Thursday, May 16, 2013

QE a matter of fact, not going anywhere


It is important to note that “money” is different from “currency”.

Consider it like this:

For a theater that can seat 1200 people, if the owner prints 5000 tickets for one show – the “excess” 3800 tickets will have no value.

Similarly, if the central bankers print “currency” that is more than the amount required for transacting the real goods and services produced in the economy, the “excess” currency will have no value and hence it is not “money”.

The unprecedented bond purchase program of global central bankers, under various schemes and programs, collectively referred to as quantitative easing or QE, has been subject of intense debate in past four years. QE in instant case has two primary objective - (a) lend stability to global financial system which witnessed a complete collapse post Lehman Bros. bankruptcy in 2008; and (b) bring the global economy back to a sustainable higher growth path.

The stability witnessed in the global financial market in the wake of recent crisis in Cyprus does indicate to the success of QE program in bringing a reasonable degree of stability to the global financial system. However, the critics find it worth little use in promoting economic growth and hence call for its withdrawal. Any suggestion of withdrawal of QE usually evokes nervous response from investors.

In our view, QE is now a matter of fact and will remain so till it completely outlives its utility – not likely in next 3yrs at the least, most likely till the time EU economy shows definite signs of revival, Japan achieves its objective of creating nominal inflation in the economy and gets out of decades of stagnation, and global trade rebalancing especially in relation to China makes steady progress.

Insofar as the extent and impact of QE is concerned, there are many sensational reports doing the rounds. We would like to take a rather simplistic view of the situation.

We all know that currency is nothing but an “unsecured zero interest bond” that usually loses its value with the passage of time. Under various QE programs, central bankers in the developed world, especially US Federal Reserve (Fed), European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of Japan (BoJ) and Bank of England (BoE), have been exchanging interest bearing sovereign and corporate bonds with virtual currency – thereby augmenting the state income at the expense of fearful savers. If they are successful in creating acceptable level of inflation in the global economy, they will also make capital gains as the “currency” in the hands of savers depreciates in its value. Moreover, this has created artificial scarcity in the global debt market and hence allowing the governments to borrow at lower cost. (see here)

Those who fear “withdrawal” need to understand that QE is a goose that is laying diamond eggs (gold is not a good analogy these days) every day. Why would someone kill it?

For records, Cumulative bond buying since 2008 by four major central banks alone - the Fed, Bank of Japan, European Central Bank and Bank of England - reached more than $4 trillion this year. Added to existing holdings, that brings their total to $5.2 trillion.

With new Fed purchases of Treasury bonds set to top $1 trillion in 2013 and Bank of Japan bond buying more than half that amount, the year-end total will be about $6.5 trillion.

And as both the Fed's and the Bank of Japan's bond buying will exceed new bond sales by their governments by at least $100 billion this year, there will be fewer bonds around this year than last despite all the new debt sales.

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