Wednesday, November 26, 2008

"For now, of course, Macro Man has to scratch his head at some of the pricing out there. "

MacroMan sees good news out there:

"Macro Man remains dubious that this is the appropriate conclusion. His view is that the actions of both the Fed and the Treasury, however ineptly communicated (here's lookin' at you, Hank!) simply represent the principle of Ricardian equivalence at work."

I guess he means that there will be no increase in demand.

"The past few decades, but particularly the past few years, have seem enormous rise in private sector leverage....both through traditional lending and derivatives contracts. The past couple of years have seen the total face amount of outstanding derivatives contracts increase at a run rate of $150 trillion dollars per year, according to the BIS.

And guess what? The value of that stuff has gone down. Financial institutions and private sector actors have learned the hard way that assets may come and go, but debt lasts forever. UBS estimates that banks need to raise an additional $1 trillion in capital to offset the amount of forthcoming losses and writedowns."

It seems he believes that banks, are, in essence, saving. I don't read that chart in quite the same way. I see a lot of derivatives yet to be worked out.

"At the end of 2007, Citigroup had more than $2 trillion of assets on their balance sheet. That number will be a lot lower by the time all is said and done. Not that US banks have a monopoly on absurd leverage, of course; at the end of last year Deutsche Bank had over €2 trillion of assets- that's 80% of German GDP. Again, trends in that figure are only going one way moving forwards."

The banks are saving.

"So in Macro Man's view, any dollars "created" by the Fed to expand its balance sheet (and let's not forget, they have yet to really crack out the printing presses by not sterilizing their asset purchases) will merely partially offset dollars lost through de-leveraging and the implosion of the shadow banking system, rather than finding their way into new the purchase of fresh turds."

There's no increase in demand.

"The impact of these programs will, in Macro Man's view, only submarine the dollar once the crisis is resolved and domestic demand begins growing organically again. That seems likely to be several years away, for there is another kind of Ricardian equivalence at work- the ballooning of the US budget deficit should be offset by a sustained rise in the US private sector savings rate.
I don't see how it's different, except that it's individuals saving money, as opposed to banks paying down debt.

"For now, of course, Macro Man has to scratch his head at some of the pricing out there. US sovereign CDS have ballooned out.....
...and are now trading merely a dozen bps below BNP! Are you kidding me? The US government (a flawed beast, to be sure, but the owner of a printing press for the current world reserve currency) a similar credit to a French bank? Puh-leeeez....."

Well, here's where MacroMan's thesis goes a bit sideways, because the CDSs on US Government Bonds, which I've already talked about today, are saying that the risk of default is worse. From MacroMan's point of view, they should have stayed the same, and, quite frankly, be getting better.

"His methodology has served him well this year, and he has little intention of becoming another footnote when the history of today's Ricardian equivalence is written."

Good luck to MacroMan and Casey Mulligan.

No comments: