By Ellen Brown
March 12, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - When the
World Health Organization announced on February 24th
that it was time to prepare for a global pandemic,
the stock market plummeted. Over the following week,
the Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped by more
than 3,500 points or over 10%.
In an attempt to contain the damage, on March 3rd
the Federal Reserve slashed the fed funds rate from
1.5% to 1.0%, in their first emergency rate move and
biggest one-time cut since the 2008 financial
crisis. But rather than reassuring investors, the
move fueled another panic sell-off.
Exasperated commentators on CNBC wondered what
the Fed was thinking. They said a half point rate
cut would not stop the spread of the coronavirus or
fix the broken Chinese supply chains that are
driving US companies to the brink. A new report by
corporate data analytics firm Dun & Bradstreet
calculates that some 51,000 companies around the
world have one or more direct suppliers in Wuhan,
the epicenter of the virus. At least 5 million
companies globally have one or more tier-two
suppliers in the region, meaning their suppliers get
their supplies there; and 938 of the Fortune 1000
companies have tier-one or tier-two suppliers there.
Moreover, fully 80% of US pharmaceuticals are
made in China. A break in the supply chain can
grind businesses to a halt.
So what was the Fed’s reasoning in lowering the
fed funds rate? According to some financial
analysts, the fire it was trying to put out was
actually in the repo market, where
the Fed has lost control despite its emergency
measures of the last six months. Repo market
transactions come to $1 trillion to $2.2 trillion
per day and keep our modern-day financial system
afloat. But before getting into developments there,
here is a recap of the repo action since 2008.
Repos and the
Fed
Before the 2008 banking crisis, banks in need of
liquidity borrowed excess reserves from each other
in the fed funds market. But after 2008, banks were
reluctant to lend in that unsecured market, because
they did not trust their counterparties to have the
money to pay up. Banks desperate for funds could
borrow at the Fed’s discount window, but it carried
a stigma. It signaled that the bank must be in
distress, since other banks were not willing to lend
to it at a reasonable rate. So banks turned instead
to the private repo market, which is anonymous and
is secured with collateral (Treasuries and other
acceptable securities). Repo trades, although
technically “sales and repurchases” of collateral,
are in effect secured short-term loans, usually
repayable the next day or in two weeks.
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The risky element of these
apparently-secure trades is that the
collateral itself may not be reliable, since
it may be subject to more than one claim.
For example, it may have been acquired in a
swap with another party for securitized auto
loans or other shaky assets – a swap that
will have to be reversed at maturity. As
explained in an earlier article
here, the private repo market has been
invaded by hedge funds, which are highly
leveraged and risky; so risk-averse money
market funds and other institutional lenders
have been withdrawing from that market.
When the normally low repo interest rate shot up
to 10 percent in September, the Fed therefore felt
compelled to step in. The action it took was to
restart its former practice of injecting money
short-term through its own repo agreements with its
primary dealers, which then lent to banks and other
players. On March 3rd, however, even that
central bank facility was oversubscribed, with far
more demand for loans than the subscription limit.
The Fed’s March 3rd emergency rate cut
was in response to that crisis. Lowering the fed
funds rate by half a percentage point was supposed
to relieve the pressure on the central bank’s repo
facility by encouraging banks to lend to each other.
But the rate cut had virtually no effect, and the
central bank’s repo facility continued to be
oversubscribed the next day and the next. As
observed in a March 5th article on
Zero Hedge:
This continuing liquidity crunch is bizarre,
as it means that not only did the rate cut not
unlock additional funding, it actually
made the problem worse, and now banks and
dealers are telegraphing that they need not only
more repo buffer but likely an expansion of QE…
The Collateral
Problem
As financial analyst George Gammon
explains, the crunch in the private repo market
is not actually due to a shortage of liquidity.
Banks still have $1.5 trillion in excess reserves in
their accounts with the Fed, stockpiled after
multiple rounds of quantitative easing. The problem
is in the collateral, which lenders no longer trust.
Lowering the fed funds rate did not relieve the
pressure on the Fed’s repo facility for obvious
reasons: banks that are not willing to take the risk
of lending to each other unsecured at 1.5 percent in
the fed funds market are going to be even less
willing to lend at 1 percent. They can earn that
much just by leaving their excess reserves at the
safe, secure Fed, drawing on the Interest on Excess
Reserves it has been doling out ever since the 2008
crisis.
But surely the Fed knew that. So why lower the
fed funds rate? Perhaps because they had to do
something to maintain the façade of being in
control, and lowering the interest rate was the most
acceptable tool they had. The alternative would be
another round of quantitative easing, but the Fed
has so far denied entertaining that controversial
alternative. Those protests aside, QE is probably
next on the agenda after the Fed’s orthodox tools
fail, as the Zero Hedge author notes.
The central bank has become the only game in
town, and its hammer keeps missing the nail. A
recession caused by a massive disruption in supply
chains cannot be fixed through central-bank monetary
easing alone. Monetary policy is a tool designed to
deal with “demand” – the amount of money competing
for goods and services, driving prices up. To fix a
supply-side problem, monetary policy needs to be
combined with fiscal policy, which means Congress
and the Fed need to work together. There are
successful contemporary models for this, and the
best are in China and Japan.
The Chinese
Stock Market Has Held Its Ground
While US markets were crashing, the Chinese stock
market actually
went up by 10 percent in February. How could
that be? China is the country hardest hit by the
disruptive COVID-19 virus, yet investors are
evidently confident that it will prevail against the
virus and market threats.
In 2008, China beat the global financial crisis
by pouring massive amounts of money into
infrastructure, and that is apparently the policy it
is pursuing now. Five hundred billion dollars in
infrastructure projects have already been
proposed for 2020 – nearly as much as was
invested in the country’s huge stimulus program
after 2008. The newly injected money will go into
the pockets of laborers and suppliers, who will
spend it on consumer goods, prompting producers to
produce more goods and services, increasing
productivity and jobs.
How will all this stimulus be funded? In the past
China has simply borrowed from its own state-owned
banks, which can create money as deposits on their
books, just as all depository banks can today. (See
here and
here.) Most of the loans will be repaid with the
profits from the infrastructure they create; and
those that are not can be written off or carried on
the books or moved off balance sheet. The Chinese
government is the regulator of its banks, and rather
than putting its insolvent banks and businesses into
bankruptcy,
its usual practice is to let non-performing
loans just pile up on bank balance sheets. The
newly-created money that was not repaid adds to the
money supply, but no harm is done to the consumer
economy, which actually needs regular injections of
new money to fill the gap between debt and the money
available to repay it. As in all systems in which
banks create the principal but not the interest due
on loans, this gap continually widens, requiring
continual infusions of new money to fill the breach.
(See my earlier article
here.) In the last 20 years, China’s money
supply has
increased by 2,000 percent without driving up
the consumer price index, which has
averaged around 2 percent during those two
decades. Supply has gone up with demand, keeping
prices stable.
The Japanese
Model
China’s experiences are instructive, but
borrowing from the government’s own banks cannot be
done in the US, since our banks have not been
nationalized and our central bank is considered to
be independent of government control. The Fed cannot
pour money directly into infrastructure but is
limited to buying bonds from its primary dealers on
the open market.
At least, that is the Fed’s argument; but the
Federal Reserve Act allows it to make three-month
infrastructure loans to states, and these could be
rolled over for extended periods thereafter. The
repo market itself consists of short-term loans
continually rolled over. If hedge funds can borrow
at 1.5 percent in the private repo market, which is
now backstopped by the Fed, states should get those
low rates as well.
Alternatively, Congress could amend the Federal
Reserve Act to allow it to work with the central
bank in funding infrastructure and other national
projects, following the path successfully blazed by
Japan. Under Japanese banking law, the central bank
must cooperate closely with the Ministry of
Finance in setting policy. Unlike in the US, Japan’s
prime minister can negotiate with the head of its
central bank to buy the government’s bonds, ensuring
that the bonds will be turned into new money that
will stimulate domestic economic growth; and if the
bonds are continually rolled over, this debt need
never be repaid.
The Bank of Japan has
already “monetized” nearly 50% of the
government’s debt in this way, and it has pulled
this feat off without driving up consumer prices. In
fact Japan’s inflation rate remains stubbornly below
the BOJ’s 2% target. Deflation continues to be a
greater concern than inflation in Japan, despite
unprecedented debt monetization by its central
bank.
The
“Independent” Federal Reserve Is Obsolete
In the face of a recession
caused by massive supply-chain disruption, the US
central bank has shown itself to be impotent.
Congress needs to take a lesson from Japan and
modify US banking law to allow it to work with the
central bank in getting the wheels of production
turning again. The next time the country’s largest
banks become insolvent, rather than bailing them out
it should nationalize them. The banks could then be
used to fund infrastructure and other government
projects to stimulate the economy, following the
model of China.
Ellen Brown chairs the Public
Banking Institute and has written thirteen
books, including her latest, Banking
on the People: Democratizing Money in the Digital
Age. She also co-hosts a radio program on
PRN.FM called “It’s
Our Money.” Her 300+ blog articles are posted
at EllenBrown.com
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