[ a little nervousness in the air, perhaps?]

<http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/2005/20050606/default.htm>

 Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan
Central Bank panel discussion
To the International Monetary Conference, Beijing, People's Republic
of China (via satellite)
June 6, 2005

The pronounced decline in U.S. Treasury long-term interest rates over
the past year despite a 200-basis-point increase in our federal funds
rate is clearly without recent precedent. The yield on ten-year
Treasury notes currently is at about 4 percent, 80 basis points less
than its level of a year ago. Moreover, despite the recent backup in
credit risk spreads, yields for both investment-grade and
less-than-investment-grade corporate bonds have declined even more
than Treasuries over the same period.

The unusual behavior of long-term rates first became apparent almost a
year ago. In May and June of last year, market participants were
behaving as expected. With a firming of monetary policy by the Federal
Reserve widely expected, they built large short positions in long-term
debt instruments in anticipation of the increase in bond yields that
has been historically associated with a rising federal funds rate. But
by summer, pressures emerged in the marketplace that drove long-term
rates back down. In March of this year, market participants once again
bid up long-term rates, but as occurred last year, forces came into
play to make those increases short lived.

But what are those forces? Clearly, they are not operating solely in
the United States. Long-term rates have moved lower virtually
everywhere. Except in Japan, rates among the other foreign Group of
Seven countries have declined notably more than have rates in the
United States. Even in emerging economies, whose history has been too
often marked by inflationary imbalances and unstable exchange rates,
access to longer-term finance has improved. For many years,
emerging-market long-term debt denominated in domestic currencies had
generally been unsalable. But in 2003, Mexico, for example, was able
to issue a twenty-year maturity, peso-denominated bond, the first such
instrument ever. In recent months, Colombia issued
domestic-currency-denominated global bonds. As rates came down
worldwide, dollar-denominated EMBI+ spreads over U.S. Treasuries
receded to historically low levels, before widening modestly of late.

* * *

A number of hypotheses have been offered as explanations of this
remarkable worldwide environment of low long-term interest rates.

One prominent hypothesis is that the markets are signaling economic
weakness. This is certainly a credible notion. But periodic signs of
buoyancy in some areas of the global economy have not arrested the
fall in rates.

A second hypothesis involves the behavior of pension funds. As the
inevitable increases in retirement populations approach, especially
among developed countries, the underfunding of retirement plans has
become a growing concern. Pension funds and insurance companies, are
being pressed to make significant additions to longer-term bond
portfolios. This demand for increasingly longer-term obligations is
evident in the favorable reception given the fifty-year-maturity bonds
recently issued by France and the United Kingdom.

But world demographic trends are hardly news, and recent adjustments
to funding shortfalls do not seem large enough to be more than a small
part of a complete explanation.

The heavy accumulation of U.S. Treasury obligations by foreign
monetary authorities is yet another hypothesis that has been offered.
And, doubtless, those purchases have lowered long-term U.S. Treasury
rates. But, given the depth of the market for long-term Treasury
instruments, the Federal Reserve Board staff estimates that the effect
of foreign official purchases has been modest. Furthermore, such
purchases seem an implausible explanation of why yields on long-term
non-U.S. sovereign debt instruments are so low.

A final hypothesis takes as its starting point the breakup of the
Soviet Union and the integration of China and India into the global
trading market, developments that have permitted more of the world's
lower-cost productive capacity to be tapped to satisfy global demands
for goods and services. Concurrently, greater integration of financial
markets has meant that a larger share of the world's pool of savings
is being deployed in cross-border financing of cost-reducing
investments.

The enlargement of global markets for goods, services, and finance has
contributed importantly to the favorable inflation performance that we
are witnessing in so many countries. That improved performance has
doubtless contributed to lower inflation-related risk premiums, and
the lowering of these premiums is reflected in significant declines in
nominal and real long-term rates. Although this explanation
contributes to an understanding of the past decade, I do not believe
it explains the decline of long-term interest rates over the past year
despite rising short-term rates.

* * *

Whatever the underlying causes, low risk-free long-term rates
worldwide seem to be one factor driving investors to reach for higher
returns, thereby lowering the compensation for bearing credit risk and
many other financial risks over recent years. The search for yield is
particularly manifest in the massive inflows of funds to private
equity firms and hedge funds. These entities have been able to raise
significant resources from investors who are apparently seeking
above-average risk-adjusted rates of return, which, of course, can be
achieved by only a minority of investors. To meet this demand, hedge
fund managers are devising increasingly more complex trading
strategies to exploit perceived arbitrage opportunities, which are
judged--in many cases erroneously--to offer excess rates of return.
This effort is particularly evident in the pronounced growth and
increasing complexity of collateralized debt obligations. Although
collateralized debt obligations are a powerful tool for enhancing risk
management by separating idiosyncratic risks from systematic risks,
the models used to price and hedge these instruments are just
beginning to be tested.

I have no doubt that many of the new hedge fund entrepreneurs are
embracing a strategy of pinpointing temporary market inefficiencies,
the exploitation of which is expected to yield above-average rates of
return. For the time being, most of the low-hanging fruit of readily
available profits has already been picked by the managers of the
massive influx of hedge fund capital, leaving as a byproduct
much-more-efficient markets and normal returns.

But continuing efforts to seek above-average returns could create
risks for which compensation is inadequate. Significant numbers of
trading strategies are already destined to prove disappointing, a
point that recent data on the distribution of hedge fund returns seem
to be confirming.

Consequently, after its recent very rapid advance, the hedge fund
industry could temporarily shrink, and many wealthy fund managers and
investors could become less wealthy. But so long as banks and other
lenders to these ventures are managing their credit risks effectively,
this necessary adjustment should not pose a threat to financial
stability.

I trust such an episode would not induce us to lose sight of the very
important contributions hedge funds and new financial products have
made to financial stability by increasing market liquidity and
spreading financial risk, and thereby enhancing economic flexibility
and resilience.

* * *

The economic and financial world is changing in ways that we still do
not fully comprehend. Policymakers accordingly cannot always count on
an ability to anticipate potentially adverse developments sufficiently
in advance to effectively address them. Thus our economies require, in
my judgment, as high a degree of flexibility and resilience to
unanticipated shocks as is feasible to achieve. Policymakers need to
be able to rely more on the markets' self-adjusting process and less
on officials' uncertain forecasting capabilities.

The U.S. economy's response to the terrorist attacks of September 11,
2001, is a case in point. That shock was absorbed by a recently
enhanced, highly flexible set of institutions and markets without
significantly disabling our economy overall. But that flexibility
should not be taken for granted, and every effort should be made to
preserve and extend it.

In this regard, the recent emergence of protectionism and the
continued structural rigidities in many parts of the world are truly
worrisome. In the end, I trust that we will all recognize our common
interest in fostering global and domestic arrangements that promote
the prosperity of our citizens.

-- 
"Life sure is weird but what else am I to know?" [Jason Pierce]

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