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Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

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  • Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

    http://blogs.cfr.org/setser/2008/09/...rdinary-times/

    Extraordinary times

    Posted on Friday, September 26th, 2008 by bsetser

    In the last two weeks — if I am reading the Federal Reserves’ balance sheet data correctly — the Fed has:

    Increased “other loans” to the financial system by around $230 billion (from $23.56b to $262.34b);

    Increased its “other assets” by about $80b (from $98.67b to $183.89b);

    Increased the securities it lends out to dealers by $60b (from $117.3b to $190.5b);

    That works out to the provision of something like $370b of credit to the financial system in a two week period. That may be a bit too high: the outstanding stock of repos felll by $40b (from $126b to $ 86b), leaving a $330b net change in these line items. But that is still enormous.

    The most that the IMF ever lent out to cash strapped emerging economies in a year?

    $30b, in the four quarters through September 1998 (i.e. the peak of the 97-98 crisis).

    The most the IMF ever lend out over two years?

    $40b, in the eight quarters through June 2003 (this covered crises in Argentina, Brazil, Uruguay and Turkey)

    This is a very real crisis. The Fed’s balance tells a story of extraordinary stress. I never would have expected to see the Fed lend out these kinds of sums over such a short-period.

    And what have the rest of the world’s central banks done over this period?

    There has been a lot of talk that central banks would abandon US assets because the perceived risk of holding dollars (and Treasuries) has gone up.

    The custodial data though don’t provide much evidence to support this theory.

    Over the last two weeks, the Fed’s custodial holdings have increased by over $40b, rising from $2394.7b to $2435.9b. Treasuries account for over $30b of the increase, but Agency holdings are rising as well. Chalk up one (minor) success for Paulson.

    Right now, it seems like central banks are running into the safest US assets, not running away from the dollar. That of course could change. But it is hard to square a $20b weekly increase in the New York Fed’s custodial holdings with a story based on a fall in central bank demand for dollars. For that matter, it is hard to square the $425b increase in the New York Fed’s custodial holdings since last September with all the of the angst about the dollar’s status as a reserve currency.

    If anything, the pace of growth in the Fed’s custodial holdings over the past two weeks strikes me as stronger than the likely pace of global reserve growth. That suggests to me that central banks are shifting funds out of the commercial banks (and money market funds) into Treasuries that can be held at the Fed’s custodial accounts. I would bet that central banks are shifting money to the BIS as well.

    Remember, most central banks do not have a mandate to take credit losses. They can take currency losses — as currency risk is implicit in the notion of foreign exchange reserves. But having money in a bank that fails would be very hard for most to explain.

    Note that all my data compares the data for the end of the reporting week, i.e the data for September 24 to the data for September 10.

    UPDATE: I should have noted a fall in the Fed’s repos with the banks in my initial post. The changes in the Fed’s balance sheet are so large that I am not sure that I still know how to read the report, so please attach an error bar to the numbers above (apart from the numbers on the custodial holdings). I may have missed some additional credit extension, or some offsetting items. The basic story though is clearly true: the changes in the Fed’s “other loans” alone are enormous.

  • #2
    Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

    And a comment from someone who has a clue:
    http://blogs.cfr.org/setser/2008/09/...comment-113730
    London Banker Says:

    Excellent and timely, Brad. I’ve been speculating all week that the pressure being used on the Congress to pass the Paulson Plan is the threat of Fed illiquidity. As of two weeks ago, the Fed had lent out more than $600 billion of its $800 billion balance sheet Treasuries against crap MBS collateral.

    The Paulson Plan would have allowed the banks to unwind the repos putting the Treasuries back in the Fed, get cash for the crap MBS, and get more Treasuries from the issues financing the $700+ billion funding of the Plan. As a bonus, the Paulson mark-to-maturity price becomes the implicit Level 3 price for capitalisation of all the firms and banks in the system, giving them some breathing room to stay in business. Everyone wins except the poor American taxpayer.

    The Fed is very close to being illiquid. That is the fear factor we are seeing at work, and the reason no one will discuss why the bailout is needed - only emphasise the urgency.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

      Right on the money IMHO!

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

        I love this

        Everyone wins except the poor American taxpayer
        No need to guess who is being referred to by "Everyone" :-)

        By the way, I just recently noticed the connection between Brad and CFR. Interesting :-)

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

          Originally posted by Sapiens View Post
          And a comment from someone who has a clue:
          http://blogs.cfr.org/setser/2008/09/...comment-113730
          Would it be fair to comment that the Fed really does not have a clue what the broad money supply really is now--- especially in light of the failures of banks and companies in recent days? In other words, how much of the broader money supply has been destroyed by bankrutcies and asset depreciation?

          Yes, the strategy of the Fed is to inflate against the deflation tide, but who is winning now: the Fed or the deflation?

          One of the disasters with fiat money experiment (which began when the Fed was founded in 1913) is that money is now a joke, and not even the Fed can measure what is going on in the economy. What is happening in real terms in the economy in America and in the world?

          And when I look at the gold market or the oil market for guideance, those markets seem to be confused, just as I am confused now. More than any trend, what I see is outstanding volatility and confusion in these markets.

          A clueless and illiquid Fed, but nevertheless a motivated Fed with high-speed printing-presses, is a very frightening Fed, indeed.
          Last edited by Starving Steve; September 28, 2008, 12:18 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

            Ever hear of the thief setting off a diversionary tactic, and thus creating chaos and confusion, in order to pick-pocket the victims and leave the room without anyone ever noticing who did it?

            I believe this mass chaos and confusion is somewhat orchestrated in order to push through measures that will pick-pocket the American taxpayer amidst all of the confusion and fear.

            I seriously believe that we are at the point of a necessity for public executions of our elected leaders. There is a reason that treason is punishable by death and I believe that most of our elected officials are guilty of such. After all, it is the lack of fear of the taxpayer that has all the politicians not really looking after our best interest.

            Instill a little fear in them, just as they have instilled fear in us by way of terrorism, market crashes, etc and perhaps they will start behaving a little better.

            And, yes, sadly it is to the point of advocating violence as a means to an end, because no other negotiations are working. After all, our leaders set the precedent for armed conflict by way of the Iraq war and this form of preemtion is completely set WITH a major precedent. We learned that violence is OK from them after all, why not use a little bit to further OUR OWN agenda (the taxpayer's)?

            PS: This is all rhetoric and is solely my opinion and does not imply anyone should perform any acts of violence on their elected officials. But I am wondering at what point the American taxpayer is going to get to the point where they have nothing left to lose but their life? That's when I believe that there will be massive civil unrest and the lives and safety of our elected officials will, and rightfully should be, put in jeopardy.
            Last edited by ricket; September 28, 2008, 12:25 PM.
            Every interest bearing loan is mathematically impossible to pay back.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

              Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
              Would it be fair to comment that the Fed really does not have a clue what the broad money supply really is now--- especially in light of the failures of banks and companies in recent days? In other words, how much of the broader money supply has been destroyed by bankrutcies and asset depreciation?
              Interesting point. I've seen many postings and much information about how the Fed is pumping up the money supply, but I've never really thought about how the money supply can shrink. I'm not at all sure about the mechanisms that can shrink it. Does a shrinking money supply = deflation?

              I would find it an interesting topic if anyone could expand on how the money supply shrinks and who's winning this tug of war.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                Originally posted by ricket
                I seriously believe that we are at the point of a necessity for public executions of our elected leaders.
                Ricket,

                I strongly suggest not putting such sentiments into writing - even on the Internet.

                If you were to say: "I could understand why executions could be warranted for our elected leaders given that treason is a capital offense", that'd be ok.

                Also, Bernanke and Paulson weren't elected...

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                  Every normal man must be tempted at times to spit on his hands, hoist the black flag, and begin to slit throats.
                  H. L. Mencken
                  US editor (1880 - 1956)
                  It's Economics vs Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics wins.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                    Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
                    Would it be fair to comment that the Fed really does not have a clue what the broad money supply really is now--- especially in light of the failures of banks and companies in recent days? In other words, how much of the broader money supply has been destroyed by bankrutcies and asset depreciation?

                    Yes, the strategy of the Fed is to inflate against the deflation tide, but who is winning now: the Fed or the deflation?

                    One of the disasters with fiat money experiment (which began when the Fed was founded in 1913) is that money is now a joke, and not even the Fed can measure what is going on in the economy. What is happening in real terms in the economy in America and in the world?

                    And when I look at the gold market or the oil market for guideance, those markets seem to be confused, just as I am confused now. More than any trend, what I see is outstanding volatility and confusion in these markets.

                    A clueless and illiquid Fed, but nevertheless a motivated Fed with high-speed printing-presses, is a very frightening Fed, indeed.

                    Dollar investments are burning at an exponential rate right now. I believe that further injections from the Fed will turn highly inflationary in markets such as gold, silver, and oil. On the other hand, further injections will do nothing to stem asset price deflation in real estate and durable goods such as 80K BMW M3's.

                    The reason I use that particular BMW in this example is that for the first time in the history of this particular model, we'll see strong depreciation as soon as the auto is driven off the lot. These cars have hand built engines and are produced in very limited quantities. The world wide demand for 80k cars is evaporating and leases have already evaporated.

                    I do not believe that the Fed can jump start the world's economy so we'll have a bad recession either way with very turbulent bouts of severe inflation in the commodities markets. Afterall, everyone's gotta eat and have somewhere to sleep.

                    There is plenty of housing so rents will remain depressed. The consumer has been neutered so we'll see vacant commercial strips. Everyone has already replaced the appliances and floors so durable goods factories will remain idle. Bernacke will be getting one of three checks for 700+ billion so food and energy will go through the roof. Reminds me of my childhood.

                    Hopefully Hollywood can bring on some great cinema such as Star Wars and The Deer Hunter! Hopefully the hip-hop scene will die where it began!
                    Hopefully the USA will embrace President Carter's insights into energy this time instead of dissing him.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                      Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                      Ricket,

                      I strongly suggest not putting such sentiments into writing - even on the Internet.

                      If you were to say: "I could understand why executions could be warranted for our elected leaders given that treason is a capital offense", that'd be ok.

                      Also, Bernanke and Paulson weren't elected...

                      I guess the idea of electing actual grownups to congress and the presidency is too difficult for some. Or to make sure local school systems properly educate students to understand economics and why trendy issues-dejour may not be as important as good old fashioned prudent and responsible leaders. Easier to just elect people based on whatever one's pet issues are and then whack em after they've done the damage.

                      "Sure he's bankrupting the nation....but he agrees with my stances on abortion, school prayer, flag burning, and gay marriage!"

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                        The American government monitors the conversation in chatrooms and blog-sites, so be careful about what you post. Be careful about what you think of posting, and be careful what you think.

                        Yes, this censorship or monitoring, whatever you call it, is darn chilling. This is something new in America, along with secret courts, secret charges, secret prisons, water-boarding, the schools bullying teachers around, the compliant media, the compliant universities, etc.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                          Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
                          The American government monitors the conversation in chatrooms and blog-sites, so be careful about what you post. Be careful about what you think of posting, and be careful what you think.

                          Yes, this censorship or monitoring, whatever you call it, is darn chilling. This is something new in America, along with secret courts, secret charges, secret prisons, water-boarding, the schools bullying teachers around, the compliant media, the compliant universities, etc.
                          I never made a specific threat against any specific individual, which is a crucial difference.

                          After all, treason *IS* a capital offense, as stated in my original post. At what point can the public start accusing elected officials of capital offenses and holding them thus accountable? Why can't the same threat of a humiliating execution given to serial killers (ie the death penalty) also be used for the officials in office? After all their decisions lead to more suffering, disease, starvation, and humanitarian crises than any one individual can muster.

                          How come we have spent 1 trillion+ in Iraq defending life while millions die every year in Africa and only need about $2/day in medication to survive? This is willing complicity on the part of the American public and we are just as guilty for ALLOWING the atrocities to happen as those who commit them.

                          In summary, my comments are more of a reflection of my SHEER ANGER at our elected officials, and their stomping of the constitution all in the name of stupid paper backed securities. PAPER!

                          THESE IDIOTS in charge make stupid decisions that lead to death all because of MONEY and PAPER MONEY (to boot). I have never been more humiliated at being a human being ever in my life.
                          Every interest bearing loan is mathematically impossible to pay back.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                            Ricket,

                            I share your anger and disgust.

                            Just don't get yourself put on any lists that you don't need to.

                            6 degrees of separation, remember.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Brad Setser: Extraordinary times

                              Originally posted by c1ue View Post
                              6 degrees of separation, remember.
                              c1ue... known associate of ricket... +3 to tracking score

                              Comment

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