Showing posts with label should. Show all posts
Showing posts with label should. Show all posts

Friday, 30 December 2011

Should the Fed save Europe from disaster?

Unless Germany agrees to the full mobilization of the European Central Bank very fast, the eurozone will spiral out of control. As The Economist put it, “The risk that the currency disintegrates within weeks is alarmingly high.”

Theoretically, EMU can limp on though the Winter until the Italian debt auctions of €33bn in the last week of January, and €48bn in the last week of February. The reality is that sovereign contagion to the financial system may well bring matters to a head more swiftly.

If break-up occurs in a disorderly fashion, with Club Med states and Ireland spun into oblivion one by one, the chain reaction will cause an implosion of Europe’s €31 trillion banking nexus (S&P estimate), the world’s biggest and most leveraged. This in turn risks an almighty global crash – first class passengers included.

So the question arises, should the rest of the world take over management of Europe to prevent or mitigate disaster? Specifically, should the US Federal Reserve assume leadership as a monetary superpower and impose policy on a paralyzed ECB, acting as a global lender of last resort?

In essence, the US would do for EMU what it did in military and strategic terms for the Europe in the 1990s when Washington said enough is enough after squabbling EU leaders had allowed 200,000 people to be slaughtered in the Balkans. The Pentagon settled matters swiftly with “Operation Deliberate Force”, raining Tomahawk missiles on the Serb positions. Power met greater power.

Personally, I have not made up my mind about the wisdom of a Fed rescue. It is fraught with dangers, and one might argue that resources are better deployed breaking EMU into workable halves with minimal possible damage.

However, debate is already joined – and wheels are turning in Washington policy basements – so let me throw this out for readers to chew over.

Nobel economist Myron Scholes first floated the idea over lunch at a Riksbank forum in August. "I wonder whether Bernanke might not say that `we believe in a harmonized world, that the Europeans are our friends, and we know that the ECB can't print money to buy bonds because the Germans won't let them. And since the ECB will soon run out of money, we will step in and start buying European government bonds for them'. It is something to think about," he said.

This is not as eccentric as it sounds. The Fed’s Ben Bernanke touched on the theme in a speech in November 2002 – “Deflation: making sure it doesn't happen here” – now viewed as his policy `road map' in extremis.

"The Fed can inject money into the economy in still other ways. For example, the Fed has the authority to buy foreign government debt. Potentially, this class of assets offers huge scope for Fed operations," he said.

Berkeley’s Brad DeLong said it is time for Bernanke to act on this as the world lurches straight into 1931 and a Great Depression II. “The Federal Reserve needs to buy up every single European bond owned by every single American financial institution for cash,” he said.

The Fed could buy €2 trillion of EMU debt or more, intervening with crushing power. The credible threat of such action by the world’s paramount monetary force might alone bring Italian and Spanish yields back down below 5pc, before one bent nickel is even spent.

One presumes that the Fed would purchase both the triple AAA core and Club Med in a symmetric blast of monetary stimulus across the board, avoiding the (fiscal) error of targeting semi-solvent states. In sense, the Fed would do quantitative easing for the Europeans, whether they liked it or not.

David Zervos from Jefferies has proposed an extreme variant of this, accusing Germany’s fiscal Puritans of reducing Europe’s periphery to “indentured servants” and driving the whole region into depression with combined fiscal and monetary contraction.

“We in the US need to snuff out these sado-fiscalists and fast, they are a danger to the world. The US can force monetisation at the ECB. We should back up the forklift and buy Euro area bonds. Lots of them,” he said.

Some of the purchases could be achieved by tapping the Fed’s euro account at the ECB, flush with funds as a result of currency swaps provided by Washington to help Europe shore up its banks. Ultimately mass EMU bond purchases would cause a sudden and potentially dangerous spike in the euro against the dollar. There lies the rub. If the ECB failed to loosen monetary policy drastically to offset this, the experiment could go badly wrong.

A pioneering school of “market monetarists” - perhaps the most creative in the current policy fog - says the Fed should reflate the world through a different mechanism, preferably with the Bank of Japan and a coalition of the willing.

Their strategy is to target nominal GDP (NGDP) growth in the United States and other aligned powers, restoring it to pre-crisis trend levels. The idea comes from Irving Fisher’s “compensated dollar plan” in the 1930s.

The school is not Keynesian. They are inspired by interwar economists Ralph Hawtrey and Sweden’s Gustav Cassel, as well as monetarist guru Milton Friedman. “Anybody who has studied the Great Depression should find recent European events surreal. Day-by-day history repeats itself. It is tragic,” said Lars Christensen from Danske Bank, author of a book on Friedman.

“It is possible that a dramatic shift toward monetary stimulus could rescue the euro,” said Scott Sumner, a professor at Bentley University and the group’s eminence grise. Instead, EU authorities are repeating the errors of the Slump by obsessing over inflation when (forward-looking) deflation is already the greater threat.

“I used to think people were stupid back in the 1930s. Remember Hawtrey’s famous “Crying fire, fire, in Noah’s flood”? I used to wonder how people could have failed to see the real problem. I thought that progress in macroeconomic analysis made similar policy errors unlikely today. I couldn’t have been more wrong. We’re just as stupid,” he said.

Needless to say, reflation alone will not make Euroland a workable currency area. Nor will fiscal union, Eurobonds, and debt pooling down the road.

"Even if they do two years of fiscal transfers, and the ECB buys all the bonds, and the problems are swept under the carpet, we are still going to be facing a crisis at the end of it," said professor Scholes.

None of the “cures” on offer tackle the 30pc currency misalignment between North and South, the deeper cause of this crisis. What Fed-imposed QE for Euroland can do is make a solution at least possible stoking inflation deliberately.

This means inflicting a boomlet on the German bloc, while allowing the South to take its fiscal punishment without crashing further into self-defeating debt deflation. It forces up prices in the North, compelling the neo-Calvinists to accept their share of the intra-EMU price readjustment.

The Germans will not like this. If inflation causes them rise up in revolt and leave EMU to the Latins, so much the better. That is the best solution of all.

What we know for certain is that Europe’s current policy settings must lead ineluctably to ruin and perhaps to fascism. Nothing can be worse.


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Monday, 25 July 2011

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Wednesday, 8 June 2011

The India concerns should not distract from long-term investment opportunities

Love story of the past two years with the Indian stock exchange a beautiful and well embittered for three months Photo: AFP/Getty Images

Perhaps only the sporting nation obsession can divert attention to inflation and corruption currently defining policy and investment program.


Love story of the past two years with the Indian stock market has well and truly handsome for three months. In particular, foreign investors seem to have had a turnaround to invest in the subcontinent.


India index benchmark Sensex had soared to minimal March 2009 8,160 to slightly more than 21,000 last November, but the change of end of year in particular saw sentiment generally emerging markets and the India return to 17,463 a week or a 17pc ago, refuse. He has reinvigorated a bit on the coat tail of a more stable situation in Egypt, but confidence is low.


The electrification of the Indian political scene today corruption scandals would be doing justice to a Bollywood film. They highlight disorder overlap between Government and enterprises, with a group of characters who remind us that corporate has no need means dull when spiced with infinite wealth, celebrities and family quarrels. Anil Ambani, a billionaire high-visibility behind part of sprawling empire of corporate dependency the India, is the last to be questioned in a rapid enlargement corruption probe that has already claimed the scalp of the Minister of the Government telecommunications.


If corruption is a reminder that emerging investment market is not without risk as the fast recovery of the financial crisis may have suggested, the major concern of investors continues to be inflation. The India is particularly vulnerable to rising prices for products traded globally with food accounting for almost half of their basket of inflation and oil a key import.


While vegetables prices came off the coast of recently, it is typical of the period of the year which has tended to see prices facilitated in February before go up again in April. Inflation will probably peak in the second quarter, but remains poorly high and rising interest rates are likely to slow the growth rate and convince investors move their investments from equities to yield higher debt.


I must say that although I am not persuaded that the apparent movement of emerging markets to truly developed countries marks a turning point. Citigroup analyzed periods in the past 10 years or when emerging price market share were less developed markets, and makes the interesting observation that only two major periods of underperformance in 2000 and 2008) occurred in a context of anxiety on the prospects for global growth. In the 2008 downturn new market share fall was accompanied first, weakening material prices slip market currencies that are emerging against the dollar and poor performance by new bonds market compared to the US Treasuries.


This time, the performance of shares is the exception because skyrocketing prices for raw materials and bonds and emerging market currencies are largely moving their American counterparts. Which suggests that there are other reasons behind weak stock market and the continuation of the global recovery will equities to emerging market to recover their shape later in the year.


Withdrawal 17pc in just 12 weeks is disturbing, but it is by the course with the India, which is volatile even by the standards of emerging markets. In a chaotic democracy there is always something to worry about, but more recent concerns about governance and rising prices should not distract from long-term growth story.


Monetary Fund figures International point on an average growth rate between 2010 and 2015 8 4pc, compared to 4 FP6 for the world at large and much less in avr developed countries. A note from Goldman Sachs that crossed my desk this week summed up the case in the long term: "the India is the Hotel California investment - you can check anytime you liked but you can never leave".


tomrstevenson@fil.com


• Tom Stevenson is an investment at Fidelity International. The opinions expressed here and @ tomstevenson63 are its own.


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Saturday, 4 December 2010

Ireland should honour its debts, says Irish business federation chief Danny McCoy

Ireland should honour its debts, says Irish business federation chief Danny McCoy. Pressure is mounting on the Irish government to rethink its plans for a Pressure is mounting on the Irish government to rethink its plans for a "haircut" on the subordinated debt of Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide Building Society. Photo: AFP

"Ireland should honour its debts if it can," said Danny McCoy, head the Irish Business and Employers Confederation (IBEC).

"The country makes a living taking capital from people and looking after it, and you don't want to get a reputation for carrying out partial defaults," he told The Daily Telegraph.

Ireland's financial services industry is around 9.8pc of GDP, with big players such as Merrill and Citigroup operating from Dublin's 'Canary Dwarf'. But foreign investment is also the lifeblood of the country's manufacturing industry, led by computers and pharmaceuticals.

IBEC's comments come amid mounting pressure on the Irish government to rethink its plans for a "haircut" on the subordinated debt of Anglo Irish and Irish Nationwide Building Society (INBS).

Millhouse, the asset management group of Roman Abramovich, is the latest foreign fund to express fury, warning that Ireland faces possible legal action and a "huge reputation loss" if it imposes a haircut on creditors. The fund said it had been "misled and deceived" by the Irish government, though this class of debt was quietly dropped when the guarantee was extended last month.

The exact shape of any "burden-sharing" is still unclear. Brian Lenihan, finance minister, has said the junior bondholders should make a "significant contribution toward meeting the costs" of the state bailout.

These investors took extra risk to enjoy extra yield, and cannot expected shield when the bank collapses. The debt of senior bondholders is considered sacrosanct.

Mr Lenihan has to walk a fine line: talk of debt restructuring for Anglo and INBS conflicts with his other message that Ireland is recovering from the crisis and still enjoys reserves of economic wealth.

Yet like finance ministers across the West, he also has to secure political support for austerity measures. This is increasingly hard to do without forcing bondholders to share at least some of the pain.

Hedge funds also have to watch their step. The political balance of power in Europe is moving against them. If they were to bring a small country like Ireland to its knees, the EU authorities would undoubtedly respond.

IBEC's Mr McCoy said the €40bn(£35bn) total cost of bailing out the banks had landed on the shoulders of 2m people in the Irish workforce, or €20,000 per person.

While this is an understandable cause of anguish, Mr McCoy said savings from a partial default on €3bn of Anglo and INBS subordinated debt, would be a small fraction of this.

Separately, Moody's called for a "credible plan" by the Irish government to bring its budget deficit back to 3pc of GDP by 2014, warning that the country could face a further downgrade. The report had no market impact.


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