<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/2008/12/17/fed-unleashes-greatest-bubble-of-all/>Fed
 
unleashes greatest bubble of all

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By: <http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/author/johnkemp/>John Kemp
Tags: 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/category/general/>General, 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/tag/alan-greenspan/>Alan 
Greenspan, 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/tag/ben-bernanke/>Ben 
Bernanke, 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/tag/john-kemp/>John 
Kemp, 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/tag/quantitative-easing/>quantitative 
easing, 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/tag/subprime/>subprime, 
<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/tag/the-great-debate/>The Great Debate

<http://blogs.reuters.com/great-debate/files/2008/11/johnheadshot.jpg>
John Kemp Great Debate
– John Kemp is a Reuters columnist. The views expressed are his own –

Like the sorcerer’s apprentice, Federal Reserve 
Chairman Ben Bernanke and his predecessor Alan 
Greenspan have unleashed a series of ever-larger 
asset bubbles they cannot control.

Now the Fed’s decision to cut interest rates to 
between zero and 0.25 percent, coupled with a 
promise to keep them there for an extended 
period, and the threat to conduct even more 
unconventional operations in the longer-dated 
Treasury market risks the biggest bubble of all, 
this time in U.S. government debt.

THE ASYMMETRIC EXPERIMENT

Bubble mania is no accident. It is the direct 
consequence of the Fed’s asymmetric response to 
shifts in asset prices. Pressed to “lean against 
the wind” and adopt counter-cyclical interest 
rate and credit policies in the asset market, 
senior Fed policymakers have repeatedly demurred.

Led by Bernanke and Greenspan, officials have 
argued it is too hard and subjective to identify 
bubbles until afterwards, and not the Fed’s job 
to second-guess asset allocation decisions of professional investors.

Even if bubbles could be identified, they argue, 
pricking them would require swingeing rate rises 
that would inflict widespread damage on the rest of the economy.

Far less damaging to allow asset markets to 
follow their natural cycle and stand by to cut 
interest rates sharply, supply liquidity and 
contain the fallout when the bubble bursts.

But the Fed’s asymmetric policy response to 
rising and falling asset prices (colloquially 
known as the “Greenspan/Bernanke put”) directly 
led to much of the excessive risk-taking which 
has humbled the financial system over the last eighteen months.

More importantly, the Fed’s decision to respond 
to the collapse of the technology and stock 
market bubble by lowering rates to 1 percent and 
holding them there for an extended period is now 
widely accepted as a mistake that contributed to 
the bond bubble and subsequent housing market boom in the middle of the decade.

If the low-rate strategy was a mistake, it was a 
conscious one. In testimony to the UK Parliament 
last year, former Bank of England Governor Eddie 
George admitted the bank had deliberately sought 
to stimulate the housing market and house prices 
to support consumption during the downturn.

Greenspan, Bernanke and Co seem to have adopted a 
similar approach in the United States.
The real mistake, however, was not creating one 
bubble to offset the collapse of another, but 
believing they could control what they had wrought.

When the Fed did eventually start to raise 
short-term interest rates in 2004, long rates 
remained stubbornly low for a year, and then rose 
much more slowly than anticipated, a development 
the puzzled Fed chairman and his able assistant 
Dr Bernanke described as “the Great Conundrum”.

Even as rates eventually rose, the alchemy of 
securitization ensured the real cost of credit 
remained far too low until the subprime bubble finally burst in late 2007.

The second mistake is a basic design flaw in the 
Fed’s “risk-management” approach to setting 
monetary policy. Risk management is a nice idea, 
but not terribly useful. As engineer will 
explain, risk management involves trade offs and is not cost-free.

The Fed has struggled to formulate a response to 
“low probability, high impact” events such as the 
threat of deflation in the early 2000s. Its 
response has been to cut rates aggressively to 
ward off the danger of extreme downside events, a 
strategy officials liken to taking out an insurance policy.

That’s fine, but when these low risk events have 
not in fact occurred, as was never statistically 
likely, the resulting policy settings have proved 
far too loose, and the central bank much too slow to change it.

Concentrating on theoretical but small risks such 
as deflation has too often blinded the Fed to 
much larger risks near at hand of bubbles and asset inflation.

INTO THE UNKNOWN

Even as officials recognize policy has played a 
role stimulating an endless series of bubbles, 
the Fed finds itself trapped with no way out. 
Following the collapse of much of the modern 
banking system, the risk of pernicious deflation 
is now very real–more so than in the early 2000s.

So like the sorcerer’s apprentice, the Fed has 
cranked up the Great Bubble Machine for what 
policymakers hope will be one final time.

The Fed’s “unconventional” monetary strategy comes in four parts:

(1) Cutting interest rates to near-zero to lower the cost of borrowing.

(2) Injecting short-term liquidity into the 
financial system in the form of bank reserves (quantitative easing).

(3) Trying to pull down yields on longer-dated 
Treasury bonds through a combination of the 
jawbone (promising to keep short rates low for an 
extended period) and the threat to intervene in 
the market directly by buying longer-dated paper.

(4) Trying to reduce credit spreads above the 
Treasury yield for other borrowers, and increase 
the quantity of credit available, by buying 
mortgage-backed agency bonds for its own account, 
and financing other market participants to buy 
securities backed by other consumer credits, auto loans and student loans.

Most attention has focused on the zero-rate 
policy and quantitative easing at the short end 
of the curve. But the real significance lies in 
the unconventional operations targeting Treasury 
yields and eventually credit spreads at the long end.

Operations at the short end are designed to 
bolster the banking system and restart lending. 
But the Fed knows the banking system is not large 
enough to replace the much more important sources 
of credit from securities markets.

Operations at the long end are designed to get 
bond finance and securitized credit flowing. 
Short-end interest rates and quantitative 
operations are significant because they help 
shape the whole term structure of interest rates embedded in the curve.

ONE LAST SUPER-BUBBLE

The strategy has already succeeded in halving 
yields from over 4 percent in mid October to just 2.25 percent now.

By convincing investors interest rates will 
remain ultra low for a long period, the Fed has 
made them willing to lend to the U.S. government 
for up to ten years for what is a paltry return.

There are two risks. First, the massive rise in 
bond prices and compression of yields has come in 
the secondary market. The U.S. Treasury has not 
yet succeeded in placing much of its massively 
expanded debt and new requirements for next year 
at such low levels. But given the panic-driven 
demand for default-free assets, officials should not have too much difficulty.

The bigger one is that the Fed is misleading 
investors into the biggest bubble of all time. 
Bernanke is making what learned economists call a 
“time-inconsistent” promise to hold interest 
rates at ultra low levels for an extended period.

The problem is that if the unconventional 
monetary policy works, and the economy picks up, 
the Fed will come under pressure to “normalize” 
rates and reduce excess liquidity to prevent a 
rise in inflation. The resulting rate rises will 
inflict massive losses on anyone who bought bonds at today 2.25 percent rate.

Bizarrely, Bernanke and Co are in fact inviting 
investors to bet the policy will fail, the 
economy will remain mired in slump for a long 
period, deflation will occur and interest rates 
will remain on the floor, as Japan’s have done since the 1990s.

Buyers of real estate and subprime securities 
have recently been lampooned for foolishly 
overpaying at the top of the market. Bernanke and 
Co are gambling memories will prove short and 
investors will prove just as eager to pay top 
prices for long-term government and private debt 
even though the downside is large.

Let us have one last bubble, and when it 
collapses, we promise not to do any more in future…honest.

For previous columns by John Kemp, click


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