Interesting article.  You can judge its merits on your on.

No Exit

By James G. Rickards

November 5 (King World News) - Disasters sometimes sneak up in small steps,
each of which appears unthreatening at the time but which cumulatively spell
collapse.  The Fed is leading the United States to ruin in ways that are
claimed to be well intentioned and benign viewed in isolation but which take
us finally into a locked room reminiscent of the Sartre play “No Exit.”


The Fed has finally embarked on QE2, the best publicized journey since the
flight of Balloon Boy to which quantitative easing might well be compared.
Of course, quantitative easing, or QE, is just a euphemism for what is
really going on.  We’ll skip the Orwellian Newspeak of QE and stick to the
Oldspeak – printing money.


How does the Fed print money? It’s easy; they simply buy bonds from the
market and credit the seller’s bank account with electronic cash that comes
out of thin air.  When they want to reduce the money supply, they do the
opposite; that is, they sell bonds and the buyer’s bank account is reduced
by the sale price and that money disappears.  So, printing money is just a
massive program of bond purchases.  The Fed intends to concentrate the
current bond buying program in the intermediate sector of 5 to 10-year
maturities.


As a result, the Fed is coming to resemble a highly leveraged hedge fund
with an inverted pyramid of risky, volatile and junk debt balanced on a slim
layer of capital.  Recall the Fed owns the Maiden Lane portfolio of junk
from Bear Stearns and $1.4 trillion of mortgages whose value is in serious
doubt because of strategic defaults, lost notes and halted foreclosures.
Treasury notes may be of good credit quality if you don’t mind getting paid
back in debased dollars but even Treasury notes have market risk.  If
interest rates go up, the value of Treasury notes goes down; it’s that
simple.  The Fed is taking both credit risk and market risk on its balance
sheet in unprecedented amounts.


Right now the Fed’s balance sheet shows about $57 billion in total capital.
Current assets are about $2.3 trillion.  The current money-printing plan
will take total assets above $3 trillion.  At that level, it only takes a 2%
decline in asset values to wipe out the Fed’s capital.  Put differently, it
only takes a 2% drop in the average value of assets on the Fed’s balance
sheet for the Fed to go bankrupt.  And this is in an environment where
various markets frequently go up and down 3% in a single day.


How risky is the Fed’s program of bond purchases? Very.  For those who are
not bond traders, here are a few quick pointers.  First off, intermediate
term securities are more volatile than short-term securities.  The Fed
traditionally purchases Treasury bills of one-year or less in maturity.
Those bills are not volatile at all and don’t move much in price when
interest rates change.  So, mark-to-market losses are never that great.  But
10-year notes are highly volatile and losses can be huge in response to even
modest increases in interest rates.  Secondly, with the Fed composing such a
large part of the Treasury market, liquidity will decrease as fewer
participants buy and sell each day due to the Fed’s dominant role.  This
means bid/offer spreads will widen making it very costly for the Fed to
unload their position if they want to.  If the Fed is selling, who on earth
wants to buy? Finally, there is a concept called “DVO1” which is market
jargon for the “dollar value of 1 basis point”.  This is a measure of how
much a bond goes down in price in response to a 1 basis point increase in
interest rates.  It happens that DVO1 is greater as interest rates are
lower.  In other words, the decline in price of a bond in response to a 1
basis point increase in rates is greater when rates are at 1% than if they
are at 5%.  This element of volatility is independent of the fact that
longer maturities are more volatile, so having longer maturities and a
low-rate environment is like soaking C4 plastic explosives in
nitroglycerine.


When critics raise the issue of mark-to market losses, the Fed has a simple
answer, which is that they will hold to maturity.  The Fed does not have to
mark to market; they can simply hold the assets to maturity and collect the
full proceeds from the Treasury or other issuers.  Just ignore for the
moment the fact that some of the junkier assets and mortgages will not pay
off, ever.  That’s years away; for now, let’s just give the Fed the benefit
of the doubt and say that mark-to-market losses don’t matter because they
don’t have to sell.


Critics also raise the issue that this much money printing will result in
inflation at best and maybe hyperinflation if velocity takes off due to
behavioral shifts.  The Fed is also very reassuring on this point.  They say
not to worry because at the first signs of sustained and rising inflation
they will reverse course and reduce the money supply by selling bonds and
nip inflation in the bud.  But also note that the world in which the Fed
wants to sell the bonds is also a world of rising inflation and therefore
rising interest rates.  This is the world of huge mark to market losses on
the bonds themselves.


The Fed is saying don’t worry about mark to market losses because we will
hold the bonds.  The Fed is saying don’t worry about inflation because we
will sell the bonds.  Both of those statements cannot be true at the same
time.  You can hold bonds and you can sell bonds but you can’t do both at
once.  You will want to sell when rates are going up but that’s when losses
will be the greatest.   So the time when you most want to sell is the time
when you will most want to hold. The Fed may say they can finesse this by
selling shorter maturities only to reduce money supply and holding onto
longer maturities.  But that just further degrades the quality of the Fed’s
balance sheet and turns it into a one-way roach motel for highly volatile
and junk assets.


So, here’s the bottom line on money printing, or QE if you prefer.  If
nothing happens, the whole thing was a waste of time.  If inflation takes
off, the Fed will have to choose between holding bonds and letting inflation
get worse or selling bonds and going bankrupt in the process.  Since no
entity goes down without a fight, the Fed will naturally hold the bonds and
let inflation take off.  Do not ask about the exit strategy from QE; there
is no exit.


J

-

It isn’t that liberals are ignorant; it’s that they know so much t

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