Thursday, November 27, 2008

"Basically, the Fed is targeting a lower interest rate on GSE debt. Sound familiar? Yup, that’s monetizing government debt."

Rebecca Wilder at News N Economics with an interesting post:

"At some point the Fed may choose to monetize new debt issued by the Treasury (let’s say in order to raise $700 billion to finance TARP), but I doubt it. There is already a new $1 trillion of new liquidity sloshing around in the banking system, posing huge inflationary risks.
Well, circumstances have changed. Twenty-four days later, and in a rather nontraditional manner, the Fed is now monetizing government debt.
The time has come to officially monetize government debt. Yesterday the Fed announced that it would purchase $100 billion in debt obligations from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank next week. And furthermore, it will purchase $500 billion in mortgage-backed securities (MBS) – I like to call this FARP (Fed Asset Relief Program).

The purchase of GSE debt is a direct attempt to reduce the spread on government agency (GSE) debt over comparable Treasury debt, the relative borrowing costs. Basically, the Fed is targeting a lower interest rate on GSE debt. Sound familiar? Yup, that’s monetizing government debt.

The chart illustrates the difference between newly issued Fannie Mae debt and a comparable U.S. Treasury through 11/24/08. This spread has widened from an average of 29 bps (0.29%) spanning 2006-2007 to 90 bps spanning 2007-2008. Fannie Mae must pay more in order to finance its mortgage obligations, which limits its ability to roll over current obligations, and tightens the terms on new mortgage loans.

By driving down the spreads on GSE debt now, and later on mortgage-backed securities, the Fed gives the GSEs more flexibility in the mortgage market, and they can offer lower rates and better terms for potential homebuyers. That’s the theory.

I am interested to hear why the Fed is supporting the GSE debt and securitized assets that derive their value from the mortgages (MBS) rather than the mortgages themselves. The Fed could allocate a similar stock of resources to mortgages directly, where the effect would be immediate (mitigating foreclosures or offering better terms directly). However, I assume that the Federal Reserve Act prevents the Fed from doing such a thing – that sort of action probably lies in the hands of Congress. Although the immediate effects do appear to be quite positive.

Expect the Fed’s balance sheet to rise by another $100 billion (at least) in two weeks. It is official: the Fed is monetizing government debt."

So, the Fed is monetizing government debt.

Here's my comment:

Blogger Don said...

From Bloomberg: Rebecca, Can you tell me why they won't say so publicly, if you agree that this is what they're doing:

"The U.S. officials, speaking on condition of anonymity, said they don’t see the Fed purchases of mortgage bonds as a way of “quantitative easing,” or using central bank policy to add reserves to the banking system when interest rates are very low, even though the purchases will have that effect. "

Why didn't they just ask Poole? He's not shy.

"Quantitative easing was a tool of monetary policy that the Bank of Japan used to fight deflation in the early 2000s.

The BOJ had been maintaining short-term interest rates at close to their minimum attainable zero values since 1999. More recently, the BOJ has also been flooding commercial banks with excess liquidity to promote private lending, leaving commercial banks with large stocks of excess reserves, and therefore little risk of a liquidity shortage.[1]
The BOJ accomplished this by buying much more government bonds than would be required to set the interest rate to zero. It also bought asset-backed securities, equities and extended the terms of its commercial paper purchasing operation."

I'm not sure why, if it's going to have that effect, it wouldn't be considered a positive side effect.

Don the libertarian Democrat

November 26, 2008 2:20 PM

Here's Rebecca's reply:
"Rebecca Wilder said...

Hi Don,

Good to hear from you?

Honestly, I don’t know what else you could call it – government purchasing MBS and credit directly? That sounds like quantitative easing to me – and Kohn said that the easing has already started. http://blogs.wsj.com/economics/2008/11/19/feds-kohn-deflation-risk-bigger-but-still-small/

In my book, the Fed can call it whatever it likes – monetization, easing, whatever - it’s not like they are going to tell us anyway. To me, the Fed purchasing MBS is better than an outright purchase of Treasuries because the yields on those bonds are already so low. Why not target an market that is actually going to do some macro-economic good, like the MBS market. I wonder if they will purchase CMBS, too? Probably not, but those spreads are very, very wide.

Thanks for reading and Happy Thanksgiving!

Rebecca"

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