In shifting their focus to interest rates, forex traders have perhaps
overlooked one very important monetary policy event: the conclusion of
the Fed’s quantitative easing program. By the end of June, the Fed
will have added $600 Billion (mostly in US Treasury Securities) to its
reserves, and must decide how next to proceed. Naturally, everyone
seems to have a different opinion, regarding both the Fed’s next move
and the accompanying impact on financial markets.
The second installment of quantitative easing (QE2) was initially
greeted with skepticism by everyone except for equities investors (who
correctly anticipated the continuation of the stock market rally). In
November, I reported that QE2 was unfairly labeled a lose-lose
by the forex markets: “If QE2 is successful, then hawks will start
moaning about inflation and use it as an excuse to sell the Dollar. If
QE2 fails, well, then the US economy could become mired in an
interminable recession, and bears will sell the Dollar in favor of
emerging market currencies.”
The jury is still out on whether QE2 was a success. On the one hand,
US GDP growth continues to gather force, and should come in around 3%
for the year. A handful of leading indicators are also ticking up,
while unemployment may have peaked. On the other hand, actual and
forecast inflation are rising (though it’s not clear how much of that
is due to QE2 and how much is due to other factors). Stock and
commodities prices have risen, while bond prices have fallen. Other
countries have been quick to lambaste QE2 (including most recently, Vladimir Putin) for its perceived role in inflating asset bubbles around the world and fomenting the currency wars.
Personally, I think that the Fed deserves some credit- or at least
doesn’t deserve so much blame. If you believe that asset price inflation
is being driven by the Fed, it doesn’t really make sense to blame it
for consumer and producer price inflation. If you believe that price
inflation is the Fed’s fault, however, then you must similarly
acknowledge its impact on economic growth. In other words, if you accept
the notion that QE2 funds have trickled down into the economy (rather
than being used entirely for financial speculation), it’s only fair to
give the Fed credit for the positive implications of this and not just
the negative ones.
But I digress. The more important questions are: what will the Fed do
next, and how will the markets respond. The consensus seems to be that
QE2 will not be followed by QE3, but that the Fed will not yet take
steps to unwind QE2. Ben Bernanke echoed this sentiment during today’s inaugural press conference:
“The next step is to stop reinvesting the maturing securities, a move
that ‘does constitute a policy tightening.’ ” This is ultimately a much
bigger step, and one that Chairman Bernanke will not yet commit.
As for how the markets will react, opinions really start to diverge.
Bill Gross, who manages the world’s biggest bond fund, has been an
outspoken critic of QE2 and believes that the Treasury market will
collapse when the Fed ends its involvement. His firm, PIMCO, has
released a widely-read report
that accuses the Fed of distracting investors with “donuts” and
compares its monetary policy to a giant Ponzi scheme. However, the
report is filled with red herring charts and doesn’t ultimately make
any attempt to account for the fact that Treasury rates have fallen
dramatically (the opposite of what would otherwise be expected) since
the Fed first unveiled QE2.
The report also concedes that, “The cost associated with the end of
QEII therefore appears to be mostly factored into forward rates.” This
is exactly what Bernanke told reporters today: “It’s [the end of QE2]
‘unlikely’ to have significant effects on financial markets or the
economy…because you and the markets already know about it.” In other
words, financial armmagedon is less likely when the markets have
advanced knowledge and the ability to adjust. If anything, some
investors who were initially crowded-out of the bond markets might be
tempted to return, cushioning the Fed’s exit.
If bond prices do fall and interest rates rise, that might not be so
bad for the US dollar. It might lure back overseas investors, grateful
both for higher yields and the end of QE2. Despite the howls, foreign
central banks never shunned the dollar. In addition, the end of QE2
only makes a short-term interest rate that much closer. In short, it’s
no surprise that the dollar is projected to “appreciate to $1.35 per
euro by the end of the year, according to the median estimate of 47
analysts in a Bloomberg News survey. It will gain to 88 per yen, a separate poll shows.”
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