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"Greenspan has lured America
into a horrible liquidity trap." Says The Good Doctor. From this point,
an orderly unwinding is simply not possible. The explanation follows...
A MOST SAVAGE CREDIT CRUNCH by Dr. Kurt Richebacher
While
the Fed hiked its rate by a paltry 25 basis points, the bond market used a
hammer, raising 10-year Treasury yields by 100 basis points within just two
weeks - that is, by nearly a full percentage point.
If the Fed truly
and urgently wanted credit restraint, the action in the bond market should
have pleased them. We suspect the abrupt surge of long-term rates has
shocked them, because the resulting higher mortgage rates have
effectually choked the mortgage refinancing bubble, presenting
policymakers in the Fed with far more credit tightening than they really
want.
All their hawkish talk, we presume, was intended rather to
calm the inflation fears in the market by emphasizing the Fed's
anti-inflation vigilance, thereby hopefully moderating the rise in
longer-term market rates. In any case, the talk about a rate hike was much
ado about nothing.
In his London speech, Greenspan cited that "the
rise in rates... has induced a dramatic fall in mortgage refinancing."
According to the Mortgage Bankers Association (MBA), mortgage-financing
activity in the United States in the week ending June 4 was down 68%
compared to a year ago. The MBA's Refinancing Index had even plunged by 85%
year over year.
Yet the impact of the higher interest rates seems to
have been cushioned by a surge in the demand for adjustable rate
mortgages (ARMs).
What exactly could or would the Fed accomplish
with a quarter-point rate hike? What would that do to the economy and
the financial system? In short, it would not be likely to change much, if
anything at all. Even the carry trade would still be profitable at this
higher rate.
In fact, the existing short-term rate of 1% is ridiculously
low for a supposedly booming economy to begin with. But most of the
profits derived from this record-low rate go to the financial system,
funding its assets in large part by this rate. Manifestly, Wall Street
firms, banks and hedge funds could easily cope with a slightly higher
federal funds rate. For consumers and non-financial firms, the Fed's 1%
rate is pure theory - except for savers.
What truly matters, in
particular for financial institutions heavily engaged in carry trade, are
changes in the long-term rate, because they directly hit their capital,
and that, of course, with high leverage. The rise by 100 basis points
reduces the value of 10-year bonds by almost 10%. Given that the carry trade
with bonds is generally leveraged at 20:1, or 5% equity, this loss of
value in the bond holdings actually wipes out more than the invested
capital.
In hindsight, it seems reasonable to say that by
maintaining the consumer borrowing and spending binge in the face of
plummeting income growth, the mortgage-refinancing bubble has been the U.S.
economy's lifeline. Consumer spending posted a new historical record in the
sense that it outpaced total economic growth. With an overall increase
of $625.8 billion, for the first time in history it exceeded the
simultaneous GDP growth, up $581 billion. The consumer achieved this with a
debt surge of $1,678.8 billion.
But as explained, this lifeline has
been badly damaged. There is no spectacular collapse like that in the stock
market of 2000-01. Yet a drastically deflating mortgage-refinancing
bubble is sure to have a much greater effect on the economy. What is
unfolding there is not just gradual credit restraint. It is a most savage
credit crunch with obvious, most dismal consequences for consumer spending
and the economy.
All the more, it stuns us how little attention this
fact is finding. Just weeks ago, the question of a possible
quarter-point rate hike by the Fed provoked an agitated public
discussion. Now there appears to be a savage credit crunch in the offing,
and nobody seems to even notice.
In our view, the fate of the mortgage
refinancing bubble and its further impact on the economy is presently the
single-most important issue facing the U.S. economy. All other major GDP
components are much too weak to take over as the new locomotive. Consider
that nonresidential business investment contributed just 0.30 percentage
points to real GDP growth in the first quarter of 2004. Consumer
spending remains so predominant that any weakness on its part would
instead pull down the other components.
Of the numerous economic data
that America's statisticians constantly publish, a single forthcoming number
appears absolutely decisive under these circumstances. That is real
consumer expenditures in May, in the Personal Income and Outlays report
published June 28 (just after this letter has gone to the
printer).
As earlier elucidated, the numbers for the first four
months of 2004 have been unusually weak. Overall growth was $61.5
billion, or $184.5 billion at annual rate. This compares with an annualized
increase in the fourth quarter of 2003 by $388.4 billion and an increase
over the whole year by $297.7 billion. To speak of any traction in this
economy is absurd. With the mortgage-refinancing bubble seriously
jeopardized, more weakness is the only thing we can imagine for consumer
spending.
The other bubble that gives us the greatest headache is the
highly leveraged carry trade in longer-term bonds. We ask ourselves how
this monstrous bubble, having certainly run into several trillion dollars,
can ever be unwound without pushing market interest rates substantially
upward.
Well, prices of longer-term bonds crashed in April-May. For
10-year bonds, the loss was close to 10%. For the time being, U.S. bonds
have stabilized at their lowered level, as unwinding - in other words,
selling - has drastically abated or stopped. But it is a deceptive
stability. Such a huge bubble that has been built up over two or three years
is not liquidated within weeks. For sure, the bulk of the carry trade
still hangs over the markets.
The decisive point to see about the carry
trade of bonds from a macro perspective is that huge purchases of bonds
with borrowed money essentially result in artificially low longer-term
interest rates. Normally, such purchases ought to come exclusively from
current savings.
While the U.S. economy has near-zero domestic savings,
it possesses a financial system that, thanks to its central bank, knows
no limit in credit and debt creation. It is a financial system of virtually
unlimited "elasticity," one might say.
However, this extraordinary
financial elasticity works overwhelmingly in two directions: personal
consumption and financial speculation. During the 13 quarters from end 2000
to the first quarter of 2004, private household debt has soared by $2.52
trillion, or 36%, and financial sector debt by $2.9 trillion, or 35%.
Jumping from $578.1 billion in 1980 to $11,280.6 billion in the first
quarter of 2004, the debt of the financial sector in the United States has
skyrocketed from 21% of GDP to 98.4%.
Mr. Greenspan keeps hailing
this extraordinary ability of the U.S. financial system for expansion as a
sign of superior efficiency. We increasingly wonder about its elasticity
in the opposite direction, that is, when it comes to unwinding existing
bubbles, regarding the immediate surge of long-term interest rates only as a
first taste of things to come.
Building the huge carry-trade bubble
of bonds during the past few years has been fun because the yield spread and
rising bond prices lured ready buyers en masse. It was a pleasure for
sellers and buyers. But we wonder from where the huge buying of bonds will
come when selling pressure from the unwinding of this bubble will develop in
earnest.
Imagine, America's whole financial system has trillions of
dollars in the same boat. But what can possibly trigger heavy selling of
this kind? For sure, the Fed is desperate not to upset this boat with the
major rate hikes that could do so. If it feels compelled to move in order to
satisfy bond vigilantes, it will do no more than minimal, so to speak,
rather symbolical rate hikes.
Considering the huge amounts involved in
the U.S. carry trade, we think that this bubble has, actually, become far
too big to allow for orderly unwinding, by which we mean unwinding with
moderate interest effects. Under the conditions created by the Fed, it was
easy to create virtually unlimited leveraged buying of bonds on the way
up. But there are few willing buyers on the way down.
But to be sure,
it is impossible to recreate these conditions. First of all, rate cutting by
the Fed has spent its power; second, there will be upward pressure on
interest rates from new credit demand; and third, being outrageously
overloaded with highly leveraged bond holdings, the financial system will be
a very reluctant buyer of new bonds.
All in all, the asset bubbles
have over time become far too big to allow for orderly unwinding. With the
highly leveraged carry trade in bonds alone running into several
trillions of dollars, one has to wonder where and who the necessary
potential buyers for these trillions are that would make such extensive
deleveraging possible. The fact to see is that the Greenspan Fed has lured
the U.S. financial system into a horrible liquidity
trap.
Regards,
Dr. Kurt Richebacherfor The Daily
Reckoning
Editor's
note: Former Fed Chairman Paul Volcker once said: "Sometimes I think that
the job of central bankers is to prove Kurt Richebacher wrong." A regular
contributor to The Wall Street Journal, Strategic Investment and several
other respected financial publications, Dr. Richebacher's insightful
analysis stems from the Austrian School of economics. France's Le Figaro
magazine has done a feature story on him as "the man who predicted the
Asian crisis."
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