So in part, because of our financial
system and, indeed, our banking system in general, we have been able to direct
the limited savings that we do have into the most effective uses. So in that
regard, one must look at the American banking system as a very major player
in our ability to improve productivity with, as you point out, a quite diminished
level of domestic savings. Part of that is a result of the fact that we have
created a very flexible system and we are able to allocate resources in a most
effective manner." Fed Chairman Alan Greenspan, testimony before the Senate
Banking Committee, June 20, 2001
Troubling confusion with the most critical issues of savings, money, credit
and investment go to the very top of the Federal Reserve. To associate savings
with resource allocation within the context of the contemporary U.S. credit
system, is poor analysis. To claim effective management of savings and resource
allocation is absolutely bizarre considering the recent implosion of the Internet
sector - with the pilferage and reckless waste of valuable resources and consequential
enormous financial losses - and now the widespread bankruptcies engulfing the
telecommunications industry. Besides, the U.S. boom has been driven by an unprecedented
explosion of money and credit, as is made patently clear from the Fed's own
data.
The continued espousal of nebulous notions, such as the efficient use of savings
and the major role played by the U.S. banking system in improved productivity,
is most unfortunate. To us, this is only further indication that the Greenspan
Fed is lost in a sea of flawed thinking and concepts. We continue to view the
Fed's obvious and serious lack of understanding of some significant subtleties
of contemporary money and credit creation as a major obstacle to sound and
effective policy. I also cannot help but to view Chairman Greenspan's previous
admission that it is neither possible to define nor manage the nation's money
supply as at the very heart of the Fed's momentous failure to protect the soundness
and stability of the U.S. financial system and economy.
I will begin my latest exploration of money and credit with a quote from Joseph
A. Schumpeter: "The error involved consists in a confusion between the
historical origin of money - which, in very many cases, although perhaps not
universally, may indeed be found in the fact that some commodities, being particularly
saleable, come to be used as the medium of exchange - and its nature or
logic - which is entirely independent of the commodity character of its
material." (Background and several of this week's quotes were drawn from
Riccardo Realfonzo's excellent book, Money and Banking - Theory and Debate
(1900-1940))
When it comes to analyzing contemporary money, I often feel like I spend about
half my time focused on the realities of this extraordinary monetary environment,
and the rest trying to better comprehend the path that has led to today's quite
inadequate monetary doctrine. As such, I think a clearer understanding of the
complexities of modern money requires a dual approach of logic and historical
analysis. Money is as money does, and it is a residual of lending. It is very
much a dynamic social convention, and is evolutionary in character. Contemporary
money is credit, but a very special type of credit. To gain clearer insight
requires a multifaceted perspective, diligently addressing institutional, structural,
and historical aspects. However, the deeper I dig, the more I believe that
perhaps today's conventional view of monetary matters suffers from too much
ideology and an emphasis on how things have operated in the past. At this critical
juncture in history, profound financial system developments dictate that logic
and critical assessment become a much greater force in monetary analysis.
Early economic theorists generally placed only marginal emphasis on money,
seeing it as a variable determined by economic activity and non-monetary factors.
Almost as an afterthought, money was viewed as the consequence of savings -
the positive outcome of productive undertakings. In the economic process, savings
was always required prior to lending and productive investment; every loan
was viewed as the result of a previously saved deposit. Money was seen as mainly
impacting the general price level, with little lasting influence on either
economic activity or relative prices. In many respects, money was a mere technicality
of the exchange process, a "lubricant" bringing a more efficient
payment mechanism to what had been a barter economy. And since gold and silver
had been commonly used as money for generations, analysis was, not surprisingly,
centered on a commodity-based monetary regime with a generally defined quantity
of metal coins. Most saw money as necessarily possessing intrinsic value, but
its main role was as an expedient for transactions - "medium of exchange." As
an economic issue, money was certainly subordinate to production. The vestiges
of this early framework remain to this day.
The late 1800's saw incredible growth, both in economic output and financial
power. International trade flourished and capital flowed freely. It was a period
of relative tranquility for a global financial system buttressed by gold convertibility.
It was also a period of phenomenal growth in banking globally. Monetary theorizing
began to more clearly focus on the mechanisms and implications of expanding
bank deposits, notes, and "paper money." The nature and characteristics
of money were more thoroughly explored, not as a metallic standard with intrinsic
value but, importantly, as being merely a created symbol of available purchasing
power. I will highlight quotes from the great economists Alfred Marshall and
Knut Wicksell, both long ago raising issues that remain of great relevance
today. They both brilliantly appreciated the evolution of money and the significance
of the developing credit-based economy.
"I should consider what part of its deposits a bank could lend, and then
I should consider what part of its loans would be redeposited with it and with
other banks and, vice versa, what part of the loans made by other banks would
be received by it as deposits. Thus I would get a geometrical progression;
the effect being that if each bank could lend two-thirds of its deposits, the
total amount of loaning power got by the banks would amount to three times
what it otherwise would be. If it could lend four-fifths, it will then be five
times; and so on. The question [
] has not yet been thoroughly investigated
by economists in any country." Alfred Marshall (issues raised in the
1880s, published 1926)
"[Banks] do nothing more than enter a figure into the account of the
creditor under the heading 'credit granted', or 'deposit'. Thus, if cheques
are presented against this credit, they merely enter the amount, as a deposit
paid in (or a paid debit), into the account of the owner, in fact, this constitutes
precisely the 'money supply'." Knut Wicksell, Interest and Prices,
1898
Recognizing bank journal entries as "money" was a radical departure
at the time. It had taken decades for a consensus to develop that accepted
bank checking deposits as money, appreciating deposits' effect on spending
and economic activity. It was to take more time for the profound ramifications
of the "multiplication" of bank deposits to be fully appreciated.
Even then, it was generally accepted that bank "money" was only a
surrogate for true metallic money, with most holding stubbornly to the doctrine
that savings created deposits. Not surprisingly, it was the great Joseph Schumpeter
that brought clarity to the analysis:
"It is much more realistic to say that the banks 'create credit,' that
is, that they create deposits in their act of lending, than to say that they
lend the deposits that have been entrusted to them
The theory to which
economist clung so tenaciously makes them out to be savers when they neither
save nor intend to do so; it attributes to them an influence on the 'supply
of credit' which they do not have
Nevertheless, it proved extraordinarily
difficult for economists to recognize that bank loans and bank investments
do create deposits
This is a most interesting illustration of the inhibitions
with which analytic advance has to contend and in particular of the fact that
people may be perfectly familiar with a phenomenon for ages and even discuss
it frequently without realizing its true significance and without admitting
it into their general scheme of thought." Joseph A. Schumpeter, History
of Economic Analysis (published 1954, but discussed much earlier)
Schumpeter understood clearly that the "nature" of money was found
in the purchasing power afforded from bank journal entries and promises of
payment - "credit money". But despite such great advancements in
monetary theory, traditional notions nonetheless held firm that banks were
merely collectors of deposits - purely operating as middlemen between savers
and borrowers. Many still argued vociferously that banks could not create money.
When it became clear that bank lending created the potential for a problematic
multiplication of deposits, it was seemingly only the argument that changed.
From A.C. Pigou (A Study in Public Finance, 1928): "In all circumstances
the [credit] structure is limited by the size of the base, and this is not
under the control of the bankers." Following this line of reasoning, banks
did in fact expand deposits, but with mandated reserve requirements and a monetary
based under the tight control of the central bank, this power was quite limited.
And since it could be assumed that banks would always lend fully to the reserve-mandated
limit, it was argued that the money supply was thus dictated not by bank lending
but by the central bank supplying the system with additional reserves to lend
against. Banks were seen as remaining merely "passive agents" of
central bank policy and economic activity.
The following definition of an intermediary remains close to the consensus
view:
"A financial intermediary is defined as an enterprise whose assets and
liabilities consist almost exclusively of financial instruments. Such instruments
would include loans and mortgages, stocks and bonds, bank deposits, savings
and loans shares, insurance and pension contracts, commercial paper, shares
in investment companies, and so forth. The function of financial intermediaries
is to act as middlemen between savers and investors. They gather savings from
individuals and businesses that make more than they spend and lend these savings
to individuals, entrepreneurs, and government agencies that spend more than
they make. Thus the liabilities of financial intermediaries are associated
with 'savers,' and their assets tend to define 'investors.' From the social
point of view, the chief problem associated with financial intermediation has
always been how to bring in touch with one another the man who has capital
funds and no enterprise and the man who has enterprise but no capital." (A
History of Financial Intermediaries, Herman E. Krooss and Martin R. Blyn)
From the above quote, one could certainly incorrectly view intermediaries
as passive participants in the economic process. The description does appear
reasonable, notwithstanding the fact that it is flawed. Intermediaries are
anything but simply "middlemen." And while there is today recognition
of the significance of bank lending to economic performance, it has been like "pulling
teeth" to get people to appreciate the powerful credit creation capabilities
of the non-traditional intermediaries that have risen to great prominence.
While off economists' and policymakers' "radar screen," non-bank
credit creation has played a momentous role in fueling the current bubble.
And just as theory was surprisingly slow to appreciate the power of banks to
create money through journal entries and note issuance, it will apparently
take time for proper recognition that a similar process now holds true for
the entire expansive U.S. financial sector. In particular, the economic community
has yet to appreciate the profound implications for the powerful positions
attained by Wall Street and the GSEs in the nation's credit system. Moreover,
few have explored the significance of this incredible power being intricately
intertwined with their partners in the money market fund industry.
The contemporary monetary system, as detailed in the past, is largely one
massive electronic ledger encompassing a myriad of institutions, securities,
arrangements and vehicles. It is a pyramid of credit built on a base of credit.
In past commentaries I have gone through journal entries, attempting to illuminate
the current extraordinary capacity for monetary expansion. My sense is that
I have only been somewhat successful. My presentations, often specifically
excluding the banking system, were generally constructed for the purpose of
dispelling the notion that only banks create credit. I hope that point has
been adequately presented. Please bear with me as I work to refine this analysis,
coming this time from a somewhat different angle and, hopefully, making this
a more illuminating example of the Power of Money Market Intermediation.
Let's say Mr. Smith receives a $100 bill as a tax refund. Desiring interest
on his "savings," he immediately deposits this $100 bill with the
Bank of Morgan. Morgan accepts the $100 bill, and issues Mr. Smith a deposit
ticket (Morgan accounting entries: debit $100 Cash; credit $100 Deposit Owed
to Mr. Smith). Faced with paying interest on this deposit, Morgan immediately
seeks to lend this $100 bill. Mr. Jones, seeking $100 for the purchase of a
new home, borrows this $100 bill from Morgan (Morgan accounting entries: debit
Mortgage Loan Owed from Mr. Jones $100; credit Cash $100). Mr. Jones then presents
the $100 bill to Mr. Roberts in payment for his house. Note that if this example
had incorporated a traditional reserve requirement, say 10%, Morgan's initial
loan would have been limited to a $90. The succeeding loan (after the $90 was
deposited) would be limited to (approx.) $81 dollars, and so on. Hopefully
it is clear in this example how the money supply was expanded by the $100 loan,
resulting in an increase of $100 of "immediately available funds"/purchasing
power for Mr. Roberts.
Now, let's assume that Mr. Roberts deposits his $100 bill in Money Market
Fund (MMF) (MMF entries: debit Cash $100; credit Deposit Owed to Mr. Roberts
$100). The fund manager, seeking to place these "immediately available
funds" in short-term credit market instruments, quickly contacts Fannie
Mae. Always looking to obtain short-term financing to expand its portfolio,
Fannie Mae agrees to borrow the $100 bill for one year. For this transaction,
Fannie Mae issues MMF an IOU for $100 in exchange for the $100 bill. (MMF entries:
debit IOU Owed from Fannie Mae $100; credit Cash $100 - Fannie entries: debit
Cash $100; credit IOU Owed to MMF $100). Fannie is now in possession of the
$100 bill ("immediately available funds"), which makes it possible
for a mutually beneficial transaction between Fannie Mae - seeking to expand
its mortgage portfolio - and Bank of Morgan - seeking to obtain liquidity for
additional lending. Fannie then uses the $100 bill to purchase Mr. Jones' $100
mortgage loan held by Morgan. (Fannie entries: debit Mortgage Loans $100; credit
Cash $100 - Morgan entries: debit Cash $100; credit Mortgage Loan Owed from
Mr. Jones $100).
With the $100 bill received from Fannie, Morgan now has immediately available
funds to loan $100 to Ms. Williams to purchase Ms. Case's home. (Morgan entry:
debit Mortgage Loan to Ms. Williams $100; credit Cash $100). At this stage,
the community Money Supply has increased to $300: $100 bank deposit held by
Mr. Smith, $100 MMF deposit held by Mr. Roberts, and the $100 bill now in the
possession of Ms. Case. Ms. Case could deposit her $100 bill in either MMF
or Morgan. In the case of a $100 deposit with MMF, it should be clear that
this then presents Fannie Mae with the opportunity to acquire $100 additional "immediately
available funds" through the issuance of an additional $100 IOU (an increase
of "financial credit"), allowing the lending and monetary creation
to run unabated.
Now let's use a more complex example that includes Goldman Sachs. Smith Corp.
receives a crisp new $100 bill as a tax refund. Smith immediately deposits
these funds into Institutional Money Market Fund (IMMF) - (IMMF entries: debit
Cash $100; credit Deposit Owed to Smith Corp. $100). Goldman's client Mr. Jackson
wishes to borrow $100 of immediately available funds for the purchase of Ms.
Hudson's home. Goldman issues an IOU to IMMF for $100, and takes possession
of the $100 bill - immediately available funds (IMMF entries: debit IOU Owed
from Goldman $100; credit Cash $100 - Goldman entries: debit Cash $100, credit
IOU Owed to IMMF $100). Goldman then lends these funds to Jackson (Goldman
entries: debit Mortgage Loan Owed from Jackson $100; credit Cash $100). The
immediately available funds - $100 bill - are then presented to Ms. Hudson,
who for our purposes immediately deposits the money into IMMF (IMMF entries:
debit Cash $100; credit Deposit Owed to Ms. Hudson).
All is swell as real estate and stock prices rise and the economy booms. Eventually,
heightened financial stress leads the Fed to lower interest rates, while Fannie
Mae moves aggressively to expand its mortgage portfolio. Here, Fannie issues
an additional $100 IOU and again borrows "immediately available funds" -
the $100 bill - from IMMF (Fannie entries: debit Cash $100; credit IOU Owed
to IMMF $100 - IMMF entries: debit IOU Owed From Fannie Mae $100, credit Cash
$100). Fannie then proceeds to use these immediately available funds to purchase
Mr. Jackson's mortgage held by Goldman Sachs. (Fannie entries: debit Mortgage
Loans $100; credit Cash $100 - Goldman entries: debit Cash $100; credit Mortgage
Loan Owed from Mr. Jackson $100). Goldman then has $100 of immediately available
funds ($100 bill), which it uses to purchase stock from IPO Client. IPO Client
then deposits the $100 bill in IMMF (IMMF entries: debit Cash $100; credit
Deposit Owed to IPO Client $100). IMMF now holds deposits for Smith Corp, Ms.
Hudson and IPO Client.
Fannie Mae then issues another IOU for $100 to IMMF, takes possession of the
$100 bill (Fannie entries: debit Cash $100; credit IOU Owed to IMMF $100 -
IMMF entries: debit IOU Owed from Fannie $100; credit $100 Cash) and purchases
$100 of new refinanced mortgages, replacing old mortgages held by Hedge Fund.
(Fannie entries: debit Mortgage Loans $100; credit Cash $100). Hedge Fund then
accepts the $100 bill and deposits these immediately available funds with IMMF
(IMMF entries: debit Cash $100; credit Deposit Owed to Hedge Fund $100). The
$100 bill is then again available to Fannie, or perhaps it will provide immediately
available funds for Hedge Fund to take a leveraged position in higher-yielding
mortgage-backs, CDOs (collateralized Debt Obligations), corporate bonds, or
credit card securities. Goldman may decide to increase its leverage, borrowing
the $100 bill short-term and taking a speculative position (interest rate arbitrage)
in long-term securities such as a Fannie Mae bonds. Here, Goldman would issue
a short-term IOU to IMMF backed by these bonds (repurchase agreement), and
the seller of the securities would then possess $100 of immediately available
purchasing power.
It is not important to tabulate the total deposits created (increased money
supply) in the above examples, but only to appreciate that the contemporary
U.S. credit system possesses the extraordinary capacity for unlimited monetary
expansion through the process of unfettered issuance of financial sector IOUs.
Lending unconstrained by reserve or capital requirements creates what I refer
to as an "infinite multiplier effect" for money fund deposits. In
truth, these "IOUs" are electronic journal entries, but hopefully
this illustration using a $100 bill demonstrates the creation of additional
purchasing power through financial credit creation (financial sector leveraging).
Any institution or entity with the ability to create liabilities acceptable
as money market fund holdings possesses the capacity to create "immediately
available funds" - an expansion of deposits creating additional purchasing
power. This includes the banks, finance companies, captive finance companies
such as GE Capital and GMAC, the Wall Street brokerages, and the GSEs, as well
as sophisticated "structured finance" vehicles such as "funding
corps" and asset or mortgage-backed security trusts. Today, there is $1.228
trillion of outstanding financial sector commercial paper, with the vast majority
of the $2.1 trillion of total money market fund assets backed by financial
sector liabilities.
The "old days" of money market funds financing high quality short-term
and liquidating corporate credits (financing seasonal inventory expansion,
for example) has evolved into the current role of funding an ever-expanding
inventory of security holdings. Importantly, the money market fund intermediation
mechanism (transforming financial sector liabilities into deposit money) has
become a most critical aspect of the contemporary credit system, whereby financial
institutions create immediately available funds as they expand borrowings and
security positions. It is truly "money" out of thin air - the monetization
of risky financial claims (financial sector IOUs). Perhaps it is helpful to
think of money market funds as indicative of the contemporary credit system's
evolution to the point of "efficiently" monetizing the ballooning
liabilities of financial sector intermediaries - "ballooning" necessary
to sustain the historic U.S. financial bubble. Or, one could certainly make
the case that this is but a very sophisticated system of "wildcat finance," whereby
virtually any institution is afforded the opportunity to issue "notes" (electronic
IOUs) to be accepted by the money funds, which are then transformed into homogenized
system deposits sought by all - "money"! For sure, this process has
absolutely nothing to do with savings, but instead has everything to do with
credit expansion and financial leveraging, as well as sophisticated and risky "intermediation".
Again, when a financial intermediary borrows in the money market to take a
position in financial assets, this is an expansion of financial credit that
creates immediately available funds (deposits) for the seller of those assets.
Recent extreme monetary expansion is largely the residual not of savings or
real economic activity, but directly from the financial sphere with its unprecedented
expansion of financial sector leverage. Interestingly, this process of asset
monetization apparently goes completely unrecognized by some of the more adept
and sophisticated monetary theorists that today focus on production as the
avenue of money's infusion into the economy - the "monetary circuit" of
firms borrowing and paying wages and the household sector spending and investing.
Others would argue that no net private sector "wealth" is created
in this process of credit expansion, as additional financial assets are offset
by corresponding financial liabilities. My retort would be that this is not
a "zero sum game" of journal entries, as this massive creation of
financial credit is inflating household sector asset prices (perceived net
worth). Moreover, while private sector financial assets and liabilities do "offset," increased
liabilities/leveraging for the financial sector is creating additional quantities
of financial assets/perceived wealth for the household sector.
It is tempting to marvel at the apparent "velocity" of the $100
bill as it moves through the system. Certainly, the "multiplication" process
functions with much greater celerity (some would use "efficiency")
when lending is used for acquiring financial assets, as compared to corporations
borrowing to finance capital investment. I would argue, however, that more
meaningful analysis is provided by examining the nature of lending and the
monetary liabilities created. Is it more illuminating that the $100 of "narrow
money" is unchanged while "velocity" has increased, or to recognize
the mechanism and process for the creation of significant additional monetary
assets (bank and money fund deposits) through increased financial sector borrowings?
I hope the latter.
Many maintain that banks hold their traditional dominant position within the
credit system, while also stipulating that only bank deposits represent money
for transaction purposes. Some would argue further that the non-banks are simply
intermediating "bank money." I disagree on all counts, but these
points are certainly worth exploring. I have argued that money market funds
have developed into the "Fountainhead" of the Great Credit Bubble,
and that there is today little differentiation between the economic functionality
of bank deposits and money market fund deposits. Indeed, these deposits are
perceived by their respective holders as "money," providing absolute
liquidity and safety of nominal value (safe and immediately marketable "stores
of value"). There is certainly no disputing the fact that banks continue
to play a major role in direct lending. I would, however, argue that the money
and capital markets have come to play the key role in creating the financial
credit that provides unlimited availability of loanable funds. In particular,
the money market has been vitally important in creating the liquidity necessary
to fuel an historic asset bubble (equities, real estate, credit market instruments),
especially in the face of collapsing household savings. Not only do banks procure
liquidity by securitizing and selling loans to the money funds, they also enjoy
open access to borrowings directly from the money market to fund lending growth
and security purchases.
Money fund deposits, of course, can be easily used to purchase securities,
or transferred to a traditional bank account. Such transactions are handled
quite efficiently in our very sophisticated payment system, with extensive
netting between financial institutions. Traditionally, banks dominated the
clearing process, with various payments first netted amongst banks. Necessary
adjustments were then made for final settlement to individual reserve positions
held with the Federal Reserve. If banks were caught short, they would borrow
temporarily from banks with excess reserves or directly from the Fed, and perhaps
be forced to call in loans. Accordingly, with the Fed tightly managing the
quantity of total system reserves, the clearing process was an instrumental
factor dissuading individual banks from lending excessively.
Today, clearing takes place with payments netted between the myriad of financial
institutions, in a process that assimilates the relative financial positions
of participating banks and non-banks. In stark contrast to the traditional
bank-based clearing process with limited quantities of reserve balances and
base money, the distinguishing feature of the contemporary payment mechanism
is the unlimited availability of borrowings to finance payment shortfalls.
I would actually argue that the newfound prominence of money funds and the
corresponding "infinite multiplier effect" has profoundly changed
the payment clearing process. Today, any deficit can be met easily and inexpensively
by tapping the money market. No longer do limited reserves and the clearing
process restrain lending; and no longer do bank deposits govern the payment
system. Individual institutions can lend freely and with little concern for "final
settlement," choosing instead to simply increase liabilities as necessary.
This peculiar process within the domestic financial system is matched globally,
whereby massive U.S. current account deficits need not be "settled," but
can be left to run uncontrolled through the unprecedented increase of inter-institution
financial liabilities. Domestically and internationally, contemporary credit
and payment systems are not conducive to prudence for market discipline.
I believe it is also worth noting that payment clearing in our contemporary
credit-based economy at the consumer spending level is dwarfed by the settlement
of financial market transactions. Especially with the momentous growth of the
GSEs, Wall Street firms, and special financing vehicles that rely so extensively
on the money market for liquidity, these financial asset-based lenders have
become the "epicenter" for this critical payment clearing process.
Consequently, the money market funds have become the heart and soul of the
clearing process. And particularly with the unrelenting GSE borrowing and expansion,
these institutions dominate the clearing process as they disperse an unrelenting
flood of immediately available funds (deposits) to institutions throughout
the system ("reliquefication"). One cannot overstate the role of
the GSEs.
I have purposely used the terminology "immediately available funds," language
traditionally associated with reserves held at the Fed. While our first deposit
was made possible by the Treasury's issuance of the $100 bill for the payment
of a tax refund, the other deposits ("immediately available funds")
were all created through the lending process, and made possible by the expansion
of financial sector liabilities. As we have witnessed, if this purchasing power
is directed to mortgages, an inflationary effect will be apparent in the prices
of these securities (lower interest rates), with a resulting heightened availability
of credit and rising home prices. As important, the creation of immediately
available funds provides general liquidity for the financial markets. As Fannie
Mae issues IOUs - repeatedly borrowing the $100 bill - the expansion of its
mortgage portfolio creates new system deposits. These immediately available
funds then create demand for other financial assets, including stocks. I have
in the past argued that one of the key aspects of the GSE-induced mortgage
refinancing booms is that additional borrowings create purchasing power for
both consumer goods and securities.
Importantly, it is the creation of new deposits (flows), not the total money
supply (stock) that provides financial sector liquidity. There may be the perception
that the $2.1 trillion of total money market deposits or the almost $7.6 trillion
of broad money supply is available savings waiting to liquefy the marketplace.
This is a misconception. While it is confusing, it is critical to appreciate
that the "old" deposits have already been spoken for, with buying
power previously exhausted in the purchase of financial sector IOUs and other
liabilities. To sustain financial sector liquidity requires additional borrowing
and concomitant financial sector leveraging, with the resultant creation of
new deposits/"immediately available funds." Yes, a depositor or fund
manager may redirect holdings, but buying power must first be procured from
the liquidation of other positions or through additional borrowings - a new
buyer or lender must be found with "immediately available funds." This
is why I have also argued that this bubble will be sustained only as long as
the financial sector continues its borrowing and leveraging. So far, it has
done so in spades.
But is this unprecedented financial sector leveraging sustainable? Well, we
would argue only so long as the GSEs are issuing enormous quantities of IOUs
and ballooning their portfolios of financial assets - the massive creation
of financial credit and "immediately available funds." This feverish
operation has run uncontrolled since the 1998 financial crisis, with GSE liabilities
expanding by almost $1 trillion and total money supply surging more than $2
trillion. As I have detailed on a weekly basis, this "reliquefication" has
been in overdrive since last fall, with incredible liquidity creation providing
the backdrop for a momentous period of security issuance. No doubt about it,
this unprecedented manufacturing of deposit money has created insatiable demand
for securities and the resulting collapse in mortgage, agency, and high quality
corporate spreads. Today, however, it appears we have passed the peak in the
mortgage refi boom, making it reasonable to expect GSE balance sheet expansion
to soon begin to wane. This could provide quite a sea change for the financial
system, and perhaps we have already begun to witness the initial signs of a
reversal in liquidity conditions. We will watch these developments closely
going forward.
Hopefully it is clear that savings has very little to do with this whole process.
The U.S. bubble has been possible, on the one hand, because of the incredible
capacity of the U.S. financial sector to leverage and extend credit, and, on
the other hand, by its ability to create unfathomable amounts of assets perceived
as risk-free money. It is the most amazing "intermediation" process
ever. In this regard, it is worth noting the recent $19 billion loss reported
by Nortel. Somewhere along the line, incredible economic wealth was destroyed,
requiring enormous write-downs and a drastic reduction of the company's net
worth. So far, the trillions of dollars of money created over this reckless
boom have escaped any reduction in value. It is certainly not because the economic
wealth backing this money remains unscathed.
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