“Crisis Management Reliquefication Mode” - by Doug Noland
All Eyes on The Greenback
As is only fitting for a year of historic volatility, the final week of
year-2000 was another wild one with extraordinary divergences. The bluechips had a positive finish, with the Dow
and S&P500 gaining 1%. The Transports and
Morgan Stanley Cyclical index added 3%, while the Morgan Stanley Consumer index jumped 5%. The small caps rallied strongly, gaining almost 5%
and cutting year-to-date losses to 4%. The
Utilities gained 1%. The S&P400 Mid-Cap
index rose 3%, increasing year-2000 gains to 16%. The
financial stocks were mixed, with the S&P Bank index unchanged and the AMEX
Broker/Dealer index jumping 4%. The New York Stock Exchange Financial index ended with a
year-2000 gain of 25%, with yesterdays close a record high. The Biotechs declined 1%
this week. Tech stocks were sold heavily into
todays close, with the NASDAQ100 dropping 4% this week. The Morgan Stanley High Tech index declined 1%
this week, while the Semiconductors dropped 2%. The
Street.com Internet index declined 6%, while the NASDAQ Telecommunications index actually
added 1%. Gold stocks declined 2%.
The credit market ended the year with a negative tone. For the week, 2-year Treasury yields increased 8
basis points, 5-year 9 basis points, 10-year 10 basis points, and the long-bond 6 basis
points. The yield on the benchmark Fannie Mae
Mortgage-back jumped 9 basis points to 6.90%. Agency
securities under performed, as yields generally increased 11 basis points. With the dollar faltering and perceptions
seemingly backing away from the economy falling off a cliff, the credit market
appears quite vulnerable. The 10-year dollar
swap widened 1 basis point to 102. Junk bond
and corporate debt securities generally outperformed, with spreads narrowing between 2 to
10 basis points. The dollar continues to
trade poorly, dropping about 1% this week.
When pondering the possible emotions experienced by Wall Street executives
after closing out another tumultuous year, I couldnt help but remember a Saturday
Night Live skit that aired shortly after the completion of impeachment proceedings. A particularly smug looking President Clinton
(played superbly by Darrell Hammond) came to the podium for a news conference, spoke the
words I am Bulletproof and then left the stage.
Indeed, Wall Street has good reason to feel bulletproof as
another year comes to an end. The Street has
not only survived, but it has prospered mightily through the early 1990s financial
crisis, the credit market and Mexican collapse in 1994/95, SE Asia in 1997, the Russia and
LTCM debacle in 1998, more credit market dislocation and the Y2K scare last year, and,
just completed, NASDAQs largest decline in history and a virtual collapse in the
junk bond market. Over this long boom cycle,
there has been recurring amazement as to the resiliency of the great U.S.
supertanker economy and the diversity and vigor of its phenomenal financial
system. This year is no exception, although
the true source of this resiliency has become as conspicuous as it is enormous.
We see that M3 money supply increased a stunning $56
billion last week to more than $7 trillion. Over
the past four weeks, broad money supply has expanded by $105 billion. This is a continuation of what has been a truly
historic monetary expansion over the past three years, with broad money supply (M3)
increasing an unfathomable $1.64 trillion, or 30%. During
this period, money market fund assets have surged $800 billion, or 75%, to an astounding
$1.9 trillion. Outstanding Asset-backed
Commercial Paper (held by the money market funds) has more than doubled to surpass $620
billion, expanding by 21% this year. Curiously,
after growing only moderately during the first-half, money market fund assets exploded
$205 billion during the past six months. The
Federal Reserve publishes data for both retail and institutional funds. With two week remaining, institutional money fund
assets have increased $155 billion this year, or 25%, to $780 billion.
Earlier in the year I wrote a commentary where I
attempted to illustrate, using journal entries, the process of monetary
expansion through the increase in money market fund assets (Mar.10,
2000-Commercial Paper). I will take
another spin at this type of analysis, using a hopefully realistic example of a mechanism
that I believe has played a critical role in recent monetary expansion. Here, the analytical focus is on the concept of
electronic money, and the notion that contemporary money is simply journal entries on the
Big Electronic Ledger. Electronic entries comprise our current financial
system. Admittedly, it takes thinking like an
accountant to makes sense of this line of analysis my apologies. We suggest that T Accounts may be
helpful in following these entries.
Lets say we have a system comprised of five
entities, Fannie Mae, Goldman Sachs, Microsoft Insiders, the Household Sector, and a Money
Market Fund. Attempting to make this
simple example more realistic, for our purposes Fannie Mae begins with a
balance sheet that includes Total Assets of $500 billion, consisting entirely of Holdings
of Mortgage Receivables from the Household Sector. On
the right side of the balance sheet, Fannie has total liabilities of $500
billion, consisting of $200 billion in Commercial Paper Borrowings Owed to Money
Market Fund and $300 billion of Long-Term Debt ($200 billion held by Goldman Sachs
and $100 billion held by the Household Sector). Money
Market Fund has Total Assets of $400 billion, consisting of $200 billion of Holdings
of Fannie Mae (IOUs) Commercial Paper and $200 billion Holdings of Goldman
Sachs (Repurchase agreements with Fannie Mae Long-Term Debt as Collateral) Commercial
Paper. Money Market Fund, of course, also has $400 billion of liabilities -
Deposits Owed to The Household Sector. Goldman
Sachs has Assets of $200 billion - Holdings
of Fannie Mae Long-Term Debt as well as $200 billion of Liabilities -
Short-Term Borrowings from Money Market Fund (Repo). Goldman Sachs derivative desk also has an
Off Balance Sheet Liability, a Put Option Contract written to Microsoft
Insiders insuring them against a decline in their $100 billion holdings of Microsoft stock
(insurance that kept these insiders from liquidating positions).
The Household Sector has Total Assets of $1.1
trillion, $400 billion of Deposits at Money Market Funds, $100 billion of Fannie Mae
Long-Term Debt Securities (held on account at Goldman Sachs) and $600 billion market value
of Residences (with real estate inflation increasing housing values by $50 billion during
the year). On the Liability side, the
Household Sector has $500 billion of Mortgage Debt Owed to Fannie Mae, while enjoying a
$600 billion bonanza of Net Worth. Microsoft
Insiders have $100 billion of Microsoft Stock and rights as the holder of the Goldman
Sachs Put Option Contract.
Now assume that the technology bubble has burst,
with Microsofts stock in the midst of a severe decline. Marketplace liquidity rapidly falters (margin
calls, etc.!). This is a particularly
problematic development for the Goldman Sachs derivative desk, on the hook for the
downside on $100 billion of Microsoft shares. Goldman
is forced to dynamically hedge (sell short the stock as it declines) to
mitigate its exposure to collapsing stock prices. With
systemic liquidity disappearing as a sinking technology sector feeds a self-reinforcing
deleveraging (margin calls and hedging-related selling), the alarm bells ring. The financial sector goes into Crisis
Management Reliquefication Mode (CMRM).
CMRM entails immediate and aggressive action,
with the old stalwart Goldman Sachs leading the charge.
The firm takes a major leveraged position in Fannie Mae Long-Term Debt
Securities to the tune of $50 billion. Since
these are top-rated securities, this transaction is easily consummated by Goldman
borrowing $50 billion in the money market (from the Money Market Fund using Fannie Mae
Securities as collateral a repurchase agreement). These funds are used to purchase $50
billion of the Household Sectors Fannie Mae Long-Term Debt Securities, held on
account at Goldman Sachs. The $50 billion of
proceeds are instantly deposited (electronic journal entry!) into the Money Market Funds
on behalf of the client, the (now much more liquid) Household Sector. In this case, Goldmans balance sheet
increases by $50 billion to $250 billion, with Holdings of Long-Term Fannie Mae Securities
increasing $50 billion (to $250 billion) and Borrowings from Money Market Fund
(Repo) also increasing $50 billion (to $250 billion). Total Household Sector Assets remain the same at
$1.1 trillion. While Holdings of Fannie Mae Long-Term Debt Securities were reduced by $50
billion (to $50 billion), Money Market Fund Deposits increased $50 billion (to $450
billion). Through this leveraged transaction
(an increase in financial sector liabilities/an expansion of financial credit!), Money
Market Fund assets (broad money supply!) actually increased by $50 billion to $450
billion, with $250 billion of Holdings of Goldman Sachs Commercial Paper
(Repo) and $200 billion of Fannie Mae Commercial Paper. Money Market Fund liabilities Deposits Owed
to Household Sector increased by $50 billion to $450 billion. Hopefully, this illustrates how financial sector
leveraging increases so-called liquidity, or the money supply.
Goldmans aggressive purchases, as presumed
(because its worked so many times in the past!), lead to surging bond prices and a
collapse in market interest rates. Sharply
lower mortgage borrowing costs, as expected, incite the Household Sector to move quickly
to refinance home mortgages. This is a
particularly powerful mechanism for credit creation, as the Household Sector continues to
benefit from extraordinary housing price inflation (fueled by continued lending excess by
Fannie Mae!). Conditioned by steady housing
gains and a the perception of enormous Net Worth, the Household Sector chooses
to extract (monetize) $50 billion of housing gains during this round of
refinancings with Fannie Mae. For this
transaction (Household Sector extracting $50 billion of home equity), Fannie Mae Borrows
$50 billion from the Money Market fund, which is transferred to the Money
Market accounts of the refinancing Homeowners (again, through electronic journal entries). In this transaction, Fannie Maes balance
sheet expands by $50 billion (to $550 billion), with Mortgage Loans Receivable from
Household Sector increasing $50 billion (to $550 billion).
Liabilities increase by $50 billion, as Short-Term Borrowings from Money
Market Fund increasing to $250 billion, while Long-Term Borrowings remain the same at $300
billion. Money Market Fund assets -
Holdings of Fannie Mae (IOUs) Commercial Paper increase $50 billion,
while the liability - Deposits Owed to the Household Sector also increases $50
billion to $500 billion. The Household
Sectors balance sheet expands by $50 billion, as it takes on $50 billion of
additional debt (Mortgage Debt Owed to Fannie Mae), while the asset - Deposits at Money
Market Funds - increases $50 billion to $500 billion.
The Household Sector, now with $100 billion
additional liquidity (Deposits at Money Market!) - $50 billion of proceeds from the earlier sale of
Fannie Mae Long-Term Debt Security sales to Goldman, and $50 billion from
monetizing home equity - has now been liquefied, providing ample
means to continue its annual pension plan contributions (held, of course, at Goldman
Sachs). With Goldmans popular
strategist calling for a sharply higher share price and constant propaganda that stocks
always increase in value over the long-term, the Household Sector uses its newfound (after
the Household Sector savings rate going negative!) liquidity to purchase $100
billion of Microsoft stock. This is
Plan Well Executed, as it lets the Goldman Sachs derivative trading operation
off the hook, providing desperately needed buyers for the Microsoft stock that
they had to sell short to hedge the Put Option they wrote.
Immediately upon receipt of the proceeds from sale, these funds are
deposited into Money Market Fund accounts, to be paid at maturity for settlement of the
Put Option Contract to the Microsoft Insiders. Looking
at the outcome of this transaction, Household Sector assets are unchanged, with Holdings
of Microsoft Stock increasing $100 billion and Deposits at Money Market Fund decreasing
$100 billion to $400 billion. Money Market
Fund assets are unchanged at $500 billion, with Household Deposits decreasing $100 billion
and Goldmans account to be paid to Microsoft Insiders increasing $100 billion.
No doubt about it, Crisis Management
Reliquefication Mode works like magic, creating perceived wealth and buying
power with the ease of entries on the Big Electronic Ledger. And the more acute the systemic stress, the
greater must be these efforts to create the additional liquidity necessary to
keep this game going. All this massive
leveraging and financial sector liability creation does create enormous revenues for the
government, as well as delusions of multi-trillion dollar surpluses. But make no mistake, this game does require
continued confidence in the U.S. financial markets.
I have written how this experiment
in electronic money has ominous parallels to John Laws fateful foray into paper
money. Interestingly, when confidence
ebbed and Laws scheme of managed money began to falter, he also took
rather draconian actions to sustain his financial bubble.
Importantly, he used note issuance (credit creation) from the Royal Bank to
support (liquefy) the faltering Mississippi Bubble. Further, (from Antoin E. Murphys excellent
book, John Law - Economic Theorist and Policy-Maker), Law used the domestic
exchange-rate changes produced through devaluations and revaluations of the money of
account (not unlike todays money market balances!), not for fiscal reasons, but to
increase the attractiveness of banknotes vis-à-vis specie and to achieve his long-term
objective, the demonetization of specie (gold and silver).
There were three distinct stages in his use of domestic exchange-rate
changes to achieve his monetary objective
The third phase of Laws operations
started (when the Mississippi Bubble began to falter) in the summer of 1719 and gathered
pace during the early months of 1720. In the
initial stages it involved an attempt to reduce the value of gold and silver relative to
banknotes, ultimately followed by a policy announcing the complete demonetization of gold
and a phased series of reductions in silver. From
May 1719 the price of gold had been progressively reduced
this policy was aimed at
making banknotes more attractive than specie for the public. Law understood clearly that any mass exodus from
shares would be catastrophic to his entire system, so strong measures were taken to keep
the crowd in the market (like we see today).
While it ended in catastrophe, this period
provided some great and pertinent economic thinking.
We again would like to highlight a few timeless quotes from Richard
Cantillon, a contemporary of John Laws who profited handsomely from the Mississippi
Bubble and went on to write his brilliant Essai, one of the great early works
in economics.
It is then undoubted that a bank with
the complicity of a Minister is able to raise and support the price of public stock and to
lower the rate of interest in the state at the pleasure of this Minister when the steps
are taken discreetly, and thus pay off the state debt
but these refinements
which open the door to making large fortunes are rarely carried out for the sole advantage
of the state, and those who take part in them are generally corrupted.
An abundance of fictitious and imaginary
money causes the same disadvantages as an increase of real money in circulation, by
raising the price of land and labour, or by making works and manufacturers more expensive
at the risk of subsequent loss. But this
furtive abundance vanishes at the first gust of discredit and precipitates disorder.
The excess banknotes, made and issued on
these occasions, do not upset the circulation, because being used for the buying and
selling of stock that do not serve for household expenses and are not changed into silver.
But if some panic or unforeseen crisis drove holders to demand silver from the Bank,
the bomb would burst and it would be seen that these are dangerous operations.
This last quote resonates particularly clearly in our
minds. Back in 1998, when the financial
sector went into Crisis Management Reliquefication Mode, most of the new money created did
not upset the circulation, because being used for the buying and selling of stock
that did not serve for household expenses. And
while it goes unappreciated, we believe it is critical to appreciate that this past year
saw a significantly larger percentage of additional money creation feed directly into
ballooning trade deficits. This is
structural, as years of credit excess have impacted wages while also fostering economic
distortions, including the gutting of our industrial base. We certainly expect this situation to only
worsen, with the current refinancing boom perpetuating the over consumption of imports. This will only exacerbate stubborn trade deficits,
and create what will be a key issue for the upcoming year
Wall Street and the Fed have one key advantage
not enjoyed by John Law. Most alternative
vehicles (gold, foreign currencies, other stores of value) outside of the Great U.S.
Financial Bubble remain in general disrepute, so Laws efforts to devalue alternative
vehicles are seemingly not as critical. Today,
the alternative to stocks is, most conveniently for Wall Street, the money
market fund they manage. One cannot overstate
how the money market has developed into a central mechanism for the Great Financial
Bubble. However, this is not sound money, but
a New Age monetary scheme. This
precarious monetary regime is backed by inflated asset values and is acutely dependent on
constant and massive liquidity creation to sustain levitated asset prices. The asset bubble requires enormous money
creation, while money creation in this scheme requires rising asset prices. An accident waiting to happen
We constantly waver between believing that
Greenspan understands the severity of this great bubble, and the alternative view that he
is rather clueless. We certainly
take issue with his past comments addressing bubble dynamics. It is our view that the piercing of the great U.S.
bubble will be the key issue for 2000 (and years to come), so we would like to highlight
Greenspans thinking on this issue:
One of the important issues for the FOMC as
it has made such judgments in recent years has been the weight to place on asset prices.
As I have already noted, history suggests that owing to the growing optimism that may
develop with extended periods of economic expansion, asset price values can climb to
unsustainable levels even if product prices are relatively stable.
The 1990s have witnessed one of the great bull
stock markets in American history. Whether that means an unstable bubble has developed in
its wake is difficult to assess. A large number of analysts have judged the level of
equity prices to be excessive, even taking into account the rise in "fair value"
resulting from the acceleration of productivity and the associated long-term corporate
earnings outlook.
But bubbles generally are perceptible only
after the fact. To spot a bubble in advance requires a judgment that hundreds of
thousands of informed investors have it all wrong. Betting against markets is usually
precarious at best. While bubbles that burst are scarcely benign, the consequences need
not be catastrophic for the economy.
The bursting of the Japanese bubble a decade ago
did not lead immediately to sharp contractions in output or a significant rise in
unemployment. Arguably, it was the subsequent failure to address the damage to the
financial system in a timely manner that caused Japan's current economic problems.
Likewise, while the stock market crash of 1929 was destabilizing, most analysts attribute
the Great Depression to ensuing failures of policy. And certainly the crash of October
1987 left little lasting imprint on the American economy.
This all leads to the conclusion that monetary
policy is best primarily focused on stability of the general level of prices of goods and
services as the most credible means to achieve sustainable economic growth. Should
volatile asset prices cause problems, policy is probably best positioned to address the
consequences when the economy is working from a base of stable product prices. Monetary
policy and the economic outlook, Before the Joint Economic Committee, U.S. Congress
June 17, 1999
We strongly disagree that the subsequent
failure to address the damage to the financial system in a timely manner caused Japan's
current economic problems, and this entire analysis will keep economists busy
for years to come. Japans protracted
financial and economic difficulties are primarily the unavoidable consequences of wild
boom-time financial excess. Still, through
it all, the Japanese economy has run large trade surpluses while enjoying significant
household savings. These two factors have
been critical in allowing Japan the luxury of dropping interest rates to near
zero with little concern for the yen. This is
one heck of an advantage when an economy suffers from a collapsing bubble, one that has
proved elusive to other countries forced to raise interest rates dramatically to stem
capital outflows. A question for 2001: will the dollars status as the
worlds reserve currency provide the luxury of Japanese-style
interest-rate flexibility, as Wall Street and Greenspan assume? If not, there is one big problem brewing.
I believe that the
general growth in large institutions have occurred in the context of an underlying
structure of market in which many of the larger risks are dramatically or, I should
say, fully hedged. That is not to say
that I have no concerns that at some point were going to run into institutional
failures. We will. We always have.
Theres no conceivable scenario of which I am aware which says that we
will not have those type of problems. I think
the crucial issue is, one, how do we keep the probability that they will occur to a
minimum; and secondarily, to be certain that when and if they occur we have mechanisms in
place which effectively either insulate or significantly diminish the impact of such
failure on the rest of the economy. Alan
Greenspan, hearing before the House Banking And Financial Services Committee, July 25,
2000
If Greenspan truly
believes that the explosion in financial sector liabilities is mitigated - many
of the larger risks are dramatically or, I should say, fully hedged - by
sophisticated derivatives and hedging strategies, lord help us all. Interestingly, but not surprisingly, the collapse
of the technology bubble and the faltering junk bond market has led Wall Street to
circle the wagons. Almost without
exception, the key players in the Wall Street Credit Machine have experienced strong stock
prices. We see that the AMEX Securities
Broker/Dealer index gained 26% this year. Fannie
Mae jumped 40% and Freddie Mac 46%. Credit
insurer MBIA gained 40% and Ambac surged 67%. Aggressive
consumer lenders Providian gained 26% and Capital One 37%.
Investment management companies Alliance Capital gained 69% and Franklin
Resources 19%. With Wall Street at the helm of this dysfunctional system, lavish rewards
continue to fall to those perpetuating credit bubble excess.
For 2001, we dont
see the predominant risk being a failure of an individual institution, as much as the
potential for the entire credit mechanism to come under intense scrutiny. The risk going forward is systemic, with a
relatively small group of powerful players and an unprecedented concentration of financial
power. Granted, such an arrangement does
function impressively in keeping the system functioning with the appearance of soundness,
despite acute underlying stress. But, this
goes bring to mind the proverbial bursting
of the dam analogy, come the day confidence wanes for the fragile U.S. financial
system. For the next year, we certainly
expect that the entire logic of derivatives and credit insurance will come to be
questioned. We also expect that the bullish
perception of money market funds as risk free investments/stores of
value is a (major) potential casualty of the unfolding crisis. Wall Street has abused this vehicle, and through
this abuse poisoned our nations money. And
if the marketplace begins to question egregious financial leveraging, derivatives, credit
insurance, and the soundness of money market funds, the GSE bubble will find itself in
jeopardy, and I will leave it at that. Further,
the current path of reckless financial sector leveraging, consumer credit excess, and the
unrelenting accumulation of foreign liabilities guarantee a crisis in confidence for the
dollar, and we do take note of how poorly the dollar traded as the year came to an end.
At the same time, we
dont believe the worst is over for the global financial system. Trouble could come
from overseas, with financial systems throughout Asia an accident waiting to happen. One of these days there will be a major derivative
accident, perhaps out of Japan, Taiwan or South Korea.
And finally, it is worth
noting that as this historic year draws to its conclusion, severe distortions to the real
economy are becoming increasingly conspicuous. The
unfolding energy debacle in California is an example of how quickly such a crisis can
develop and, importantly, how difficult it can be to rectify. But, then again, that is the nature of structural
economic distortions. There are no easy
solutions to such problems, and they certainly are not solved by lower interest rates and
greater credit creation. As should have been
expected after years of money and credit abuse, the list of problem areas is as long as it
is diverse.
David W. Tice & Associates
2 January 2001
DAVID W. TICE manages the Prudent Bear mutual fund.
His Dallas-based research firm advises more than 150
institutional investors. http://www.prudentbear.com