Top central bankers vow to talk investors out of easy
money
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[November 14, 2017]
By Balazs Koranyi and Francesco Canepa
FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Four of the world's
top central bankers promised on Tuesday to keep openly guiding investors
about future policy moves as they slowly withdraw the huge monetary
stimulus rolled out during the financial crisis.
After pumping some $10 trillion into financial markets since the 2008
crisis -- driving them many markets to record highs -- the Federal
Reserve, European Central Bank, Bank of England and Bank of Japan are
now trying to wean investors off easy money without causing an upset.
To do this, words will be key, the heads of the four central banks told
an ECB conference on communication. It is called forward guidance in
banker-speak, essentially warning gently of what is coming.
"Forward guidance has become a full-fledged monetary policy instrument,"
ECB President Mario Draghi said. "Why discard a monetary policy
instrument that has proved to be effective?"
Draghi and his three counterparts are at very different stages in
roll-back process.
The Fed is looking at its fifth rate increase and the BOE raised its own
rate this month for the first time in 10 years. But the ECB is merely
reducing the pace of its bond purchases, and the BOJ is still printing
money at full speed, although it has signaled that no additional
stimulus is likely.
Fed Chair Janet Yellen agreed with Draghi that guidance has been
beneficial "on balance" but stressed it should always be viewed as
depending on how the economy actually develops.
"All guidance should be conditional and related to the outlook for the
economy," she said.
Banks such as the ECB often say the envisage doing something but reserve
the right to change their mind if circumstances change.
History shows that preparing the ground for a withdrawal of stimulus is
not always easy.
Then-Fed chair Ben Bernanke famously sent global bond markets into a
tailspin in May 2013 by suggesting that bond purchases could be reduced.
In the event, the "taper tantrum" meant bond buys would not be reduced
for another 10 months.
Draghi had his own mini-tantrum in June when he hinted that the ECB's
policy could be tweaked to reflect stronger growth. The market sell-off
that followed was so big the eventual scaling back of purchases was
relatively small and drawn out.
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European Central Bank (ECB) President Mario Draghi holds a news
conference following the governing council's interest rate decision
at the ECB headquarters in Frankfurt, Germany, October 26, 2017.
REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
And Bank of England Governor Mark Carney's guidance on the path for interest
rates has repeatedly been knocked off course by surprises in the economy,
prompting one lawmaker to call him an "unreliable boyfriend".
KEEP IT SIMPLE
Hyun Song Shin of the Bank of International Settlements told the ECB conference
such unreliability was not necessarily all bad. Too much "predictability and
gradualism" could lead investors to take on too much risk.
"Predictability and gradualism may not be a virtue if market participants take
them as a commitment not to pull the rug from under their feet while they build
up leverage and risk-taking," the BIS’s head of research said.
Speaking alongside Yellen and Draghi, Bank of Japan Governor Haruhiko Kuroda
said the best way to avoid misunderstandings was to keep the message simple.
"It should better be straightforward," he said. "That's the best way."
His UK counterpart, Carney, stressed the importance of reaching the broader
public, rather than just financial investors.
"We’re speaking to the people we serve first," Carney said. "Three hundred
thousand people read the Financial Times; there are 30 million Facebook users in
the UK."
Yellen noted that conflicting messages by different Fed policymakers risked
confusing the public.
Fed governors talk on an almost daily basis, Kuroda speaks frequently and some
of the ECB's 25 rate-setters appear to live a life of their own, sometimes
giving speeches at odds with the ECB's main policy lines.
A survey by the Brookings Institute think tank found that two-thirds of Fed
watchers wanted governors to speak less frequently and over half wanted Yellen
to speak more instead, to streamline and focus the message.
Yellen will be replaced as Fed chair in March next year, Carney and Draghi's
terms are up in 2019, and only this week a senior aide to Japanese prime
minister Shinzo Abe recommended that Bank of Japan governor Kuroda not be
reappointed.
(Reporting by Balazs Korany and Francesco Canepa; Editing by Catherine
Evans/Jeremy Gaunt)
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