Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Credit Tightening- Savings Increasing!!

The Bernanke Files has written extensively about where money comes from. Today the Federal Reserve released the monthly Credit-Demand report. Demand for credit has dropped significantly. This means that, because credit is the opposite of savings, savings in the US has increased. When there is more demand for savings, bond yields go down; thus making investment easier.

In other words, from 1997-2007, the USA went into debt with China to the tune of a trillion dollars. But, savings in the USA is now UP, so we will not go as heavily into debt to China as we will to American savers!! At the same time, economic growth will slow in the USA because we SAVE money instead of borrow money that we can SPEND. Of course when Americans buy less, China makes less money. To avoid this problem, the government will SPEND more and they will SAVE less. Chinese demand for US-TBonds is being replaced by AMerican demand for T-BOnds, and everything is coming into equilibrium.

Tuesday, September 8, 2009

USA Drops to Second Place

According to the newly released Global Economic Competitiveness report, USA has dropped from being the most competitive economy in the world to the second most competitive economy. Replacing it is Switzerland, and following USA is Singapore. Here is what the report summarized:

Switzerland’s economy continues to be characterized by an excellent capacity for innovation and a very sophisticated business culture, ranked 3rd for its business sophistication and 2nd for its innovation capacity. The country is characterized by high spending on R&D.

The United States falls one place and is ranked 2nd this year. The country continues to be endowed with many structural features that make its economy extremely productive and that place it on a strong footing to ride out business cycle shifts and economic shocks. However, a number of escalating weaknesses have taken their toll on the US ranking this year…. More generally, given that the financial crisis originated in large part in the United States, it is hardly surprising that there has been a weakening of the assessment of its financial market sophistication, dropping from 9th last year to 20th overall this year in that pillar.

Singapore moves up two ranks to 3rd place, remaining the highest-ranked country from Asia. The country’s institutions continue to be ranked as the best the world; at a time when confidence in governments in many countries has diminished, they are assessed even more strongly than in past years. Singapore places 1st for the efficiency of its goods and labor markets and 2nd for its financial market sophistication, ensuring the proper allocation of these factors to their best use. Singapore also has world-class infrastructure (ranked 4th), leading the world in the quality of its roads, ports, and air transport facilities. In addition, the country’s competitiveness is propped up by a strong focus on education, providing highly skilled individuals for the workforce. In order to strengthen its competitiveness further, Singapore could encourage even stronger adoption of the latest technologies—especially broadband Internet—as well as the innovative capacity of its companies.


A Look Back

To this very day economists debate the actions, inactions, choices, missed opportunities and risks that President Franklin Roosevelt has become so very famous for 70 years ago. Elected in the midst of a recession, Roosevelt showed the world what his tenure would be like on just the thirtieth day of his presidency when he declared a bank holiday. In late February 1933, Roosevelt closed every bank across the nation, then he told the American citizens via radio that their deposits would be insured by the government. Even though the government had no authority to insure deposits, Americans believed him and the financial crisis subsided. Over the next several years Roosevelt would enact hundreds of initiatives in an attempt to turn the economy around. In hindsight, it is generally agreed that about 25% of initiatives did good, 50% did little or nothing, and 25% actually harmed the economy.

The Bernanke Files believes that 70 years from now, economists will be debating the current economic policies in a similar manner. Enormously expansive and creative monetary policy, $1 Trillion stimulus, health-insurance reform, increased unemployment and other government initiative's helpfulness will be debated.

Fortunetly, though, the debates will never be as famous as the Great Depression debates because of the Great Depression. Ben Bernanke is a Great Depression scholar. Because of his creativeness and guidance, our current crisis is merely a recession. A scary fact is that it could have been a depression. In 70 years, just like Bernanke argues that monetary policy, not government intervention, helped us climb out of the Great Depression, economists will be arguing that it was the Federal Reserve that incurred some of the damage but most of the stabilization in the markets. Because we learned from the Great Depression, great Americans like HenryPaulson, Ben Bernanke and Timothy Geithner will be taken for granted in the 70 years.

Saturday, August 29, 2009

The Savings Glut Hypothesis

One of Ben Bernanke's most controversial theories is his Asian Savings Glut Hypothesis. The Asian Savings Glut Hypothesis shows how high savings rates in China effects the supply, demand and prices of US goods and how these three factors affect US wage rates, unemployment rates, and yields on federal debt (T-Bond Yields).

Here is a brief explanation of how Bernanke sees the interactions between Asia and America. Pretend, for a second, that there are two countries, one named China and the other named the United States. These two countries compete with each other to sell as many basketballs and basketball shoes as possible. China decides that the best way to compete with the US is to keep wages (the amount of money manufacturing employees make per hour) as low as possible. This ensures China that when a consumer is at the store looking at basketballs and basketball shoes, the balls and shoes on the Chinese aisle are always cheaper than the balls and shoes in the US aisle. Therefore, assuming Chinese made balls and shoes are the same quality as US balls and shoes, the Chinese have become more competitive than the US and consumers will buy more Chinese goods than US goods.

That is a simple, obvious concept. The complexities of the Asian Savings Glut Hypothesis occur when we ask how can China constantly keep wages low while at the same time keeping the ball and shoe consumers rich enough to afford the balls and shoes?

The concept that expains this is called the Balance of Payments and will be explained further in the next blog. The balance of payments concepts simply says that money MUST go somewhere. If a consumer pays $10 for a basketball and a ball, and they cost $3 to make, the extra $7 must go somewhere. In America, the $7 would go to wage-earning employees, shareholders, banks, credit cards, etc. In China, since they are trying to keep wages as low as possible, the government creates policies to make sure the extra $7 goes anywhere but to the wage earning employees, credit cards, banks, etc. In fact, the banks are so controlled by the government that loans are dictated to go to only two places: low interest rate loans to large manufacturing companies; or to the purchase of US T-Bonds. When China buys a T-Bond, many effects occur. These will be discussed in the next blog.

Thursday, August 27, 2009

Bias Economists

The Economics profession has taken a lot of criticism lately for its response to the recession.

The Bernanke Files prides itself on being a pragmatic, unbias analyzer of economic policy. The Bernanke Files believes that most of the well founded criticism of economics probably stems from the political bias and ideological rants that many pundits spew everyday.

For example, today's Paul Krugman Blog exemplifies the profession's ignorant biases. Krugman criticizes Bush for going into debt to the tune 0f $500B. Then every comment is a total acceptance of Krugman's statement, its like his audience is... liberal! So of course he is speaking down to his audience.

But, has humanity come to such mindless, thoughtless following? The Bernanke Files thinks not! The debt had to come from somewhere. The two questions one must ask to be fair are: How much did we pay for the money? (Answer: a measley 3-4%) And is the benefit we recieve from the debt greater than (3-4%+addt'l unseen costs)? Keep in mind that if we did not go into debt, employment or wages (or a combo of both) would be considerably less than it is now.

While many of these questions are semi-rhetorical, it is interesting that Krugman does not even mention the cost/benefit analysis in his anti-Bush rhetoric. When the average reader crosses this, how could he become anything but skeptical at the economics profession?

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

A Few Thoughts and Updates

Now that Obama has made the mind-numbingly easy decision of re-appointing Bernanke as Chairman of the Federal Reserve, a few loose ends need to be tied up. First, we are taking Laurence Summers, head of Obama's economic council, off of the Bernanke Arch-Nemesis list. Replacing Summers will be Kentucky Republican Senator John Bunning. Today, in a show of splendid ignorance, Bunning criticized Obama's decision. Then Bunning proceeded to criticize Bernanke for what Bunning called a "delayed response" to the crisis. This puts Bunning on the dreaded Bernanke Arch-Nemesis list and is a good lead into the next loose end that needs to be tied up.

The Bernanke Files argues that Bernanke's response to financial crisis was late... and occurred at the exact right time. Let me explain: to be fair, one must look at Bernanke's response in context with the Federal Reserve's day to day environment. If you a critic says, "Bernanke should have speculated about the future of the economy and put into motion drastic measures to stave off the recession," then it is only fair to say that "Bernanke should ALWAYS speculate about the future economy and put into motion measures to stave off the recession." This means that when unemployment was going from 7% to 3.9% but half way down it turned around for a month (from 5% to 5.1%), Bernanke should have closed down AIG, Bear Stearns, McDonalds and urged Congress to pass Armeggeddon resolutions mandating the purchase toilet paper and water by every American citizen.

But, the Federal Reserve DOES NOT SPECULATE- as crazy as it sounds, the Fed actually waits for facts and data to come to them, then it makes the best decision it can with the resources it has at hand. This maintains confidence in the Fed, and makes sure its decisions are not too drastic, or not enough.

In hindsight, of course Bernanke's response was late... by 20 years. Bernanke, Bush, Clinton, Summers, Bush 1, Reagan, Greenspan and every Congressmember since the 1980's could have made the sub-prime mortage backed security market less leveraged, yet none of them did because rational people don't look into crystal balls to make decisions.


Firstcongerss bunning rule second summers of arch nem

Monday, August 24, 2009

BREAKING NEWS: Bernanke Re-appointed!!!!

The Executive Branch has done little right over the last several years. Today, though, this trend paused for a moment when Barack Obama re-appointed Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke to another 4 year term.

Obama joins George W Bush as being members of the very prestigious club of presidents that has appointed Ben Bernanke as Chairman. Though Bernanke has a long road of him in dealing with the recession and exiting the current monetary situation, he is the right man for the job, hands down.

Bernanke has overseen the worst liquidity crunch in over 70 years. He reacted to the crisis by expanding the amount of money in the financial system. What he will truly go down in history for is his ability to add so much money into the system at the extremely low risk levels that he did; and for adding so much liquidity while keeping in mind he would have to undo the expansion shortly. These two measures have kept faith in the dollar and interest rates low- two important factors for future growth.

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Stimulus vs. Monetary Policy

Monetary policy stimulates the economy by determining the amount of money that is injected into the banking system each month. Fiscal stimulus is money spent directly by the federal government on various projects.

While The Bernanke Files is not totally anti-Stimulus, it has concluded that the current stabilization of the economy had little or nothing to do with Obama's stimulus plan. Several weeks ago, before the "popular" indicators showed economic stabilization, Liberal commentators said the stimulus plan hadn't yet worked because most of the stimulus plan has not been spent. Now, after the "popular" indicators are turning around, those same commentators are saying "See, we told you so! Of course the stimulus is working." In reality, though, ONLY $25 Billion more dollars has been spent since then!!! In a $14,000 Billion economy, of course $25 Billion will make virtually no difference.

There is other evidence that shows that stimulus has done little, much less than the efficiently crafted monetary policy has done. First, if stimulus was working, one would expect people to go out buy things like clothes, toys, toothbrushes, etc. But, as was reported this week, retail sales declined by MUCH MORE THAN ANTICIPATED. Clearly, to any unbiased spectator, one would have to be skeptical of saying the stimulus plan had much, if anything, to do with the turnaround.

Conversely, monetary policy is having a large impact. Econ101 says that stimulus plans work because it replaces the "fearful" investor/consumer spending with government spending. This time, though, the Fed has crafted such efficient monetary policy that interest rates are declining (A2/P2 is way down, the LIBOR-OIS spread is almost back to normal). This makes investors invest more because they can borrow money for less than what they will make off of the money. Investors in turn employee consumers who can then spend money. The Bernanke Files believes the first step, investors investing more, is beginning to take place. Next, down the road, unemployment will turn around because of investment, not the stimulus plan.

Saturday, August 15, 2009

Economics Riddle Solution

Several blogs ago the audience was asked what China did with the extra money it receives from having more imports than exports. The technical name for this extra moneythe trade gap, which is hundreds of billions of dollars.

The correct answer is that there are several things it can do, a couple of things it has done, and several things it may do to combat the recession.

First there are things China can do with the extra money. The first thing it can do, which The Bernanke Files has discussed at length, is use the extra money to pay its employees higher wages. The problem with this, of course, is that the USA buys goods from China because their wages are so low! Raising wages would hurt China's most important sector: manufacturing.

Second, China could use the extra money it receives to build up its infrastructure. Highways, ports, buildings, schools, regulators, boats, airports etc. could be built with the extra money. However, this raises two things: the demand for labor and (therefore) wages. Again this hurts their economy because China's economy is built on the assumption of low wages. Also, this kind of spending, when unwarranted, creates bubbles by producing things, like boats, that are not needed by the market participants.

Third, China can and does purchase American T-Bonds at an extroardinary rate. This serves three purposes: it keeps Chinese wages low, it diversifies China's government because the T-Bond is a very safe investment, and it gives American's more money and therefore higher wages. Higher wages and more money give American's more fuel to purchase Chinese goods! This full circle of US cash to China for goods, that same cash back to America so we can buy more goods is very important to the Chinese growth model. Actually, all high exporting countries (Germany, Brazil, India, Vietnam) follow this same model.

Finally, it can use this money to subsidize a certain sector of the economy. For example, China can lend the extra cash to very large manufacturing corporations to make sure they keep making STUFF that Americans buy. But what happens when Americans quit purchasing the STUFF, and China keeps making the STUFF?

It is also important to remember that China receives extra cash from another source: local Chinese citizens that want to SAVE money. Since China wants to stifle local Chinese citizens from buying too much (so that imports do not go too high and other reasons) they can either give the citizens high interest rates so that the Chinese have more incentive to save money, or they can ration goods (like USA did during WWII...hmm, we were the lending nation back then, think theres a correlation?), explicitly by direct rationing or implicitly by keeping wages low and credit card restrictions high.

So basically China has used its own citizen's money to, well, screw over most of the Chinese citizens. Of course, China does this because they believe that in the long run it will pay off.

The next economics riddle should be "So what happens when America goes into a recession and quits buying Chinese goods but China passes a huge stimulus bill and keeps making the goods anyways?" But, this will be such a depressing subject I will save Bernanke fans everywhere a lot of grief and just answer briefly: Nothing good.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Inflation at 0.0

The Consumer Price Index data that measures inflation was released today. Inflation is at 0.0% year over year.

Last year at this time inflation was peaking, so this months CPI data is being compared to a peak. Still, inflation hawks and anti-Fed fear mongerers have to be laughing at themselves. Inflation is not currently a problem and won't be for sometime, if at all.

There are two reasons for this. First, the Federal Reserve has very powerful tools to combat inflation. But, even if these are not enough, the Fed will most likely sacrifice low unemployment to maintain low inflation rates. What we need to be worried about is not inflation, but rather that the Fed has to back off of easy monetary policy before unemployment returns to acceptable levels.

Thursday, August 13, 2009

A Whacky Few Days

A few days ago The Bernanke Files hypothesized that some important economic relationships were changing. For example, a few months ago the yields on T-Bonds went up when the market went up. This could be seen as a "flight to safety" relationship because when the markets went down investors became fearful and bought bonds.

But The Bernanke Files is hypothesizing that the motives behind movements will change as investors are driven less by fear and more by other market indicators. This change affects oil, the Dow, bonds, individual stocks and gold.

Today gives us empirical evidence that this trend may be swaying in the direction that The Bernanke Files has argued it will be going: the markets went up, but the interest rate WENT DOWN. This is opposite of what you would have expected a few months ago and supports The Bernanke Files hypothesis.

Monday, August 10, 2009

The Past Weeks Odd Movements

Since the recession began there have been certain up/down relationships between several markets. For example, when the Dow Jones went DOWN, the dollar usually went UP. When the Dow Jones went DOWN, crude oil went DOWN. When the dollar went UP, bond rates went DOWN. Most of these movements were explained by pointing out they are "protectionist plays." When the Dow Jones went down, fear made investors seek the safety of the dollar thus raising demand and therefore the value of the dollar.

But!, over the last two weeks these relationships seem to be changing. At the end of last week the Dow Jones skyrocketed up several hundred points. Instead of the dollar and oil decreasing and bond rates going down, the opposite happened. Crude oil has decreased slightly, the dollar has appreciated in value and bond rates have remained unchanged.

The Bernanke Files will be watching this turn of events very closely. While still in the early stages, these changes could signify growth, but also the emergence of inflation risks. The Bernanke Files will keep you updated on this trend as events unfold.

Sunday, August 9, 2009

What to Look for This Week

The Bernanke Files is reporting from beautiful Detroit, Michigan. Well, we're assuming its beautiful- we're actually stuck in the Detroit airport for a 3 hour delay.

Having some time on a Sunday evening, we thought it would be a good opportunity to take a look at the upcoming week. First, we take a look at where the Asian markets are at. Currently they (the Nikkei) are up 24.0 points. Few Americans are aware that the Asian markets open up in Japan in the morning (local time). This means they are open at about 3:00 pm MST. This early look gives us a preliminary look at what investors may have on their mind. Because the Asian markets are open, American markets open futures trading for most of their markets as well. For example, crude oil, corn, wheat, the Dow Jones Industrial Average and many other markets are open at night. These are called the "night markets."

After taking a brief look at the Asian and night markets, we take a look at the economic calender. The economic calender provides investors with the most important events occuring in the markets this week. Good economic calenders, such as the one provided by Bloomberg, also give users other helpful information such as what the concensus is and a brief description of what each event means.

This week, an important and interesting release occuring is the International Trade report. This gives us the earliest data on what America's net import/exports are. the concensus for this month is that the trade gap will be $25 billion. This is way down from last year because wer are importing a lot less goods because of the recession.

Keep in mind that the markets always beg the question: If a butterfly flaps its wings in China, what will occur in New York. The markets are closely intertwined. As you may notice, on Monday there are a lot T-Bill auctions. These results will tell us how much it cost for the government to borrow money. But, as The Bernanke Files has pointed out, the auctions and the International Trade report are linked. Remember, if Americans import more than they export, the cash that was used to buy the imports had to come from somewhere. Of course, one of the main places the funds come from is from T-Bond sales. This is why international trade and T-Bill sales are linked. Since foreign Americans need LESS money to make up the difference between imports and exports, foriegn exporting countries need to loan us LESS money to make up the difference. Therefore, demand for T-Bill will go DOWN and prices will drop AND THE INTEREST RATE WILL GO UP. These complex relationships between different sets of data make the markets very difficult to study.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

The Future for Interest Rates

While The Bernanke Files never "looks into its crystal ball" and speculates about the future, we would like to discuss what economics ripples might occur when the we exit the recession. More specifically, this entry examines the effects on interest rates.

Currently interest rates are very low. The Fed discount window is at .25%, and 10-Year Treasury Bonds yield 3.71%. This tells us several things, but probably the most important thing it tells us that investors are very wary of starting new ventures. Since the yield is 3.71%, we know that an investor believes he CANNOT MAKE MORE THAN 3.71% outside of buying T-Bonds. While in reality this is too simple (the low interest rate includes a very high premium for the extreme safety it offers), this is a good place to start.

When the economy begins to turn around, these same investors will want to be taking advantage of a strengthened economy. Unfortunately, their money will be tied up in the T-Bond they purchased for, lets say, 8 more years. They have two option: keep the low yielding bond, or they can sell the bond for cash. If the investor chooses the latter, supply of bonds will go up and the interest rate will go up also!! (Remember, if supply goes up, than price goes down and the interest rate goes up).

It is at this inflection point (the point at which almost everybody with a T-Bond realizes investing is better than holding a low interest rate bond) that we will have to worry about another slowdown in the market because INVESTMENT will be stifled by higher interest rates. In other words, there will be a small window that interest rates will move between (the window between a very low interest rate and an interest rate that stifles investment).

If Congress runs too much of a fiscal deficit and has to borrow too much money (thus selling bonds), the enormous dropping of T-Bonds into the markets will make interest rates rise out of the window pushing us back into a recession.

At this point, though, foreign countries that export goods (China, India, Germany), will see a drop in exports because the USA slips back into a recession. They will reduce their employees wages by taking profit and purchasing T-Bonds. This LOWERS the interest rate in America and, because their is so much cash going into America, credit becomes easy and a bubble is created.

Of course this is an oversimplified model, but it shows how complex of a job economists have. Remember, this is almost exactly what happened from the 2001 recession through to the 2008 recession. It is interesting that while most people blame the Federal Reserve for easy money, they are curiously and I believe rightfully absent from the model. Easy money came from Congress fiscal irresponsibility, not the Federal Reserve keeping the discount window interest rates too low for a couple of quarters.

Sunday, August 2, 2009

An Economics Riddle

Here are a couple of economics riddles.

An American buys a product from Wal-Mart that was made in China. Wal-Mart charged the American $1. How much of the $1 do the Chinese actually get?



In an unspecified time period, American's buys $2000 of goods from China. In that same amount of time, China buys $500 of goods from America. Where does the difference of $1500 go?

Hint: The answers are in percents, eg: 10% goes to fixing Chinese manufacturing machines.

Friday, July 31, 2009

Get it straight, folks

As everyone knows, Chairman of the Federal Reserve Ben Bernanke can by re-appointed by the President to a 4 year term in January. As expected, the Fed-haters are making something out of nothing.

This week Bernanke went in front of a television audience and answered questions asked by the average joe off of the street. Bernanke announced at the beginning of his term that he would try to make the Fed more transparent and help the American people understand exactly what is going on in the economy.

Libertarians have perverted Bernanke's intentions... in the stupidest way possible. If your going to make a long rant about how bad Ben is, at least make it a logical argument. Look at what this blog has to say (http://blogs.reuters.com/james-pethokoukis/2009/07/27/candidate-bernanke-hits-the-campaign-trail/).

"If Ben Bernanke were running TV ads, taking polls and holding town hall-style meetings, it wouldn’t be any clearer that he’s conducting an explicit reelection campaign for another four-year term as Federal Reserve chairman come next January."

So this guy thinks Bernanke is trying to campaign to be re-appointed to the Fed. The last Chairman of the Federal Reserve remained Chairman for the most amount of time he could (14 years). Would it not therefore follow logic to say that Bernanke, a smart fellow, would take a play out of Greenspan's playbook and do the same things Greenspan did to be re-appointed.

But, and the anti-Fed author admits this in his article, Greenspan stayed as far away from the public as possible. So, by explaining things to the public, Bernanke is doing the opposite of what the last 14 year Chairman did to be re-appointed.

This is ridiculous. Clearly, if Bernanke's only goal is to be re-appointed, he would do what the last Chairman did to get re-appointed did. He isn't, so clearly there is another motive for why Bernanke is doing what he said. Anti-Fed idiots will say anything to get attention and to create suspiscion about the Fed.

This Weeks Auctions

Today marks the end of a record auctions week. The government auctioned over $205 Billion dollars of T-Bonds to private investors and foreign governments. By selling T-Bonds to the public the government is doing two things. First, it raises the supply of T-Bonds in circulation. Theoretically this would raise the interest rates. Second, by accepting cash from investors it reduces the amount of cash investors will have to invest with in the future. Combining the double whammy of rising interest rates and reduced cash for investment gives us a good picture of why governments don't like going into debt: they don't like stifling investment.

However, this weeks auctions, under the supervision of the Fed and the Treasury, yielded lower interest rates! This means that investors don't expect inflation to be an immenent problem. It also means that investors still have confidence in the US to pay back the bonds. This is a clear indicator that the Fed is doing a good job because inflation expectations are low while money is being printed to stimulate the economy.

Adversly, though, it means that there will be $205 Billion less for investors to invest with in the future. From an investor's standpoint, it also means that they believe that an investment will yield less than the meager 2-4% the bonds pay them in interest each year.

This weeks auctions show us that the Federal Reserve is doing a good job with what it has to work with. In a perfect world Congress would not be spending like they are currently doing and this would make the Fed's job of handling inflation expectations much simpler. The Bernanke Files is going on record and suggesting that Congress should begin reducing spending soon, and arguing that the Fed has been and will continue doing a good job keeping inflation low while stimulating the economy.

Thursday, July 30, 2009

Reminder

Tomorrow, Friday the 30th of July, is the final day of the governments bond auctions. This week saw a record sale of treasuries auctioned to investors. Usually this steep increase in the supply of bonds would raise the interest rates. This would be bad because it stifles investment and borrowing. Also, higher interest rates signal the threat of impending inflation.

The Bernanke Files will do a full survey of this weeks auctions after the markets close tomorrow so that readers get a better understanding of what is happening in the credit markets right now.

Monday, July 27, 2009

The Great Preventer

Last week in the NY Times two top-notch economists debated Bernankes re-nomination chances. Nouriel Roubini, an economist from NYU who has gained fame for publishing a 12 step list the recession would go through before it became severe, argues that Bernanke was The Great Preventer. By taking creative steps, in Roubini's opinion, the Fed and Bernanke prevented Great Depression 2.0. The Bernanke Files agrees and would also like to point out that Bernanke can be assumed to have just as creative maneuvers to prevent inflation.

Anna Schwartz, a retired Professor from Chicago (boo, hiss, remember: Chicago schools of economic thought are synonymous with Libertarian, Fed-hating ideology), argues that Bernanke and the Fed failed to foresee the recession, failed to warn investors and failed to communicate their anti-recession plans to the public. But, uh, hello, are any of these things in the Fed's job description? Absolutely not. As is turns out, Schwartz was Milton Friedman's partner and has a general bias against the government, the Fed, and convertible money (money not backed by the gold-standard). Sorry, Schwartz, but you have to have a better argument than that the Fed didn't look into the crystal ball and prevent the future from happening.

Saturday, July 25, 2009

China Calls For an International Currency

The current global economic regime utilizes the US dollar as its 'reserve currency.' Reserve currency simply refers to the currency that foreign central banks purchase with their extra revenue. Lately, the Chinese and Russian governments have called for a new currency to be used for reserve currencies. They argue that when central banks diversify into reserve currencies, they should purchase SDR's (special drawing rites) instead of US dollars. Theoretically, countries would try to quit using the US Dollar for excess reserves if they thought the United States was going to go bankrupt.

An SDR is simply a bond (an IOU) that is issued to governments that give more money to the IMF (International Monetary Fund) than they have to. For example, the United States has over $2 Billion of SDR's. The SDR is weighted by the US dollar, the Japanese Yen, the Euro and sterling silver.

Most economists believe that China and Russia's push for a different reserve currency is all talk and no bite. Economists point out that if China and Russia actually believe that the United States is going to go bankrupt they could simply quit buying US bonds with their reserves and instead purchase the Japanese Yen, Euro, silver, and less amounts of the US dollar. By doing so, China and Russia would achieve the exact same diversification as purchasing an SDR.

Instead, economists believe that the call for a new reserve currency is political posturing. Next year the IMF is meeting to determine the NEW weight of SDR. If the Russian and Chinese governments can get their currencies into the SDR there will be many advantages for their countries. It is believed that these governments are trying to question the US dollar just enough so that IMF countries will see a need to diversify the SDR with Russian and Chinese currency.

BRIC Nations

Brazil
Russian
India
China

Emerging market investors have emphasized the growth of these four countries so much that they have given them a special name: BRIC.

Hypothetically, these countries are on the brink of becoming fully developed countries and have large populations. Therefore, they are ripe for investment. When the US invests in other countries company's it is called FDI (Foriegn Direct Investment). Policy makers in BRIC countries compete for FDI by streamlining the investment process, giving tax-breaks to investors and middle men, and making infrastructure (ports, shipping, roads, airlines and regulation) more efficient to make FDI more appealing.

Each of the BRIC countries has unique advantages and disadvantages for FDI. Brazil has several advantages. First, it has some of the largest oil and natural gas reserves in the world. Brazil is also rich in coffee, soybeans and other natural resources. It has been de-regulating its financial sector since the 1970s and has a healthy stock market (the Bovespa). Brazil also has a large population that is focused on industrializing.
Brazil has several disadvantages as well. With a large population comes many challenges. The education system is poorly funded and does not specialize in a specific area. The government is involved in a lot of corruption. Inflation worries seem to haunt the Brazilian central bank and it is difficult for entrepeneurs to open a business. Overall, however, Brazil is poised for strong growth as it continues to focus on trade relations with China and the United States and continues to deregulate its economy.
Russia's primary strengths are its education system, natural resources and industrialized regions of the country. Impeding its potential for growth are bad relations with surrounding countries, unstable currency, inflation fears, and corruption in the government. Brazil has great potential for growth, but also is very risky due to the risk of default from the government that constantly drives investors away.
See future posts for Indian and Chinese strengths.

Wednesday, July 22, 2009

A New Bernanke Arch-Nemesis

Ron Paul, the psycho-libertarian, has been added to the Bernanke Arch-Nemesis list today. His ignorant questioning of the Chairman begs the following question: How did this guy get through Eco 101.

Answer: He probably didn't: Professor Bernanke had to inform Paul that inflation is the rise in the price of goods. Paul, for some reason unbeknown to me, thought that inflation was a rise in the Fed's balance sheet. After an awkward moment when everyone thought Bernanke was going to break out laughing, Bernanke informed Paul that he was wrong- even though I did sense a humorous tone in the answer.

Tuesday, July 21, 2009

Bernanke Calms Inflation Expectations

Today, July 21, Bernanke reported to Congress. This hearing was expected to be a challenge for Bernanke because he had to balance the markets expectations. On the one hand, some investors believe we have printed so much money that inflation is imminent. On the other hand, some believe the economy is still too fragile to quit stimulating the economy. Bernanke had to keep inflation expectations low while making sure others believed the Fed would continue growing the economy.

So, how did he do? The Bernanke Files gives him an A.

Why? Let's look at the numbers:

Remember, if bond interest rates go lower, INFLATION EXPECTATIONS ALSO GO LOWER. Here is the graph of what the rates did today:

Bond .....Change in Rate
5-Year ...... -.032
10-Year ...... -.030
20-Year ..... -.013
30-Year ..... -.026

As this data shows, interest rates clearly went lower today. Bernanke subdued any rational inflation expectations.

Thursday, July 16, 2009

The Truth Comes Out

The truth continues to seep out... great Americans like Henry Paulson are being persecuted by a bunch of cowards whose IQ's are inversely related to their egos (and their egos are famously high).

Today, July 16, Congressmen and Congresswomen railed Paulson for the action he took to fight the largest recessionary forces since 1933. Defending himself against accusations from Bank of America CEO Ken Lewis, Paulson made many enlightening statements. Initially, Paulson threw the Committee a curve ball when he admitted to telling Lewis that the Federal Reserve had the authority to relieve Lewis of his position if he enacted MAC. MAC (Materially Adverse Change) is a clause that says that once a company agrees to purchase a company, it can only back out of the deal under certain circumstances.

One could tell this was a curve ball because each Senator asked the same question: "Did you threaten to fire Lewis if he enacted MAC?" But this question needed to be asked only once because Paulson admitted to... what exactly? Well he informed Lewis that the Fed had the authority to remove him... a law that Congressmen approved! Clearly they did not expect Paulson to be so honest and so innocent at the same time. Of course the Secretary of the Treasury can inform someone of the law- that's his job. Clearly this blame game needs to end and Bernanke and Paulson need to be cleared of wrongdoing. As Ken Lewis himself said, "They were forceful, but I don't believe they acted illegally."

Some may think that even if Paulson only informed Lewis of the law, he should not have done even that. But think about it. Lewis, a terrible CEO in my opinion, SIGNED A CONTRACT to purchase Merrill Lynch. The conditions stated in the MAC clause, which is a standard clause that many mergers utilize, did not include worsening market conditions. This is because it takes a long time for mergers to go through (six months or so), and it would be stupid if a side could back out once they realized they made a bad investment. Additionally, it was several days from the time the contract was signed to the time Lewis questioned the deal, and the those several days could have been spent finding a new partner for Merrill Lynch.

Anyways, the Senators continued to embarrass themselves. One Senator from Ohio berated Paulson for how bad things were in her state. Paulson said that he realized things were bad, but said they would have been worse had TARP not passed. To this she answered, "If that's your answer, its not good enough." To this Paulson could easily have responded: "Well that's fine, but where was your plan? Where were you when I was planning and making the hard decisions? Show me one sentence from a plan that you put forward to save your state." He could have gotten up and walked out of the hearing in disgust, if you ask The Bernanke Files. Lets analyze this for a second. First, if she is mad that TARP didn't work, wouldn't it make sense that she had a plan that was better? In reality, she didn't have a plan and still doesn't have a plan. None of the Congressmen do. They will continue to attack the smart officials that get the job done... that is until another shock hits the system and they go running back into their little holes, hoping intelligent people like Paulson, Bernanke, Geithner, Hoenig, Kohn, Plosser, Fischer, and (dare I say it) Bush Jr can jump in and save them once again.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

TARP Effectiveness: A Challenge

One job that economists enjoy is predicting what effects certain policies will have. This could be the effects of a policy from the government, or a policy enacted by a small business owner. Either way it is very important to look at the effects from as many sides as possible.

For example, when Congress passed the TARP legislation they basically agreed to purchase enough shares of certain banks available stock so that the investors THAT HELD BONDS WOULD BE BAILED OUT... the stockholders were not bailed out.

Let me explain. Large companies need to invest. 30% of the money they use to invest comes from selling bonds, not from profit or from the stock market. Bonds are popular purchases because they accrue a constant interest rate over several years and because they are much less risky than stocks. The reason stocks are more risky is because they "protect the bonds." In other words, if a company is headed towards bankruptcy, every penny of every stock becomes worth $0.00 before any bonds can be defaulted upon. Therefore, bonds are safer than stocks. In return for this protection stocks, obviously, have more potential for profit.

To clarify, use this analogy: pretend you are an archer in a medieval army. You, as an archer, wouldn't stand in the middle of the battlefield. You stand behind the frontline (the swordsman and shield-bearers and cavalry, etc.) The infantry, in other words, protects you from attacks. The archers are like the bonds of businesses, and the infantry is the stock market. The archers (bonds) are more important than infantry (stocks) and are therefore heavily protected.

TARP, in essence, did NOT bailout any shareholders (unless you consider stocks going from $100 to $2 a bailout). They injected just enough cash into the stock market to make sure the BONDHOLDERS were not touched. For that to happen, remember, they simply have to keep stock from going to $0.00.

So here is the challenge for Fellow Bernanke Fans: What future effects does TARP have on banking stocks (stockholders), bonds (bondholders), and bank CEO's and executives.

Here is an example from an MIT professor named Simon Johnson (www.baselinescenario.com). Johnson argues that CEO's of the future will not have an incentive to take excessive risks independently (like many pundits now argue), but they will have incentive to take excessive risks that all of the other CEO's are taking. This is because they realize that while they're bank may not be systemically important by itself, if all of the banks mess up than the government will bail them out so the economy does not go into a recession.

While I generally agree with Johnson, we know this is somewhat oversimplified. He is 100% correct if CEO's retire every couple of years, thus being able to sell their stocks at a high price. However, if the laws are changed so CEO's can only sell a certain amount of shares each year after retiring (and presumably close to none before retiring) than they will have an incentive to grow their company over the long term.

Anyways, if you can think of any effects that TARP may have on bonds, stocks and CEOs let us at The Bernanke Files know!

Friday, July 10, 2009

Bond Yield Basics

This week (7-03-09) there were several US Government Bond auctions. These are important to watch because the results from the auctions can give us a good idea of important economic indicators such as inflation, US deficits, and the US government's credit worthiness.
Here is how we examine the results of bond auctions. Bonds are denominated in two ways: the price and the yield. If the price goes up then the yield goes down, and vice versa. The easiest way to examine a bond is by the price. If you see that the price goes up (or the yield goes down) than you know that either the demand for the bond went up or the supply went down. This follows the same supply and demand idea as any other product you may purchase. So lets say the price does go up and the yield goes down. What implications could this have? First, it tells us that more people want bonds. These "customers" of the US believe a) that the US government will be able to pay them back and b) that inflation will not increase too much above the yield that they recieve the bond.

Tuesday, July 7, 2009

The Bernanke Files and Inflation

The Federal Reserve is constantly trying to successfully maintain acceptable levels of inflation and unemployment. Unfortunately this a balancing act because an excess of one is often the result of attempting to achieve the other. This is a difficult, thankless job for which the Federal Reserve receives much criticism. If unemployment levels go too high the Federal Reserve is blamed, if inflation goes too high the Federal Reserve is blamed.
However, we at The Bernanke Files have unbiasedly examined the plight of the Fed and the job that they have done in their unending balancing act. We conclude that, in general, the Federal Reserve has maintained realistic levels of both unemployment and inflation. More importantly, though, we have also found overwhelming evidence that shows that the Federal Reserve has learned from its mistakes! In the 1970s, after the Federal Reserve maintained policies that would lead to inflation, the Federal Reserve realized their mistake and reversed their position. This occurred on October 9, 1979, five months after Carter replaced Arthur Burns with Paul Volker as Chairman of the Federal Reserve. Inflation subsided, but unemployment skyrocketed. This occurred because of Volker's belief in the Monetarist Experiment which limited the printing of money. Investors didn't like this policy and reacted by not investing, thus driving unemployment to over 10%. By 1982, though, Reagan and Volker and Reagan realized the Monetarist Experiment emphasized inflation too much and ignored unemployment altogether, so they once again reversed their position by printing money until the cows came home. By the late 1980s inflation and unemployment have evened out.
The point of this little story is that while the balancing act the Fed must attempt on a continual basis is difficult, they are the right person for the job. The Bernanke Files looks at how efficiently the Federal Reserve has responded to this crisis and concludes the excessive inflation is nothing to worry about! Chairman Bernanke implemented never before seen policies to offset a potential Great Depression II, and it would be naive of us to say that he doesn't have as good of a playbook to offset inflation when the threat occurs (and we believe it will once the economy begins to recover).

Saturday, July 4, 2009

An important indicator

Since this recession began with a freezing of the credit markets, indicators that measure the health of the credit markets are extremely important. In October 2008, Alan Greenspan made a speech arguing that the credit markets would not return to normal until the LIBOR-OIS spread returned to "normalcy." This post will attempt to explain what the LIBOR-OIS spread is and its importance/background to the current recession.
Essentially what the LIBOR-OIS spread does is measure the difference between the interest rates that banks can borrow from each other for and what they can borrow from the Federal Reserve for. LIBOR stands for the London InterBank Offering Rate. Each day, economists in London call about 50 banks spread throughout the world and ask them how much they charged (what the interest rate was) other banks to borrow from them. This "interbank" market is very important because banks can borrow from other banks to maintain healthy Reserve requirements. With out the interbank market, banks would be like you and me and the average business would be without banks: always in danger of being unable to invest or even to pay bills.
The OIS stands for the Overnight Index Swap and measures the interest rate that large banks are charged to get a loan from the government. It is just another tool to ensure the health and well being of financial institutions.
Whatever the difference is between the LIBOR and the OIS measures the willingness banks are to lend to other banks. If Bank A thinks Bank B is going out of business tomorrow they will not lend them money or they will charge them very high interest rates. So if LIBOR sky rockets, something in the economy is screwing with bankers confidence and this is never a good thing.
The average LIBOR-OIS spread (spread being the difference between the two) was .1% for the 18 months leading up to the recession. For example, the LIBOR was at 2.9% and the OIS was at 2.8%. A huge exogenous shock occurred on September 8, 2008: Lehman Brothers was allowed to file for bankruptcy. This sent the LIBOR to 6%, while the OIS remained constant (at about 3%). That means that the LIBOR-OIS spread went up to 3.00%- ten times the average spread!!!
At this point, the failure of Lehman Brothers, everything went awry. Within a few hours, AIG was on the brink of bankruptcy, WAMU went bankrupt, Wachovia went bankrupt. The stock market plummeted and people finally started paying attention to how bad the mortage backed security market really was.
It was also at this point that Bernanke started enacting drastic measures to increase lending. Using the LIBOR-OIS spread as a gauge, he implemented a plan that would increase the Fed's balance sheet (and thus the money supply) to increase the financial systems ability to lend money to other institutions.

Creating Money

There are several ways the Federal Reserve can print money. The federal government cannot print money, though they are often accused of doing so. This blog will discuss the implications of how money is printed.
In 2008, the federal government (and by this I mean the President's office and Congress) ran a $1 trillion deficit. This means they spent $1 Trillion that they didn't have. This doesn't mean that they printed $1 trillion. To pay for the deficit the government goes to the Treasury and asks them to print $1 trillion in bonds. The government then has to sell the bonds in exchange for cash to pay for the $1 trillion deficit. Remember, though, that cash used to pay for bonds is already in existence. The government is taking money from one group of people and giving it to another group of people. The monetary base does not grow.
The Federal Reserve can print money and this done in several different ways. What most people think of when they hear that the Federal Reserve is printing money is actually called "monetizing the debt." This occurs when the Federal Reserve prints cash and pays for the bonds the government printed to fund their deficit.
The Federal Reserve can also print money in other ways as well. They can utilize OMO's (Open Market Operations) to print money. This occurs when the Federal Reserve buys bonds from private dealers (banks, hedge funds, etc.). A multiplier effect occurs when OMO's are utilized. Another way the Federal Reserve can create money is by lowering the Reserve Requirement. When the average person deposits money into a bank, the bank profits from the deposit by loaning the money to other people. However, to ensure safety for depositors, banks can only loan a certain amount of the deposit, usually about 80%. The remaining 20% is the reserve requirement and is fairly innefficient because it just sits in the bank constricting supply of loans thus raising the price of loans.
To put these in perspective of the current recession, I have accumulated some of the stats for what has occurred to the money supply over the last several months. Only about $35 Billion have been monetized. Currently, the Fed will escalate these purchases until they reach $350 Billion. The Reserve requirement has been unchanged since the beginning of the recession. The most interesting money creation that has occurred over that last year has been the OMO's that have occurred. The Fed's balance sheet has expanded from $800 Billion to over $2 Trillion dollars. Initially, the Fed offset all purchases of private bonds (they purchased bonds from private companies like Lehman Brothers) by selling an equivalent amount of short term government bonds. Once they realized that the credit markets had siezed up, they began expanding the balance sheet (which expands the money supply) by purchasing bonds from private banks. This added money and therefore liquidity to banks, allowing them to loan more money to borrowers in an attempt to stimulate the economy. Inflation is almost sure to follow if the economy recovers before the Fed has time to unwind the purchases from the OMO's.

Friday, July 3, 2009

The Grilling of the Fed Chair

James Hamilton, a renowned economist and econometrician, recently defended Chairman Bernanke from the angry, condescending attacks waged against Bernanke by several Congressmen. Being a close follower of Hamilton's blog, which can be found at www.econbrowser.com, I paid close attention the responses made by other Hamilton followers. I was immediately struck by the number of responses that were created. An average Hamilton post recieves 10 replies. This post had hundreds of replies!! I closely examined as many of them as I could and found that the vast majority were Bernanke-haters!!!
One can draw many important conclusions from comparing the amount of anti-Bernanke replies to the average amount of regular post replies. First, it shows us that people in general recieve more satisfaction from unfairly criticizing things they don't understand than they do from contemplating difficult economic theories and replying with a well-thought out response. I believe this is called Monday morning quarterbacking in the sports world. It also gives us good insight to those who are criticizing Bernanke, and might even suggest that their ethos is lacking. I say this because if you can't even come up with an intelligent response to issues that have been clearly presented and explained, why would you think that you could come up with a plan to battle the worst economic downturn in 70 years?
This leads me to the main point of this blog: Bernanke was the man with a plan. Others (inlcuding Congressman) were not. These other people became insecure and did what the average person does- belittles those with a plan to make themselves feel bigger. The repliers and Congressmen have this in common. They have no idea what they are doing, they subconciously realize this and therefore compensate for their shortcomings by tearing others down to their level.