Tuesday, July 10, 2012

AN ENORMOUS SUCCESS

Then again, turning five isn't the hardest thing in the world but the triplets sailed through it with nothing but smiles and laughter.  To be that young and innocent...but we are not and it's back to business.

It would appear that after the great celebration of last week over the supposed solving of Europe's problems, reality has once again set in despite the French note auction of yesterday which immediately after it closed went to a negative yield.  The wise folks out there immediately proclaimed that France was surely in the catagory of Germanydespite the fact that anything in France that looked like a financial institution was ordered to bid on the damn thing and a six month auction tells us nothing about anything  The fact of Spanish yields inching above 7% again tells us a great deal more and none of it is good and the Spanish being given an extra year to meet the financial standards ordered by Brussels (which they have already said they will not meet) tells us a great deal more.  Not only are things not good, they are not getting any better.

Meanwhile, the great Libor scandal continues to grab the headlines with the special commission now trying to figure out who knew what when between the Chairman of Barclays and the CEO.  Yawn.

John Taylor of Stanford and the Hoover Institute, a very smart guy, had a piece in the WSJ the other day saying far more eloquently than I some free standing facts that I have been talking about for some time; to wit if you REALLY want to investigate interest rate manipulation look no further than the world's central banks and by all means start with the Fed.  As opposed to the terrible effects of the Libor manipulation--which, curiously, have yet to be identified--the central banks have caused real damage and it is there for all to see.

With the dollar as the reserve currency there is no point in not singling out the Fed as the culprit in this international dance macabre and the reason begings with one single fact; the dual nature of the Fed's mandate.  Somewhere along the line someone got the bright idea that a central bank should be more than a guardian of the risk of inflation and take on the added duty of assuring, to the greatest extent possible, full employment through the use of monetary tools.  Needless to say, the first role is often ignored in pursuit of the second, and particularly so by the political forces at play as inflation is the greatest friend a free-spending politician can have (not to be redundant) in most cases.  Of course the only tool a central bank has is to regulate the supply of money and in that is the rub: they will never admit to playing with interest rates but that is exactly what they are doing.  When the Fed does it the entire world is affected and the results are often not immediately apparent, not fully understood or simply ignored by the Fed who have adopted the view first expressed by Treasury Secretary James Baker who straightforwardly told a foreign finance minister, "The dollar is your problem not ours."
A more honest man never lived.

The last time the Fed really went after inflation or the threat thereof was back in 1980 when Paul Volker--a Carter appointment of all things--killed it in this country, stone, cold dead through the brutal application of monetary policy.  Of course he killed Latin America stone, cold dead as well and for a full ten years, and damned near killed the American banking system and a few other systems as well, but that was the last time in recent memory that our central bank showed any kind of monetary restraint and what we face today is the result of the distortions in a global marketplace that unfortunately continue and are magnified by the current policy of the administration in Washington.  Tune in tomorrow and we'll try to stroll through the last 20 years of financial history.

2 comments:

  1. You want the Fed to fight inflation? Now? It seems we are again on the verge of a deflationary collapse...there are half a dozen counties printing negative NOMINAL interest rates...consumer deman in China is collapsing...mfg equipment orders in Japan and China are slowing...coal is piling up at Chinese ports....European bank credit is contracting (and they don't have private markets to pick up the slack)....the 10 year is what 1.5%?... James Baker was a hellofa good SecState....

    Be great to get back to 3/6/3 banking where 3 was the rate you paid on deposits, not the rate you earned on Baa corporate bonds or 30 yr Treasuries

    Unfortunately, the Greenspan put remains likely for quite some time

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  2. BTW: my trips turn 15 tomorrow. 10 years goes fast

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