>When the Fed expands their balance sheet, what they're doing is replacing private-sector assets with liquid cash. Given that the stimulus is appropriate for the economy, this is all fine. It's not anything that future generations have to "pay back." And it's not going to cause a collapse of the dollar.
This is simply not true. The Fed is buying assets at a premium (otherwise counterparties wouldn't sell the assets to the Fed) and is effectively injecting money into the economy. This is a bailout as the Fed is making a liquid market (that otherwise would not exist) for assets, saving the balance sheets of firms. Future generations pay this back not through taxes but through inflation.
Whether or not the U.S. dollar will collapse or not is another topic, but what can be said is that it is not sustainable to continue bailing out irresponsible businesses like banks and others when they do not exercise good business practices like prudence, not being overleveraged, or having a buffer in case of lost revenue. The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before (which would liquidate and clear out bad businesses), or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar whereby more and more money is injected to prop everything up. I'm betting on the latter as the former is too politically inconvenient.
> The Fed is buying assets at a premium (otherwise counterparties wouldn't sell the assets to the Fed)
That's not necessarily true, economic transactions aren't necessarily zero-sum. I would assume for most of the assets being sold to the Fed, the banks need liquid cash more than they need the asset and so would be willing to take a haircut.
>The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before[...], or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar
Why specifically do you think this will happen now when it didn't happen post 2008? Sure the scale so far seems bigger, but also the scale of the hit the "real" economy is taking is much bigger. And, in March, when some of these asset purchases had already started, CPI declined by 0.4%.
Asset managers are front running the Fed. The Fed hasn’t even bought junk corporate bonds yet. They’ve only signaled that they are willing to do so, which immediately sent the price of junk corporate bond ETFs skyrocketing.
If the Fed steps in to save this market they’ll overpay for debt from companies included in these bond ETFs that will likely go under anyway.
It also creates a moral hazard situation where poor performing companies can raise cheap debt because everyone now thinks the Fed will step in and guarantee it.
This is not accurate. A "plummet" in value when it comes to the fallen angels that the Fed is purchasing is more like a 10% drop, and even if you treat the difference between the "true" value of the bonds (if the Fed didn't purchase them) and what the Fed pays as a surplus, the aggregate value of all those surpluses is still tiny in the grand scheme of things.
It likely would have fallen even further, until the fed decided to intervene and buy corporate bond ETFs.
Now LQD has fully recovered and is back to pre-corona virus levels.
More interesting is the rebound in HYG, another Corp bond ETF, which is 50% BB rating, and the remaining 50% below BB rating. I imagine those will get downgraded and be even worst.
Now what happens when companies can’t meet their debt obligations is that covenants will get triggered and that can mean a whole lot of bad things for corporate debt. Which the federal reserve now holds because nobody else wants it.
Yes, this is a good methodology: we should take the lowest point of a random ETF, extrapolate it out, and use that number in our analysis of the Fed's actions.
edit: they edited their comment extensively after I sent this haha.
I'm not saying I agree or disagree given mild inflation trends over the past decade, but how long do you think inflation takes to really get in gear if you're right? We experienced deflation last month according to the consumer price index despite fiscal stimulus and Fed buying assets. [0]
The consumer price index is definitely flawed. However, one thing I've heard is that the massive drop in demand and velocity of money is necessary to consider when analyzing inflation. I also was initially worried about inflation given the massive stimulus numbers we're seeing but have been reconsidering this.
I'm not well-versed in this at all, but demand-pull inflation under Keynesian economics [1] or a drop in V (velocity of money) in the equation of exchange in the monetarist theory of money [2] seem to be what is supporting why folks are worried about deflation. I would venture to guess that this is part of why the Fed is doing these massive buys right now, too.
Tangentially, pointers to good econ learning resources from anyone would be helpful. I've only started with Khan Academy and what I remember from old classes so far.
It's worth noting that part of the reason that inflation statistics are so "low" is that there's an official adjustment done when things cost more but (supposedly) have increased quality, called a "Hedonic quality adjustment"
This adjustment has been made multiple times in recent decades for housing, which is a large part of any given adult's spending.
So the Fed economists keep saying "wow inflation is so low even after we pump gazillions of dollars in during QE", while ignoring the fact that easy money has lead to massive multinationals consolidating control of real estate and jacking prices up.
So even if it is somehow true that houses have gotten better in some ways (I'm not really convinced), that doesn't matter to people lower on the income scale where the price of housing is the difference between having a roof over their head and not - they can't really afford to care about the latest greatest improvements in housing. They have a different demand curve - be homeless or spend most of their income on rent.
"The theory is that the vast majority of that 70% price increase of a Camry since 1990 is due to quality improvements, with buyers today getting a far superior Camry; and that only a smaller part of that 70% price increase is due to monetary inflation, namely the dollar losing its purchasing power"
Just anecdotally, I wouldn't be surprised if a Camry really were "more valuable" (as measured by some sort of ideal fixed value-marker not subject to inflation) than in 1990. I seem to recall when I was growing up that the average expected lifetime of a car if well-maintained was about 100k miles; now it seems to be about 200k.
I agree that’s an opinion many people familiar with cars would share.
However the usefulness of that improvement is going to be a lot lower to someone who just needs a car to get somewhere rather than someone who can afford to buy a car with the long view of how it will affect their finances over many years.
The “purchasing power of the dollar”, even if you accept the accuracy of hedonic adjustments, is an extremely limiting view of the value many participants in the economy are deriving from that dollar.
I agree housing is a better example because the cost floor is much higher.
"the usefulness of that improvement is going to be a lot lower to someone who just needs a car to get somewhere rather than someone who can afford to buy a car with the long view of how it will affect their finances over many years."
I don't understand how a longer lifespan could not affect TCO regardless of how long you keep your car or what portion of its life you use. What does it mean to say people can't afford to spend less money?
> So the Fed economists keep saying "wow inflation is so low even after we pump gazillions of dollars in during QE", while ignoring the fact that easy money has lead to massive multinationals consolidating control of real estate and jacking prices up.
This is not remotely grounded in fact. The majority of real estate is controlled by homeowners and small-time landlords, not massive multinationals. Landlords don't have monopoly pricing power, rents have gone up (in specific cities) because anti-development policies restrict supply.
If you only look at home rentals, yes corporations make up less than 10% of ownership. But even the small percentage of ownerships really affect things, in Chicago we can see it has repeatedly taken just a few new luxury high rises to blow up cost of living in entire neighborhoods - it has a follow-on gentrifying effect where stores rush in to serve the new monied residents and the people living there can no longer afford to participate in their local micro-economy.
Again, real, actual lived experiences tell the store more than the super-super high level macro numbers might suggest.
There's still the effects on non-home real estate too, in which there is significant consolidation:
"During the past ten to twelve years, Blackstone has grown tremendously. Since going public in 2007, it has quadrupled in size. On top of that, Blackstone’s real estate division has exploded from a $17.7B venture to a $100B portfolio. According to BizNow, since 2009, it has spent more than $50 billion on commercial real estate. In addition, Blackstone closed a real estate fund worth about $16B in 2015. As a result, Blackstone now has the crown of ‘Largest Real Estate Owner in the World.’ Business Insider has even called the group’s Chairman and CEO Steve Schwarzman, ‘America’s landlord.’"
> If you only look at home rentals, yes corporations make up less than 10% of ownership. But even the small percentage of ownerships really affect things, in Chicago we can see it has repeatedly taken just a few new luxury high rises to blow up cost of living in entire neighborhoods - it has a follow-on gentrifying effect where stores rush in to serve the new monied residents and the people living there can no longer afford to participate in their local micro-economy.
You are confusing cause and effect. The luxury high rises are the result of rising demand and rising prices, not the cause. If you could magically cause prices to increase by building luxury apartments, you would see luxury apartments sprouting up all over the impoverished parts of the South side. But you don't, because the demand is not there. If you stop luxury apartments from being built in desirable neighborhoods and desirable cities, people will just bid up the prices of crappy older housing stock and drive poorer people out anyway (see: San Francisco).
Building new housing decreases the price of existing housing by expanding supply. It does not increase it. People who have a vested interest in seeing housing costs go up (landlords, existing homeowners) understand that fact, which is why NIMBYs keep voting against development. Unfortunately many people who do not want housing costs to go up do not understand the basic economic fundamentals and are motivated by reflexive hate of wealthy developers, so they sabotage their own interests by voting against new housing to the delight of their landlords.
I think it's a bit more complex than this. No, you can't magically create a yuppie utopia in the middle of the Southside, but you can start on the northwest side and expand it just a couple blocks west, then a few more blocks west. It's a coordinated effort from the large-scale developers and the city - look at Lincoln Yards for the most large-scale and egregious example.
Housing supply absolutely needs increased, but we must require developers to build mixed-income housing. The wealthy developers can afford to leave many units empty to maintain the luxury cache of the building or area. The relationship between supply and price in housing is not that sweet sweet smooth curve - it's lumpier than that in reality.
Additionally while the increase in supply can hurt your local landlords, it can also raise the average income of the clientele of an area, which then benefits them. In practice these landlords have not been staunch opponents of all the new luxury buildings.
> but you can start on the northwest side and expand it just a couple blocks west, then a few more blocks west.
Again, you are confusing cause and effect. The luxury apartments are popping up because of rising demand and rising prices; they are not the cause the rising prices. San Francisco refuses to build new housing stock and rents are still soaring there because people just bid up the prices of crack shacks.
> The wealthy developers can afford to leave many units empty to maintain the luxury cache of the building or area.
That is completely false. Real estate developers don't intentionally leave a large fraction their buildings empty to project an image of luxury. No renter is going to pay 2x as much rent because they see that the building is half empty and they think that makes it more exclusive. If they wanted an excuse to pay 2x the rent they would just get a larger apartment or move to a more expensive zip code. Deliberately leaving part of a building empty would be an extraordinarily financially dumb move. If a building is substantially empty then the developers screwed up their market research and are losing money on the project.
> Housing supply absolutely needs increased, but we must require developers to build mixed-income housing.
Building luxury housing frees up existing cheaper housing stock for lower income households. You don't have to build cheap housing to make more cheap housing available. Blocking the construction of luxury housing is counter-productive because it just means people will bid up worse housing stock.
I didn't say the Fed calculated it. I did say they reference it to say their policies (or whoever's policies) aren't causing inflation.
When a majority of leading economists subscribe to economic views that don't reflect the lived reality of an average person, it may not be a conspiracy, but the effect (groupthink) is similar.
>Sorry, but it's at this point in the thread that I realize that talking to tech bros on hacker news about monetary policy is actually the seventh circle of hell. Glhf.
Appealing to the authority of mainstream economists in a perpetual state of groupthink is not an argument. It is this kind of hostile and borderline elitist attitude that scares away people from discussing monetary policy and makes it seem more complex than what it really is, and I don't think that is productive at all. Ironically it is the same kind of elitism that caused the collapse of the planned economies of the 20th century (which grade-school students learn about today), despite being comprised of supposed "experts" in economic affairs who should never be questioned.
Please, this isn’t Soviet Russia, economists disagree about practically everything, so the whole argument that the profession has a serious groupthink problem is unconvincing to me. The reason why economists mostly agree on this particular topic-the way the Fed operates-is because it’s exceedingly transparent, theoretically (not to mention mathematically) simple, and empirically verifiable.
>Please, this isn’t Soviet Russia, economists disagree about practically everything, so the whole argument that the profession has a serious groupthink problem is unconvincing to me.
They disagree on a lot of things, that is true, but the one thing they all seem to agree upon (except for Austrian economists) is that the economy can be effectively modelled and that effective policy prescriptions can be derived from said statistical models. It is a supremely complex system and it is the pretence of knowledge (in the words of Hayek) to believe that you can use monetary policy to command it, much less policies based upon empirical models which are as you say constantly bickered and debated about.
Furthermore, the Fed is not exceedingly transparent - audits of its operations and its meeting minutes are classified and are not open to public review, as is the case with most central banks in the world. I know because I've tried to ask for copies of open market operation details from my central bank (the Swedish Riksbank) but was denied as they are classified by law (which is incredibly unusual for a society where other government agencies publish everything, including income tax returns).
Statistical models exist primarily for the falsification of hypotheses. The Austrians didn't submit such models so their theories could never be subjected to the same scrutiny that mainstream theories are. "It's too complex" is a cop-out, and Austrian theory's lack of math is enticing to people who don't want to put forth the effort involved in rigorous study (i.e., internet scholars). They pretended to be agnostic about economic principles, when really they just applied ad hoc explanations for economic events (which they were free to do because they weren't constrained to those pesky mathematical models).
I’m sorry that your Swedish central bank is classified, since, based on your worldview, there are presumably a bunch of Swedish economists working there behind closed doors to screw you over.
"Effective March 15, 2020, the meeting was closed to public observation by Order of the Board of Governors1 because the matters fall under exemption(s) 9(A)(i) of the Government in the Sunshine Act (5 U.S.C. Section 552b(c)), and it was determined that the public interest did not require opening the meeting."
This seems to be the case for almost all of their meetings.
They only keep certain parts secret so market actors don’t make decisions based on what the Fed is thinking about doing. Obviously if people knew the Fed was thinking about raising interest rates, for example, it would affect their decisions (and the market as a whole) negatively. This is something any business or economics undergrad learns in an introductory banking class; since you are evidently unfamiliar with the Fed’s system (as opposed to the Swedish one), you may find it helpful to consult an American money and banking textbook.
From your own link, verbatim:
"Items considered in closed session include primarily
- Bank and bank holding company supervisory matters, discussions of which generally disclose information from bank examination reports or commercial and financial information obtained in confidence by the Board
- Monetary policy and other matters whose premature release could be used in financial speculation
- Personnel matters."
> But over the same period, the Consumer Price Index for new vehicles – so this is one of the many subcategories of CPI – has risen only 22%. In fact, it rose 22% from 1990 to 1997, and today is flat with where it had been in 1997.
So inflation only accounts for log(1.22)/log(1.77) = 37% of the price rise.
I had the same question a few weeks ago! Apparently, the delay between monetary stimulus and the time we'd notice inflation is estimated to be greater than 12 months. I found one of the sources whose abstract I scanned when I had this question[0].
Hedge: I'm not saying it's true or that I've verified any of the research, only saying that economists have studied the effects of central bank stimulus action on inflation rates and the economic response seems to take a while.
It's complicated. Hyperinflation occurs generally when the banking system's regulation is gets out of control and goes into a lending/money creation spiral. That can happen very quickly - within several month. All things considered what's more likely to happen at the moment though is a monetary implosion, as massive debt defaults occur destroying the money in the banking system. Which is why people are muttering about Great Depressions.
Demand for dollars won't evaporate overnight. The thing about being a reserve currency is in a crisis, the entire levered world is short your currency.
That, combined with the fact that it's not like any major developed economy is doing that much better, means US goods, services and financial assets are still pretty competitive with the rest of the world.
The dollar is up 40% vs the lows of 2008. When DXY is back at 70, it's time to worry about a crack in the dollar reserve system.
The worry isn't demand dropping over night, since in that case the Fed could just sell the assets it's been buying. The worry is that the value of the Fed's assets will drop overnight.
This is inaccurate; most economists think we're most likely to see deflation over the next several months as demand collapses. Considering the position of the dollar, a "monetary implosion" like you're describing is still exceedingly unlikely.
"Well, unquestionably, housing prices are up quite a bit; I think it's important to note that fundamentals are also very strong. We've got a growing economy, jobs, incomes. We've got very low mortgage rates. We've got demographics supporting housing growth. We've got restricted supply in some places. So it's certainly understandable that prices would go up some. I don't know whether prices are exactly where they should be, but I think it's fair to say that much of what's happened is supported by the strength of the economy." - Ben Bernanke, Chairman of the Fed, in 2005.
I don’t understand how your quote from Ben Bernanke is relevant. Where in the quote does Bernanke say that we’ve fully eliminated volatility? And how is he representative of “most economists?”
I’ve said in other parts of the thread that economists can, in fact, be wrong sometimes. I just find the people making completely unjustifiable assertions about the economy, while simultaneously castigating the economics profession as some cabal of out-of-touch elites who can’t be trusted, unconvincing, when I know that the vast majority of economists are simply researchers trying to understand the world and how to improve it.
I don't think the problem at the current time is inflation - it's deflation. There's less money chasing the same amount of goods and services. That was the case during the Great Depression - and the Fed exacerbated things at that time by not intervening in controlling the money supply because they were bound by rules which prevented them from doing so.
If inflation suddenly increases, then the Fed has tools to combat that. They can sell off some of their balance sheet or raise interest rates to reduce the amount of money in the system. Inflation only occurs because there's too much money chasing goods and services.
> They can sell off some of their balance sheet or raise interest rates to reduce the amount of money in the system.
The Fed was unable to unwind more than ~$650B out of $4T from their balance sheet in one of the longest expansion periods in US history. How will they do this? This is not a rhetorical question, I am genuinely curious in how people think this will be done if the Federal Reserve itself can't do it (either reducing the balance sheet or influencing the target rate above low single digits).
They couldn't do it without causing deflation which they didn't want. But if they were combatting hyperinflation then they would want to cause deflation, so it would be fine.
Look at what happened in December 2018 when the Fed tried to raise interest rates and let assets bought during the financial crisis roll off at maturity...the market immediately crashed.
Fed is backed into a corner where it can’t raise rates without crashing the market and can’t lower rates now that we’re at 0.
> The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before (which would liquidate and clear out bad businesses), or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar whereby more and more money is injected to prop everything up.
Uh, the latter is not a distinct option from the former.
Also, you've left out: “the government continues as it has for generations, occasionally bailing out out wide sectors of the economy in black swan events with wide impact but mostly letting businesses big and small that are not prudent fail while cushioning some of the impacts of that failure with bankruptcy (both regular rule-based bankruptcy and similar, ad hoc restructuring in special cases; the latter is often also referred to as a ‘bailout’, but is meaningfully distinct from other bailouts.)”
The fact that it has been going on for decades doesn't make the point less valid. This kind of monetary intervention is compounding in nature, and it can be clearly seen as how each financial crash over the past 2-3 decades has been worse than the one before.
> The fact that it has been going on for decades doesn't make the point less valid. This
No, the fact it what you describe has not been going on for decades. It is an occasional response to extreme events, not a continuous mode of operation, and your criticism is all about the potential risk it has as a continuous mode of operation. There've been a couple major cases fairly recently, but that was in response to the biggest financial crisis in 70 years and the most significant acute global pandemic in over a century happening to fall a little over a decade apart, not some change in general approach.
>The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before (which would liquidate and clear out bad businesses), or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar whereby more and more money is injected to prop everything up. I'm betting on the latter as the former is too politically inconvenient.
Most countries are actually passing larger fiscal stimulus measures than the USA so far, at least relative to their existing currency base, so wouldn't this mean every currency hyperinflates all at once?
>The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before (which would liquidate and clear out bad businesses), or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar whereby more and more money is injected to prop everything up. I'm betting on the latter as the former is too politically inconvenient.
Or, like last time, a global war.
Also, I cannot emphasize more fervently your accurate correction here:
>Future generations pay this back not through taxes but through inflation.
It's a form of theft, really. Increasing the velocity of money is important to Keynesians and the faster that stuff degrades in value the faster those who are paying attention want to get rid of it in tangible or better-performing assets rather than, say, saving it long-term for something like capitalizing a small business.
And, whether an individual or organization, taking out loan after loan and not worrying so much about bankruptcy is easier to tolerate since sooner or later the gambling will pay off and it'll be easier to pay off in the future with easy money. When a dozen eggs cost 50$, 100,000$ in student loans will be easier to pay off.
I read something today about how China is gambling on the dollar collapsing and have been hoarding lots of gold in anticipation of some kind of at least partially gold-backed currency that's likely to be digital.
> Future generations pay this back not through taxes but through inflation.
Inflation expectations have collapsed in recent months. We didn't see steep inflation when the government pumped trillions of dollars into the economy after 2008, why do you think we'll see steep inflation now?
The most obvious illustration of this is the jump in junk-bond ETFs after the Fed began buying up junk bonds.[1]
The Fed is supporting the price of dubious, high-yield corporate debt. Whether or not that's good for the economy is a separate question, but it's not as if the Fed is just replacing assets with cash at 1:1 value. It is encouraging lending to risky enterprises, by itself taking on the risk.
That could be true, but one thing is that the way (or some of the ways) the money is added to the economy is dubious and another that nothing should be done.
>Future generations pay this back not through taxes but through inflation.
I don't think that's a fair characterization. Inflation helps people with student loans (salary grows but debt stays the same) and hurts people with retirement accounts full of bonds. Broadly speaking, inflation helps the young (by closing the wealth gap between haves and have-nots).
The actual reason why inflation hurts young people has to do with economic stability and its cascading effects on the economy. A period of significant inflation can wipe out generational mobility. Inflation has a minimal effect on "closing the wealth gap" in comparison and I think it's irresponsible to act like hyperinflation would be a reasonable way to solve economic inequality.
Yes, fully agree that economic instability from hyperinflation hurts far more than reducing the wealth gap could help.
In recent times, the fed has been below its 2% inflation target.If it missed on the other side, and inflation went to 3-4%, I think that would be totally reasonable economic policy. Double digit inflation, however, would end up making everyone poorer.
This is simply not true. The Fed is buying assets at a premium (otherwise counterparties wouldn't sell the assets to the Fed) and is effectively injecting money into the economy. This is a bailout as the Fed is making a liquid market (that otherwise would not exist) for assets, saving the balance sheets of firms. Future generations pay this back not through taxes but through inflation.
Whether or not the U.S. dollar will collapse or not is another topic, but what can be said is that it is not sustainable to continue bailing out irresponsible businesses like banks and others when they do not exercise good business practices like prudence, not being overleveraged, or having a buffer in case of lost revenue. The only way this ends is either a depression the scales of which we've never seen in history before (which would liquidate and clear out bad businesses), or a hyperinflationary collapse of the U.S. dollar whereby more and more money is injected to prop everything up. I'm betting on the latter as the former is too politically inconvenient.