Showing posts with label QE3. Show all posts
Showing posts with label QE3. Show all posts

Thursday, September 13, 2012

Why You Must Invest for Inflation From Now On

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.


The Fed made history today by announcing an open-ended money printing policy — a policy heretofore unseen outside of history's hyperinflation havens. The news conference that followed the announcement revealed a central bank acting out of extreme desperation.

While the Fed is doing another round of quantitative easing, QE3 is not the same as QE2. The previous QE involved the purchase of U.S. Treasuries. This time around, the Fed is buying MBSs (mortgage-backed securities). In QE1, various types of securities were bought. The previous QEs also had specific limits to the amount of money that was going to be printed whereas QE3 doesn't. QE3 is supposed to be ongoing until somewhat after the economy and employment situation have been improving for a while. How long that will be is anybody's guess.

Despite several questions in the press conference that followed the announcement, Bernanke made only vague statements about how the Fed would determine when enough money printing was enough. The purchase of mortgage-backed securities is likely to continue for some time because doing so is supposed to reduce unemployment. How that will work is not clear other than perhaps reducing unemployment in the construction industry. The Fed's actions should lower already historically low mortgage rates and Bernanke specifically stated more than once that getting the price of homes up was one of his major goals (he seems to have forgotten that the global financial collapse in 2008 was the result of the collapse of the housing bubble).

Anticipating the obvious objections, Bernanke tried to head off the major criticisms of the Fed's new plan at the beginning of his news conference. While he admitted that the Fed's action hurt savers and would make it difficult to prepare for retirement, he said that if you don't  have a job you wouldn't have any money to save anyway. So, apparently the large majority of people who have a job should risk having their retirement unfunded in order to pursue Bernanke's high risk policies that have been tried for the last five years, but haven't worked. I wouldn't have been surprised if a couple of retired people were brought up to the podium and Bernanke kicked them a few times to emphasize his point.

Bernanke also denied that the new round of money printing will cause inflation. The basis of his argument was that the members of the FOMC aren't prediction inflation in their projections, so obviously it's not going to happen (these are the same people that failed to foresee the subprime crisis coming). Also Bernanke claimed inflation has been around 2% for years, so there is no problem. Even a casual perusal of commodity prices since 2009 shows increases of 100%, 150%, 200% and sometimes more however. It is true the government isn't reporting inflation, but that isn't the same as it doesn't exist. The head of the Weimar German central bank also claimed inflation wasn't a problem as he printed more and more money. Eventually, inflation reached 300 million percent.

One of the real eye-openers of the Bernanke news conference was his admitting the impotency of the Fed and monetary policy. Over and over again Bernanke stated that the Fed's actions were, "not a panacea". He said that, "We [the Fed] can't solve the problems by ourselves". He also emphasized that the Fed's, "tools are not so powerful that they can solve the problem". If the chances of success are so limited, why is the Fed taking a course of action that could have serious negative consequences for the American people?

In addition to his desire to reinflate the housing bubble, Bernanke was also proud that when the Fed speaks, economic forecasters change their numbers and that, "markets respond to [the Fed's] guidance".  This was a blatant admission that the Fed purposely manipulates the stock and bond markets and financial news. Obviously, this destruction of free market mechanisms is not something that he considers shameful, even though this represents a major power grab on the part of the Fed.

Bernanke was much more coy however when the question of whether or not the Fed's money printing decision was base on political considerations. One reporter mentioned that Romney was not planning on reappointing Bernanke and asked if the policy shift was an attempt to help reelect President Obama. Bernanke denied this of course, his voice almost breaking when he stammered out, "our decisions are based entirely on the state of the economy." I must admit that I am personally surprised that the Fed did this before the election because this question is only going to be the beginning and the Fed has now made itself an ongoing issue in the presidential campaign. I didn't think Bernanke was so foolish to take this risk, but obviously I overestimated his political awareness.

Earlier this month, ECB head Mario Draghi promised unlimited bond buying. This is different from what the Fed is doing because those purchases are supposed to be sterilized (new liquidity put in is neutralized by liquidity being removed). Many people however believe that the ECB will have to engage in money printing despite its claims. Added to the Fed, this means inflation investments will have a bid under them for some time to come.  Investors should be looking at gold and silver, energy and agriculture. Ironically, shorting Treasury bonds also look like a good bet now as well, since the Fed is not buying them as part of its QE program (Operation Twist though will be going on to the end of 2012 however and this acts to lower interest rates around the 7 to 10-year maturity level so be careful). Keep buying as long as the Fed keeps printing.


Disclosure: None


Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, August 31, 2012

Bernanke Makes No New Promises at Jackson Hole



 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Stocks underwent wild gyrations on Friday morning. First the Dow was up over 100 points just after the open on hopes that Fed Chair Bernanke would promise more QE in his Jackson Hole speech. Then, as Bernanke gave his remarks almost the entire rally disappeared. Then a few minutes later the Dow was up 100 points again.

Did anything happen to justify these market movements? The answer is no for the first rally and no for the second rally. Only the selling made sense. There was no promise in the speech for any additional QE in the immediate future. Bernanke did say "the Federal Reserve will provide additional policy accommodation as needed" as he has already stated dozens of times. This is a meaningless platitude that he repeats as often as a mindless parrot. He basically can't take any other position.

Bernanke had to admit that the economy wasn't in really awful shape, but he did emphasize that getting the unemployment rate lower was an important consideration for the FOMC. He did not make any case, nor did he offer proof that doing more quantitative easing would be effective in accomplishing this goal.  He did admit however that, "estimates of the effects of nontraditional policies on economic activity and inflation are uncertain". In other words, the central bank is playing a potentially dangerous game that might have very negative unforeseen consequences in the future.

Bernanke did admit that doing QE could disrupt the Treasury market. He stated that, "if the Federal Reserve became too dominant a buyer in certain segments of these markets, trading among private agents could dry up, degrading liquidity and price discovery".  All of the Fed's actions degrade free markets. That's why they are supposed to be effective. History has shown that markets always dominate in the end however.

Bernanke made it obvious in his speech that he doesn't think any underlying changes have taken place in the economy or financial markets. The ever-insightful Fed Chair also thought in the spring of 2007 that a mountain of subprime mortgage debt posed no risk to the economy or markets. This time Bernanke said, "rather than attributing the slow recovery to longer-term structural factors, I see growth being held back currently by a number of headwinds". Consider the Fed has been taking action since August 2007 (yes, it's been five years) and the economy still is not in great shape, you would think it might occur to him that maybe his policies don't work particularly well (note to readers: many economists are not particularly good at reality-based thinking).

Within the last few days, it has become obvious that Bernanke wouldn't promise anything at Jackson Hole. The QE touts were already making media appearances and publishing articles admitting this, but claiming that the Fed would be taking action at its September meeting. The same people said the Fed would be announcing QE at its June meeting and when that didn't happen, they said it would occur at the July/August meeting. Then it was supposed to take place at Jackson Hole. Now it's going to happen in September. Don't hold your breath.

There is no way the Fed can do QE3 before the election (unless Europe has a major collapse). It would just be too much of a political hot potato. While there are those who state correctly that the Fed has acted prior to presidential elections in the past, that was before the "Audit the Fed" movement started and before the Republicans started criticizing Bernanke's money printing. Romney has already said that if elected, he is going to dump Bernanke. Doing QE again with only the flimsiest of justifications would be seen as a blatant act to help reelect Obama and save his own job. Like QE itself, this could have "uncertain" consequences and many of them could be unpleasant.

The text of Bernanke's speech at Jackson Hole can be found here: http://www.marketwatch.com/story/text-of-bernanke-speech-at-jackson-hole-2012-08-31?pagenumber=2


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Thursday, August 2, 2012

Central Banks Sucker the Market




The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Three major central banks met on August 1st and 2nd and none of them took any decisive action. Markets in the U.S. and Europe have been rallying since late June on expected policy easing they've been promised by reports in the mainstream media. So far, empty talk is all the central banks have delivered.

Traders had high expectations for the Fed's monthly meeting on July 31st and August 1st. A week previously, news hit the wires (only a few moments before Apple's disastrous earnings were announced) that the Fed was definitely going to do some easing at this week's meeting. The source was the Wall Street Journal and they followed up with a front page article the next day. And what did the Fed do?  Nothing, zilch, nada. So much for the Wall Street Journal being a reliable source of investing information.

For the previous meeting in June, Goldman Sachs claimed the Fed was going to be doing quantitative easing (or maybe some other form of easing, but you would have to have read the entire coverage to find that out). What happened when QE wasn't forthcoming? The market hypsters came out of the woodwork with assurances that QE3 would be announced at the July/August meeting. Now that that hasn't happened either, we are hearing "just wait until September". You might as well wait for Godot. The only way the Fed will be doing QE before the election is if the financial crisis in the Europe gets out of hand. This will not stimulate the economy, but prevent a total collapse of the stock market (not a drop, but a total collapse).

The Bank of England and the ECB also met today. No rate changes from either of them (unlike the U.S. and Japan both have rates slightly above zero and they could lower them). The Bank of England is already doing QE2 and has been doing so since the fall of 2011. The UK is in a recession and QE has not stopped its economic decline.

Mario Draghi, the ECB chair and one of the biggest windbags to ever run a central bank, held a press conference after his meeting. He said that the ECB would undertake "outright" open market operations and would be using non-standard policy measures. Bonds rallied on the news. Unfortunately, only minutes later, Draghi was forced to backtrack on his boisterous pronouncements. He admitted that he was only providing "guidance" of what was going to occur in the future and details wouldn't be available for weeks. Draghi continued that even if the ECB was ready to act now, it would not have the grounds to do so. Someone should give that man a bagpipe.

How long the markets will continue to fall for promises of stimulus that never comes remains to be seen. Whatever happens, there is no reason be confident that things will be getting better. If the Fed could fix the U.S. economy, it would already have done so. If the ECB could solve Europe's debt crisis, it also would have already done so. Doing more of the same is not going to work, so it's not worth waiting for cental bank action as is. Eventually, the markets will figure this out.

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Friday, July 27, 2012

Why Quantitative Easing Won't Happen Now



The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Quantitative easing is off the table for the Fed at the moment because of Friday's GDP report. According to the Commerce Department U.S. second quarter GDP growth was 1.5%, which is mediocre, but not bad enough to justify another round of money printing stimulus.

The stock market has been juiced up on a number of occasions since June on rumors of impending QE3.  There is always connected to phrase like "the Fed will do more to help the economy." The mainstream press never raises the question of why does the Fed need to do more to help the economy. If its program worked, the economy should have recovered. If they don't, doing more of the same thing isn't likely to accomplish much. A need for a third round of QE certainly implies that the first two weren't effective — at least in creating economic growth.  Could it be that printing money out of thin air doesn't really create lasting wealth?

All the U.S. fans of quantitative easing should look across the pond at what is taking place in the UK. Its second round of QE was started last October. Yet, Britain has fallen into and remains in recession. It doesn't look like it will exit the recession by the end of the year either. So much for QE being a panacea for saving an economy.

The best case for the ineffectiveness of QE though comes from Japan. Japan has maintained a zero interest rate policy since 1999 (the U.S. had done so since 2008). After ten years of economic decline and malaise Japan began implementing quantitative easing in the early 2000s. The ten years that followed were also a period of economic decline and malaise. The Japanese stock market peaked in 1989 and over twenty years later it is still down more than 75% from its high (investors who fought the Bank of Japan are glad that they did). The various stimulus programs raised stock prices temporarily, but they eventually fell to lower lows.

The stimulus bag of tools that central banks use is meant to be effective when there is a cyclical downturn in the economy. However, they will not work if the problem is structural — and that is exactly what Japan has been dealing with since 1990 and Europe and America are dealing with today (and probably since 2000). We are at the end of the Keynesian era, where credit can no longer be extended to greater levels without creating a subsequent collapse and the economy can't grow without continual stimulus from the central banks and massive government deficits. This is sharply evident in the case of Greece and Spain at the moment, but it is just as true in the U.S., UK and Japan.

The Fed can't just cavalierly decide to engage in more QE as is. It will need to do so if there is a major financial incident in the EU and it can't waste its bullets. It is inevitable that there will be such a crisis, and the Fed knows it. Mario Draghi's assertion on Thursday that the ECB will do everything possible to save the euro was nothing but meaningless bravado. The crisis in Europe has been going on for over two years now and despite numerous bailouts and half a dozen support schemes it keeps getting worse. During the entire time, the powers that be in the EU have said that they will do everything to save the euro. Sometimes "everything" isn't enough. 

The Fed also has the problem of looking political if it acts before the election. While it is true that the Fed has acted before elections in the past, it actions weren't being closely scrutinized back then. Nor were its policies politically controversial. The House of Representatives just passed the Federal Reserve Transparency Act of 2012 by 327-98. This legislation would produce a full audit of the Fed. While it might not pass the Senate this time around, eventually it will.

While the Fed will almost certainly be doing quantitative easing again, but it won't happen until either  the problems in Europe become a full-fledge global credit crisis or the U.S. economy is in an obvious recession. In either case, it will not be something to cheer about. 

Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

Without Stimulus Market Can't Rally

 

The 'Helicopter Economics Investing Guide' is meant to help educate people on how to make profitable investing choices in the current economic environment. We have coined this term to describe the current monetary and fiscal policies of the U.S. government, which involve unprecedented money printing. This is the official blog of the New York Investing meetup.

Minutes from the last Fed's Open Market Committee meeting indicate the central bank is less likely to introduce more stimulus. While this should not have been surprising, stocks sold off on the news adding more evidence that the top has been put in.

The current market rally, indeed the entire market rally since mid-2009 has been produced primarily on liquidity provided by the Fed and other central banks. This liquidity not only allows the market to continue to rise, but it also props the market up. Without a continuing flow of liquidity, the market could easily hit an air pocket and fall apart and it can do so in a very short period of time.

The impact of what happens when just a hint that more liquidity won't be forthcoming can be seen by Wednesday's action. The Dow Jones was down 1.0% (125 points), the S&P 500 1.0% (14 points), Nasdaq 1.5% (45 points) and the small cap Russell 2000 1.7% (14 points). Commodities were hit even harder than stocks with gold dropping 3.0% or $51, silver down 4.2% or $1.33 and oil lower by $1.97 or 1.9%. Copper lost more than 3%. The major gold and silver mining ETF GDX was $ 2.05 lower or 4.2%. The junior version, the GDXJ, dropped an even dollar, also 4.2%.

While there seems to be a number of players in the market hoping for QE3, they are not likely to get their wish anytime soon. At this point it is almost impossible for the central that has been crying recovery for the past three years to justify such a move without seeming to be blatantly interfering with the ongoing presidential election. Moreover, even to an inflation-blind Fed, the risk of future rising prices is becoming increasingly difficult to ignore.

Traditionally, rallies last between six and seven months and this one is beginning its seventh month. The upside action on the indices has been decent even for an entire year. Rallies don't go to the sky however, but correct because too many people have bought and many of them have bought on margin. Once that point has been reached it takes very little to pull the market down and once the selling starts in earnest it becomes very difficult to stop. We may not be there yet, but we probably will be soon enough.


Disclosure: None

Daryl Montgomery
Author: "Inflation Investing - A Guide for the 2010s"
Organizer, New York Investing meetup
http://investing.meetup.com/21

This posting is editorial opinion. There is no intention to endorse the purchase or sale of any security.