Tuesday, November 4, 2008

"concern that central bank demand may not rise as fast as Treasury supply."

Interesting Brad Setser post. Read him for all the facts, which he is amazing at marshaling and making coherent. Also read the comments, they're often quite incisive, and Brad Setser replies, which is great:

"Nonetheless, central banks are unlikely to match the extraordinary pace of reserve growth that characterized much of 2007 and 2008. That though doesn’t necessarily imply that US Treasury rates will have to rise dramatically to induce private investors to absorb the increase in Treasury supply. Not so long as economic climate remains so bad. Yesterday’s data was awful. And the recent fall in consumption suggests that Americans will soon start saving a bit. Their appetite for risky assets has already fallen. That means more demand for safe assets. Investors who reached for yield in the boom times got burned; many may play it safe.

Consequently, whileCalculated Risk worries about fall in Chinese demand for Treasuries, I worry more that China’s steps to stimulate its economy won’t be vigorous enough. Right now, demand for the world’s goods seems to be falling fast . Demand for safe financial assets is not. And Treasuries — judging from their yields — are still considered safe. At the margin, I would rather see China step up its imports of goods and services than continue its current pace of Treasury purchases."

I'm thinking that banks will have to raise interest rates to attract capital from investors, but not if the government bails them out. On the other hand, I can see the reasoning that would keep government interest rates lower. All of this, for me, is only short term. I'm the only person worrying, not about deflation, but inflation. I find the effects of the crosscurrents here quite amazing. Thank God for blogs like Setser's and Calculated Risk.

Also notice this in my continuing Lehman brief:

"Indeed, the total increase in Treasuries in the market between August 2007 and August 2008 — i.e. before Lehman’s default triggered the current crisis and the huge surge in Treasury borrowing — has been quite large. Think $425b from the Fed’s balance sheet (an outright fall of $305b, and another $115b increase in securities lent out over that time frame) and roughly $400b of new Treasury issuance (see the monthly statements of the public debt)."

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