Most economic observers are predicting that 2014 will be the year in
which the United States finally shrugs off the persistent malaise of the Great
Recession. As we embark on this sunny new chapter, we may ask what
wisdom the five-year trauma has delivered. Some big thinkers have declared that
the episode has forever tarnished freewheeling American capitalism and the myth
of Wall Street invincibility. In contrast, I believe that the episode has, for
the moment, established supreme confidence in the powers of monetary
policy to keep the economy afloat and to keep a floor under asset prices, even
in the worst of circumstances. This represents a dramatic change from
where we were in the beginning of 2008, and unfortunately gives us the false
confidence needed to sail blindly into the next crisis.
Although the media likes to forget, there was indeed a strong minority of
bearish investors who did not drink the Goldilocks Kool-Aid of the pre-crisis
era. As the Dow moved up in 2006 and 2007 so did gold, even though a rising gold
price was supposed to be a sign of economic uncertainty. The counter intuitive
gold surge in those years resulted from growing concern among a committed
minority that an economic crisis was looming. In the immediate aftermath of the
crisis in 2009 and 2010, gold shifted into an even higher gear when those
investors became doubly convinced that the extraordinary monetary measures
devised by the Fed to combat the recession would fail to stop the economic free
fall and would instead kick off a new era of inflation and dollar weakness. This
caused many who had been gold naysayers and economic cheerleaders to reluctantly
jump on the gold band wagon as well.
But three years later, after a period of monetary activism that went far
beyond what most bears had predicted, the economy has apparently turned the
corner. The Dow has surged to record levels, inflation (at least the way it is
currently being measured) and interest rates have stayed relatively low, and the
dollar has largely maintained its value. Ironically, many of those
former Nervous Nellies, who correctly identified the problems in advance, have
thrown in the towel and concluded that their fears of out of control monetary
policy were misplaced. While many of those who had always placed their
faith in the Fed (but who had failed - as did Fed leadership - from seeing the
crisis in advance) are more confident than ever that the Central Bank can save
us from the worst.
A primary element of this new faith is that the Fed can sustain any number of
asset bubbles if it simply supplies enough air in the form of freshly minted QE
cash and zero percent interest. It's as if the concept of "too big to fail" has
evolved into the belief that some bubbles are too big to pop. The
warnings delivered by those of us who still understand the negative consequences
of such policy have been silenced by the triumphant Dow.
The proof of this shift in sentiment can be seen in the current gold market.
If the conditions of 2013 (in which the Federal Government serially failed
to control a runaway debt problem, while the Federal Reserve persisted with an
$85 billion per month bond buying program and signaled zero interest rates for
the foreseeable future) could have been described to a 2007 investor, their
conclusions would have most likely been obvious: back up the truck and buy gold.
Instead, gold tumbled more than 27% over the course of the year. And despite the
fact that 2013 was the first down year for gold in 13 years, one would be hard
pressed now to find any mainstream analyst who describes the current three year
lows as a buying opportunity. Instead, gold is the redheaded stepchild
of the investment world.
This change can only be explained by the growing acceptance of
monetary policy as the magic elixir that Keynesians have always claimed it to
be. This blind faith has prevented
investors from seeing the obvious economic crises that may lay
ahead. Over the past five years the economy has become
increasingly addicted to low interest rates, which underlies the recent surge in
stock prices. Low borrowing costs have inflated corporate profits and have made
possible the wave of record stock buybacks. The same is true of the real estate
market, which has been buoyed by record low interest rates and a wave of
institutional investors using historically easy financing to buy single-family
houses in order to rent to average Americans who can no longer afford to buy.
But somehow investors have failed to grasp that the low interest
rates are the direct result of the Fed's Quantitative Easing program, which most
assume will be wound down in this year. In order to maintain the
current optimism, one must assume that the Fed can exit the bond buying business
(where it is currently the largest player) without pushing up rates to the point
that these markets are severely impacted. This ascribes almost superhuman
powers to the Fed. But that type of faith is now the norm.
Market observers have taken the December Fed statement, in which it
announced its long-awaited intention to begin tapering (by $10 billion per
month), as proof that the dangers are behind us, rather than ahead.
They argue that the QE has now gone away without causing turmoil in the markets
or a spike in rates. But this ignores the fact that the taper itself has not
even begun, and that the Fed has only committed to a $10 billion reduction later
this month. In fact, it is arguable that monetary policy is looser now than it
was before the announcement.
Based on nothing but pure optimism, the market believes that the Fed
can somehow contract its $4 trillion balance sheet without pushing up rates to
the point where asset prices are threatened, or where debt service costs become
too big a burden for debtors to bear. Such faith would have been
impossible to achieve in the time before the crash, when most assumed that the
laws of supply and demand functioned in the market for mortgage and government
debt. Now we "know" that the demand is endless. This mistakes temporary
geo-political paralysis and financial sleepwalking for a fundamental suspension
of reality.
The more likely truth is that this widespread mistake will allow us
to drift into the next crisis. Now that the European Union has survived
its monetary challenge, (the surging euro was one of the surprise stories of
2013), and the developing Asian economies have no immediate plans to stop their
currencies from rising against the dollar, there is little reason to expect that
the dollar will rally in the coming years. In fact, there has been little notice
taken of the 5% decline in the dollar index since a high in July. Similarly, few
have sounded alarm bells about the surge in yields of Treasury debt, with
10-year rates flirting with 3% for the first time in two years.
If interest rates rise much further, to perhaps 4% or 5%, the stock
and real estate markets will be placed under pressure, and the Fed and the other
"Too Big to Fail" banks will see considerable losses on their portfolios of
Treasury and mortgage-backed bonds. Such developments could trigger
widespread economic turmoil, forcing the Fed to expand its QE purchases. Such an
embarrassing reversal would add to selling pressure on the dollar, and might
potentially trigger an exodus of foreign investment and an increase in import
prices. I believe that nothing can prevent these trends from continuing to the
point where a crisis will be reached. It's extremely difficult to construct a
logical argument that avoids this outcome, but that hasn't stopped our best and
brightest forecasters from doing just that.
So while the hallelujah chorus is ringing in the New Year with a
full-throated crescendo, don't be surprised by sour notes that will bubble to
the top with increasing frequency. Ultimately the power of monetary
policy to engineer a real economy will be proven to be just as ridiculous as the
claims that housing prices must always go up.
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