Column-Draining the money pool - guess the 'excess' :Mike Dolan
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[January 14, 2022] By
Mike Dolan
LONDON (Reuters) - If central banks start
draining the money pool to stop an overspill buoying sky-high inflation,
the assessment of just how much liquidity is 'excess' becomes critical
to world markets.
A hawkish new year blitz from the U.S. Federal Reserve in the face of 7%
inflation and near full employment readings stateside has markets
scrambling to price as many as four U.S. interest rate rises this year.
But more pressing for many in financial markets are Fed signals that
it's already time to siphon off some of the money it flooded into the
banking system via emergency bond buying - money aimed at keeping the
wider economy afloat during the shocking pandemic lockdowns.
Surprising many investors, the Fed discussion on shrinking its bloated
$8.7 trillion balance sheet began at its December policy meeting while
it agreed to gradually end new bond buying in the first quarter of 2022.
While the apparent urgency to start shrinking its balance sheet seems
odd against plans to keep adding more to it until March, many Fed
officials have already this year insisted the process needs to start
soon. But when and how fast?
In an interview with Reuters this week, Atlanta Fed chief Raphael Bostic
was most explicit.
Bostic reckoned the runoff - which would at first just involve allowing
the Fed's bond holdings to mature without reinvesting the proceeds -
should start shortly after the first interest rate rise in March.
But he also said this so-called 'quantitative tightening' (QT) should be
forceful at $100 billion a month, twice the monthly pace of the last
balance sheet reduction in 2017-2019, and he identified $1.5 trillion of
pure 'excess liquidity' that needed to be taken out before assessing the
impact at that point.
It wasn't clear where Bostic plucked the $1.5 trillion figure from, but
it's roughly equivalent to what the Fed has been forced to drain from
the money markets every day in recent weeks via overnight 'reverse repo'
operations.
On Wednesday, Cleveland Fed chief Loretta Mester - a voting member of
the Fed's policymaking Open Market Committee this year - chimed with
Bostic and told the Wall Street Journal she felt the balance sheet
should be cut as fast as possible without disrupting markets. But she
went one further by saying the Fed should not exclude the option of
actively selling its assets.
So, the Fed appears pretty serious about this all of a sudden and market
number crunchers have been working overtime.
EXCESS AND VELOCITY
JPMorgan's flows and liquidity specialist Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou and
team conclude that the peak of what they see as global 'excess money
supply' is now far behind us and its proxies for broad liquidity will
shrink significantly over the next two years.
The JPM team now sees Fed QT in July after the second rate rise and,
assuming it reaches a $100 billion monthly runoff pace of Treasury and
agency bonds by the end of this year, then the market would need to
absorb an additional $350 billion of new debt from government and agency
borrowers in the second half of 2022 and about $1 trillion in 2023.
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Federal Reserve Board building on Constitution Avenue is pictured in
Washington, U.S., March 19, 2019. REUTERS/Leah Millis
Fanning that out to its measure of net global bond supply versus demand - it now
sees that position deteriorating by some $1.3 trillion this year relative to
2021. And based on historical correlations, JPM reckons that should typically
see yields on global bond aggregate indices rise by an additional 35 basis
points.
Another direct impact on liquidity of Fed QT is cutting commercial banks'
reserve balances held at the Fed and hence their lending capacity. While
globally this will be offset this year by ongoing European Central Bank and Bank
of Japan bond buying, JPM reckons it will bite harder in 2023 when those central
banks wind down new bond purchases closer to zero.
As a result of a drop in central bank bond buying flows and slowing world loan
demand from pandemic peaks, they see their estimate of global money supply
growth more than halve to $3 trillion in 2023 from a $7.5 trillion pace last
year and returning to annual money growth levels not seen since 2010.
Will this have burnt off estimates of 'excess'? Looking at global proxies for
'excess' measuring world money growth against nominal GDP or the ratio of cash
held as a share of household equity and bond holdings, JPM reckons the excess is
already gone.
All under control? Will this be enough to rein in inflation and runaway markets?
Amundi's Chief Investment Officer Pascal Blanque believes we will see a new
inflationary regime like the 1970s mainly because governments will simply have
to assume greater control of money and borrowing rates from their central banks
- with post-COVID reconstruction and climate change demanding fiscal expansion.
"In this new regime, governments will take over the control of money while
maintaining widespread and double-digit monetary growth for several years, as
part of a broader transition from free market forces, independent central banks
and rule-based policies to a command-orientated economy."
Blanque reckons the reason rising money supply did not spur inflation over the
past decade was because a plunge in the so-called velocity of money - or the
rate at which one dollar is used in transactions - in the real economy merely
transferred to financial assets.
Taking real and inflation spheres as one, then velocity may have been as stable
as monetary theories assume, he wrote, and ongoing money pumping will prove
inflationary eventually - even coincidentally for periods in both consumer and
asset prices, as now.
The author is editor-at-large for finance and markets at Reuters News. Any views
expressed here are his own
(by Mike Dolan, Twitter: @reutersMikeD; Editing by Mark Potter)
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