"And for all the talk of how foreign central banks are intrinsically stabilizing forces in the market, the real heavy lifting has all been done by the Fed (with a bit of help from the Treasury). The world’s reserve managers may have been a stabilizing force in the currency markets in the third quarter — we will have to see what the IMF’s COFER data tells us (and read the tea leaves to guess what China has been doing; to stabilize the market it should be stepping up its purchases of euros, pounds and Australian dollars … ). But they clearly haven’t been a stabilizing force in the US credit market. In the first two weeks of November they added over $30 billion to their Treasury holdings at the New York Fed while continuing to scale back their Agency holdings. Paul Swartz of the Council’s Center for Geoeconomic Studies (check out its coverage of the Leaders 20) and I tried to illustrate how the Fed has been taking on credit risk even as other central banks have pulled back.
We plotted the y/y change in the Fed’s holdings of Treasuries (including Treasuries that have been lent out through the Fed’s securities lending facility) against the y/y change in foreign central banks holdings of Treasuries and Agencies. There is little doubt that Fed has been selling Treasuries — and other central banks have been big buyers."
"Was This Another Signal We Missed?
Brad Setser posts:
"The story is simple, at least in my view. Most foreign demand for US assets over this period came from central banks. And they increasingly only wanted to buy Treasuries."
And this didn't turn out to be a good thing. But did it signal our crisis?"
The story is simple, at least in my view. Most foreign demand for US assets over this period came from central banks. And they increasingly only wanted to buy Treasuries. I love this graph:
"UPDATE: Here is a graph of foreign holdings of long-term Agencies. Notice the recent fall.
The TIC data can be found here. This report draws on both the short-term stock data and the long-term flow data.
Is there a point in a philosophical analysis of these kinds of issues? I say yes.
"within a general trend (central bank financing of the us deficit) there can be subtrends -- and for a while central bank demand had shifted from agencies to treasuries ... and (harder to document but true) some central banks were also buying more corporate bonds (including the bonds issued by big us banks). so the composition of central bank demand has evolved ... "
I must be missing something. This makes sense to me.
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