23/09 Monetary policy - A few thoughts about the Fed



Sep 23rd 2011, 17:07 by R.A. | WASHINGTON
AS THE headline promises, here are a few quick thoughts about monetary policy.
1) I mentioned yesterday that given the intensity of the political uproar over monetary policy of late, the Fed would likely be even more reluctant than normal to take action in the months leading up to the 2012 election. That means the Fed is quickly running out of opportunities to make big, near-term course corrections to policy. And that means thatthis, via Tim Duy, is disconcerting:
Nathan Sheets, who retired as director of the Federal Reserve‘s international affairs group this summer, said he believes the central bank will pause for a while after taking unconventional steps in August and September to bring down long-term interest rates as it assesses the impact of its actions.
“I wouldn’t expect at its November meeting the Fed is going to roll out some additional package,” he said in an interview.
The Fed isn't leaving itself much time to act.
2) The Fed isn't the only institution that can conduct "monetary policy". The Treasury can, too. Douglas Irwin recently published a paper showing that the Treasury's decision to sterilise gold inflows from 1936 to 1938 had a sharply contractionary effect on monetary policy, pulling the American economy into the "recession within a depression". James Hamilton notes that during QE2 the Treasury ramped up its issuance of long-term Treasuries, essentially cancelling out the impact of the Fed's purchases of same. Mr Hamilton goes on to note that during the original "Operation Twist", the Fed and the Treasury were cooperating. If Fed and Treasury policy continue to be at odds with each other, then new Fed purchases may be even less effective than the 1960s version.
3) Monetary policy works through a number of mechanisms. As the Fed has responded to the crisis, it has become clear that Ben Bernanke places a big emphasis on the impact of the Fed's market operations on interest rates and, through them, on the economy. Some monetary economists argue that this policy channel is less important and less powerful than the Fed's influence on expectation. When Fed purchases have a strong impact on the economy, for instance, that seems largely to be due to the signaling power those purchases have and the resulting shift in market expectations.
There is ample support for this line of thinking in the literature (consider these two very recent papers, for instance). Just last month, monetary economist Michael Woodford argued forcefully in the Financial Times that the Fed was falling short of its policy goals by declining to communicate clearly where it wants the economy to go and what actions are likely to be taken when to get it there.
There are signs of an ongoing debate within the Federal Open Market Committee concerning how to deploy these tools. The change in the Fed's language in August hinting that it would likely not raise rates for the next two years represented a—short, halting—step toward greater deployment of the expectations channel. Two things seem clear to me, however. First, it makes little sense to argue that monetary policy is impotent when the Fed has scarcely touched its strongest weapon. And second, to the extent that the Fed's move this weak emphasised its focus on a portfolio-balance model of monetary policy rather than an expectations-based outlook, there's plenty there to account for market disappointment.
The Fed can and should do more, but it's far from clear that it will.

23/09 FRBにも万能薬はない



2011/9/23付
 米連邦準備理事会(FRB)が金融緩和策の強化に動いた。保有資産の中身を入れ替え、長期国債の購入を増やす。今のFRBに景気浮揚の万能薬はない。効果に限界があるのは承知のうえで、可能な政策手段を繰り出すしかないだろう。
 21日の米連邦公開市場委員会(FOMC)では、市場が予想していた「ツイスト・オペ」の実施を決めた。期間6~30年の長期国債4000億ドル(約31兆円)を来年6月末までに購入し、その代わりに3年以下の国債を同額売却するという。
 資産規模を変えずに長期国債の購入を増やすことで、長期金利の低下を促す狙いがある。量的緩和の第3弾(QE3)は資産の拡大を通じて大量の資金を供給するため、物価上昇圧力が高まりやすい。その弊害を避けるべきだと判断した。
 米経済の減速懸念は確かに強い。住宅市場や家計債務の調整が長引き、雇用の改善も遅れているのは心配だ。欧州の信用不安が収まらず、世界経済危機に発展する可能性も否定できない。FRBが景気の下支えに全力を挙げるのは当然である。
 しかし目覚ましい成果は期待できそうにない。過去最低の水準を記録した米長期金利の低下余地は乏しい。FRBは少なくとも2013年半ばまで、事実上のゼロ金利政策を続ける方針も確認した。持てる政策手段をうまく組み合わせ、緩和効果を少しでも高める必要がある。
 米政府もFRB頼みの限界を認識しているはずだ。オバマ大統領が4470億ドルの景気・雇用対策を打ち出したのは妥当である。財政・金融両面の対応が今の米国には欠かせない。中長期的な財政健全化に責任を持ちながら、短期的には対策の実行を急がなければならない。
 米経済の悪化が鮮明になるようなら、もちろん追加緩和も必要になる。今回のFOMC声明も「深刻な下振れリスクがある」と指摘し、今後の対応に含みを残した。新興国などの反発は避けられないが、QE3の準備を怠るべきではない。
 日本を含む主要20カ国・地域(G20)の財務相・中央銀行総裁会議が22日、ワシントンで開かれる。欧州不安だけでなく米経済の情勢についても、広く認識を共有してほしい。

23/09 G20財務相・中央銀行総裁会議 声明文の要旨



2011/9/23 19:14
◆世界経済の課題 
ソブリン(政府債務)問題、金融システムの脆弱性、市場の混乱、弱い経済成長、高い失業率により高まっている下方リスクに対処するため、力強く協調のとれた国際的対応を確認する。
◆ユーロ圏 
ユーロ圏は財政の持続可能性を確保するための主要な手段をとってきている。ユーロ圏は次回のG20会合(10月)までに欧州金融安定基金(EFSF)の柔軟性を増す行動を取っているだろう。
◆日米 
米国は財政改革とあわせ、成長と雇用を強化するための相当な規模の対策を打ち出した。日本は中期的な財政健全化を維持しつつ、東日本大震災の復興のための本格的な財政措置を実施しつつある。
◆新興国 
新興国は安定性と持続的な成長を維持するために、マクロ経済政策を状況に応じて調整している。新興国経済が為替レートの一層の柔軟性を高め、さらに内需主導の成長に向かうことで、世界経済の成長に対する貢献は増すだろう。
◆為替 
為替レートの過度な変動や無秩序な動きは、経済や金融の安定に対して悪影響を与えることを再確認する。
◆行動計画 
信頼できる財政健全化計画を実施し、強固で持続可能な均衡ある成長を確保する。(11月に開かれる)G20首脳会議に向けて協調的な政策についての行動計画を策定する。
◆金融システム 
銀行システムと金融市場の安定を保つために必要なすべての行動をとる。銀行が十分な資本や資金を調達することを確保する。中央銀行は引き続き、必要な場合に銀行に流動性を供給する準備がある。

23/09 Asian stocks have fallen after slide in US and Europe



ASX in SydneyWorries about a global recession have intensified after warnings from the IMF and World Bank
Asian stocks have fallen on Friday, driving towards their worst weekly losses since 2008, after a sharp sell-off in the US and Europe.
The G20 said they were ready to preserve stability in the financial markets after Thursday's falls, when European indexes fell about 5%.
But South Korea's main Kospi index shed 5.7%, while Australia's ASX lost 1.6%.
The latest market slump was sparked by a Federal Reserve warning about the weak outlook for the US economy.
A number of gloomy comments about global growth, particularly from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and World Bank, then combined to sour market sentiment further.
On Thursday, Christine Lagarde, head of the IMF, said the global economic situation was entering a "dangerous place".
Robert Zoellick, the World Bank president, said separately he thought the world was in a "danger zone".
Market moves
These comments, along with weak economic data out of China, sent Taiwan's main index sliding by 3.6% and Hong Kong's down 2%.
Japan's Nikkei index is closed for a holiday.

Start Quote

There still seems to be a large gap between what economists and markets say is needed - and politicians are able to provide. ”
Commodity markets also took a hit, with copper sinking 7.5% and Brent crude oil futures posting their biggest single-day loss in six weeks.
Global miners were among the biggest losers on concerns about slowing demand for minerals.
Rio Tinto fell 3.3%, after losing 10.8% in London trade, and BHP Billiton lost 2.3% after falling 8.3% overnight.
"Anything sort of leveraged to the global growth story is being sold off hard because people are questioning whether or not we are going to see a global recession," said Cameron Peacock from IG markets.
'Coordinated action'
The negative sentiment weighed on markets despite attempts by policymakers to inject some urgency into their attempts to fix the European debt crisis.
The G20 countries, which are also meeting in Washington alongside the IMF and World Bank, said they were ready to take action.
"We commit to take all necessary actions to preserve the stability of banking systems and financial markets as required," G20 officials said in a communique after a dinner meeting to discuss the European crisis.

Hong Kong Hang Seng Index

LAST UPDATED AT 23 SEP 2011, 08:02 GMT*CHART SHOWS LOCAL TIMEHang Seng intraday chart
valuechange%
17668.83-
-243.12
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-1.36
Analysts said the markets were expecting some concrete action from the group, and so the comments were unlikely to alleviate the current turmoil.
"The bottom line is they need to follow up with action. Until markets see coordinated action, they're not going to get a lot more confident," said Shane Oliver, head of investment strategy at AMP Capital.
Euro rise
It may not have calmed the markets, but the statement from the G20 helped the euro recover losses on Friday.
The euro strengthened 0.5% against the US dollar to $1.3530, rebounding from a 0.8% drop yesterday.
The currency also climbed 0.6% versus the yen to 103.24 yen, the first gain in six days.
US stock futures and oil rebounded as well.
Asian currencies, however, weakened with the Korean won sinking to its lowest level in a year.
Authorities in South Korea and India said they were ready to intervene in markets to support their currencies.
Indonesia's central bank said on Thursday that it was taking steps to support the rupiah.
'Sentiment downdraught'
Separately, the major emerging nations that form the Brics countries - Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa - said they may lend money to the IMF and other financial institutions to help ease global financing issues.

Europe economy essentials

Analysts said that concerns about the political and policy response will affect markets globally.
"We'll certainly be caught in the downdraught of negative sentiment for markets today," said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist from CMC Markets in Sydney.
"The concern here is that the sentiment is weighing on lending markets and... we could see a freezing of credit markets in Europe."
However, he added that in the future, Asia's better economic growth may help markets bounce back.
"Looking forward there is the opportunity, I think, for a much better performance from the Asian region, mainly because of the superior growth in the economies of Asia."

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