Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Does the Fed know something about banks that we don’t?

TO BE NOTED: From the FT:

The Fed’s bond bombshell

Does the Fed know something about banks that we don’t?

Short View: Fed’s shock and awe

By John Authers, Investment editor

Published: March 18 2009 20:37 | Last updated: March 18 2009 22:06

The Federal Reserve is on a war footing and it is using the Powell doctrine – only go to war as a last resort, and do so with overwhelming force.

The stunning news that it would buy $300bn (€222bn) in Treasury bonds (and spend a lot more on many other fixed-interest securities) also used another classic military strategy. It had the element of surprise.

Even after the central banks of Japan, Switzerland and the UK bought bonds and successfully pushed down interest rates (“quantitative easing“), and even though the Fed said three months ago that it might buy bonds, nobody expected such a drastic move. Fed officials had downplayed it in recent days.

It provoked a drastic market response. Ten-year Treasury yields dropped half a percentage point in minutes. The dollar dropped more than 3 per cent against the euro, its biggest daily fall in many years, and the S&P 500 briefly surged above 800, having hit 666 less than two weeks ago.

The Fed had cover from this week’s inflation data if it did not want to go through with the purchases. Both producer and consumer prices are rising a bit faster than had been thought, providing an argument that drastic rate cuts to fight deflation were not necessary.

Sentiment appeared better. The stock rally came amid stories that banks were making money, and that the term asset-backed securities loan facility (Talf) might revive credit, while 10-year yields, at around 3 per cent, were still historically low.

So why did the Fed do it? The theories are out there. With the AIG bonuses moving public opinion against bail-outs, this may be the only way to pump more public money into credit. Congress will not approve such a thing. Or the Fed may know something about the banking system that others do not.

But for now, the tactic of shock and awe rules.

john.authers@ft.com

www.ft.com/shortview

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