In Bill's World Asset Price Inflation is Easy
The risk for the Fed is that this
strength is immediate. Citibank's US economic surprise index has dropped to its
lowest level since last June as recent data has disappointed, but this is
temporary. The surprise index measures the economic data outcomes against both
the market consensus and its level three months ago. It is mean-reverting by
design and was developed to generate trading revenue for Citi rather than be
the essential high-frequency market indicator that it has become. Economists
despair, but it has a market impact. More importantly, from the current
relative low, it is poised to make new highs over the next three months. The
data is likely to exceed expectations by a margin, helped by the seasonal
adjustment process's vagaries, which will weigh the data in relation to last
year's 20% annualised decline. Indeed, it is not inconceivable that the second
quarter's annualised growth will be similar to last year but in the opposite
direction.
The timing of this boost is
important for the Fed. Jay Powell is committed to keeping policy accommodative
for as long as it takes. The Fed believes that the forthcoming rise in
inflation will be the result of transitory, frictional and cyclical factors and
that returning the economy to full employment is a greater priority. One
quarter of very strong growth should not influence the Fed, but it will impact
the treasury market. The Fed has not reacted to the sharp jump in treasury
yields over the past month or the curve's substantial steepening because
financial conditions have remained highly accommodative.
We owe this focus on financial
conditions to the genius of one man, Bill Dudley. Dudley is the unsung hero of
global monetary policy, having driven the most important innovation in the 21st
Century. The other, seemingly more noteworthy innovations, such as quantitative
easing, negative interest rates, funds for lending, purchases of mortgage and
credit bonds, are the inevitable consequences of Bill's inescapable logic. The
original measure of financial conditions was developed at Goldman Sachs when
Bill was Chief Economist. He then shared this innovation when he was President
of the New York Fed, cementing financial conditions at the heart of the Fed's
response to the Global Financial Crisis. Dudley's innovation has spawned a
range of imitators, many of which contain more components than the five used by
the GS index. Still, Bill's index has the longest track record, having been
developed in 2000, a year after the ECB's debut in 1999, and the data set has
been back-filled to 1960.
The GS US Financial Conditions
Index consists of long rates (45.1%), corporate bond spreads (39.6%), trade-weighted
US Dollar exchange rate (6%), equity prices (4.9%) and short-term rates (4.4%).
In other words, the index assigns the lowest weighting to the instrument
traditionally targeted and controlled by the Fed. It is little wonder that the
Fed developed new mechanisms to target financial conditions culminating in the
program to purchase corporate bonds last Spring. The GS index weighting for
corporate bond spreads is eight times larger than the weighting for equities
suggesting that an equity market selloff will only be important because it
causes corporate spreads to widen. Former Fed Governor Jeremy Stein once noted
that what keeps FOMC members awake a night is a 20% widening of corporate bond
spreads.
In a valedictory paper in 2018,
Dudley's eminent successors, Jan Hatzuis and Jari Stein highlighted that monetary
policy's traditional metrics had broken down. Since the failure of the monetary
aggregates in the seventies, central banks developed a new Keynesian monetary
framework based on the Hicks Investment-Savings Curve, which describes the
relationship between the output gap and the real policy rate; a Phillips Curve,
which describes the relationship between inflation and the output gap; and a
Taylor-type monetary policy rule, which relates the policy rate to deviations
of inflation and employment from the central bank targets.
The model is elegant and based on
decades of western economic theory; unfortunately, it doesn't work well in
practice. It has two flaws; the Phillips curve has flattened over the past few
decades and is relatively flat so that it only explains a modest proportion of
the variation in US inflation. However, this is not the biggest concern. The
explanatory power of the IS curve is also weak, particularly in recent decades.
If the Phillips curve fits poorly, the central bank will have trouble
controlling inflation but will still be able to control output, but if the IS
curve does not work, the central bank will be unable to control either
inflation or output.
The authors demonstrate the IS
curve's weak explanatory power by regressing the output gap on two of its lags
and a measure of the lagged policy rate. They used three separate measures of
the lagged policy rate. The first is the real funds rate deflated by the annual
inflation rate. The second is the real funds rate minus the estimated
equilibrium rate, which uses estimates of the natural R* rate from the work of
John Williams, Fed Vice-Chair, and the late, great Thomas Laubach, which in
2018 was 0.6%. The third version is the "narrative approach",
developed by Christina and David Romer, which defines monetary policy shocks as
the difference between the intended funds rate and the rate implied the by Fed's
normal operating procedure. The analysis showed that there was a statistically
significant impact from the real funds rate on output, but the significance
disappeared when they focussed on the more recent data, and in particular, over
the period from 1985, the impulse responses are not significantly different from
zero.
The paper justifies the shift
from interest rates to financial conditions. We can criticise the shift in
terms of the hyper-financialisation of balance sheets, materially higher
corporate and government debt, rising inequality, increased portfolio risk and
the undermining of defined benefit and defined contribution pension funds, but
there can be little doubt that major central banks are explicitly targeting
financial conditions. In this world, equities and other risk assets become a
policy tool, with asset price inflation leading to easier monetary policy. The
rules explicitly forbid the Fed from buying equities, but as last year's crisis
showed, in extremis rules are there to be broken. The Bank of Japan, which is
further down this process than most, has already crossed this particular
Rubicon.
More importantly, in the
short-term, central banks are determined to keep financial conditions easy, and
despite the recent rise in longer-dated Treasury yields, conditions remain near
record accommodation. The Fed doesn't feel the need to respond to these higher
yields, risking further rises in the months ahead. Moreover, when the Fed does
come to protest the unwarranted deterioration in financial conditions, it will
have a choice between Operation Twist, switching the purchase program to
longer-dated treasuries or buying corporate bonds to stabilise spreads. In the
first instance, the central bank will choose the former.
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