Yesterday, both the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of the
UK cut their benchmark interest rates to record lows. This is especially
incredible in the case of the UK, whose Central Bank over 300 years
old! You can see from the following chart that both Central Banks have
more than made up for their respectively slow starts in easing monetary
policy by effecting several dramatic rate cuts, following the example of
the Federal Reserve. The baseline UK rate now stands at .5%, only
slightly higher than the Federal Funds rate, and slightly lower than the
1.5% ECB rate.
Given that they have essentially reached the terminus of their
monetary policy options, all three Central Banks are exploring further
options aimed at pumping money into their respective economies. The Fed
has already “announced a program to buy $100 billion in the direct
obligations of housing related government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) —
Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan banks — and $500
billion in mortgage-based securities backed by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
and Ginnie Mae.” As I wrote in a related article, “this was quickly
followed by repurchase programs, lending facilities, investments in
money market funds, and option agreements, all of which were designed to
supplement its ‘traditional open market operations and securities
lending to primary dealers.’ The Fed’s efforts also worked to ease the
liquidity shortage in credit markets abroad by entering into swap
agreements with several foreign Central Banks suffering from acute
Dollar shortages.”
In conjunction with the rate cut, the Bank of the UK, meanwhile, will pump £150bn directly into UK credit markets through liquidity support, buying public and private debt, and asset purchases. “The main purpose of quantitative easing
is not to send the money supply into orbit but to stop it from
crashing…the broad money held by households has risen at a worryingly
slow rate over the past year, and holdings by private non-financial
firms have actually been dropping.” In contrast to the monetary programs
of the UK and US, the ECB has thus far refrained from the kind of
liquidity support that would necessitate printing new money. Instead,
“the central bank will continue offering euro-zone banks unlimited loans at the central bank’s policy rate until at least the end of this year.”
The interest rate cuts were announced simultaneously with a spate of
macroeconomic data, which collectively paint a bleak picture. Eurozone
growth is projected at -2.7% for 2009 and 0% for 2010. The current
unemployment rate at 8.2% and climbing. The thorn in the side of the EU
is represented by eastern Europe, where growth is falling at an alarming
pace, dragging the EU down with it. While EU member states have pledged
to intervene if one of their own falls into bankruptcy, it’s unlikely
that they would intervene similarly if a non-EU member state went bust.
The UK economy is similarly desperate, having contracted at an
annualized rate of 5.8% in the most recent quarter. The wild cards are
the real estate and financial sectors, the fortunes of which are
increasingly intertwined.
So what do the forex markets have to say about all this? Economists have used the dual phenomena of risk aversion and deflation
to explain the interminable weakness in the the Pound and Euro.
Everyone is surely familiar with the notion of the US as “safe haven”
during periods of global financial instability. The deflation
hypothesis, meanwhile, suggests that the ECB (and to a lesser extent,
the Bank of UK), fell behind the curve
when easing liquidity. The ECB, especially has harped on inflation as a
reason for cutting rates more quickly. Given that investors are now
more concerned with capital preservation than price inflation, it
follows that they would prefer to invest where Central Banks were more
vigilant about deflation (i.e. the US).
Personally, I think that the continued declines in both currencies,
in spite of steep interest rate cuts, indicates that the deflation
hypothesis is bunk, and investors remain fixated on risk aversion. By no
coincidence, the temporary rebound in US stocks that took place in
January was also accompanied by a bump in the Euro. (See chart below).
I think this mindset is reasonable, but only in the short-term. Given
the current economic environment, I don’t think investors (and currency
traders) can be faulted for ignoring the possibility that quantitative
easing and liquidity programs will have to be funded with the printing
of new money, which would be inherently inflationary. Many comparisons
are being made with Japan, whose ill-fated quantitative-easing program
succeeded only in inflating a bond-market bubble and vastly increasing
Japanese public debt. According to one columnist,
“it’s hard to argue that quantitative easing ended deflation; high oil
prices did that. Meanwhile, the economy cured on its own most of the
structural problems such as excess capacity and too much debt associated
with the deflationary environment.”
In short, with a medium and long-term investing horizon in mind, I
think the ECB’s approach to dealing with the credit crisis is more
conducive to monetary stability. Thus, when investors grow weary of the
idea of US as safe haven, they will no doubt focus instead on
fundamentals. At which point, the ECB will likely be rewarded for
fulfilling its anti-inflation mandate, in the form of a stronger Euro.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment