Whatever It Takes 2.0?

Similar documents
Merk Insights September 8, 2016

Repression Investing: Got Gold?

International Money and Banking: 14. Real Interest Rates, Lower Bounds and Quantitative Easing

Transcript of interview with ESM Managing Director Klaus Regling. The interview was conducted by Tomoko Hatakeyama in Tokyo on 26 January 2016

The main lessons to be drawn from the European financial crisis

What Could Possibly Go Wrong?

Global Bond Markets to Enter New Phase in 2018

Why ESBies won t solve the euro area s problems

Negative Yields in the Eurozone: Rationale and Repercussions

Interview given by the Governor to the German newspaper Welt am Sonntag on 11 January 2015

PIMCO Cyclical Outlook for Europe: Near-Term Recovery, Long-Term Risks

Fed Plans To Trim Its Massive $4.5 Trillion Balance Sheet

Explaining risk, return and volatility. An Octopus guide

Incremental Steps Toward a Radical Solution

Gundlach's Forecast for 2015

What's next for the Dollar, Stocks, Bonds & Gold?

European Central Bank Monetary Policy Announcement

Gundlach: I m Not Really Bullish on Bonds

Cristina Camastra Matr IL QUANTITATIVE EASING DELLA BCE. The object of my work is The BCE s Quantitative Easing discussed through three

Design Failures in the Eurozone. Can they be fixed? Paul De Grauwe London School of Economics

Some Thoughts on Inflation, Tax Reform and the Fed

Globalization vs. the U.S. Business Cycle: The Effects on U.S. Interest Rates

Advanced Macroeconomics 4. The Zero Lower Bound and the Liquidity Trap

remain the same until the end of 2018.

BINARY OPTIONS: A SMARTER WAY TO TRADE THE WORLD'S MARKETS NADEX.COM

Karl Kaltenthaler University of Akron and Case Western Reserve Univeristy

Global Economic Outlook 2014 Year Ahead Outlook January 2014

Consequences of present Euro area monetary policy on savings and capital wealth formation. 14 November Parliamentary evening in Brussels

Chapter Eighteen 4/23/2018. Chapter 18 Monetary Policy: Stabilizing the Domestic Economy Part 4. Unconventional Policy Tools

With-Profits Fund. Investment Report 2015

EUROPEAN BANKS: NEITHER A BORROWER NOR LENDER BE

Gundlach: Treasuries will Rally When QE2 Ends

Market outlook: What to expect in 2018 and beyond

Chapter 10. Conduct of Monetary Policy: Tools, Goals, Strategy, and Tactics. Chapter Preview

RNPFN With-Profits Fund. Investment Report 2015

One Policymaker s Wait for Better Economic Data

Interview with Klaus Regling, Managing Director, ESM Published in Politis (Cyprus), 8 November 2015

After the Stress Test, Deal With the Debt. Global Economics Monthly November 2014

Management Report. Banco Espírito Santo do Oriente, S.A.

QUANTITATIVE EASING. 1. Point of departure 2. More on the US 3. Secular Stagnation 4. More on the Euro Area 5. Helicopter money 6.

European Investment Grade Credit Market Outlook Q Introduction

European Bond Market: What Lies Beyond the Politics?

The Advantages and Pitfalls of Investing Your Pension in Property

Global Bond Outlook. Full circle, but which direction? December 2011 IN BRIEF

The Euro Goes Negative

Understanding Quantitative Easing

ECONOMICS U$A 21 ST CENTURY EDITION PROGRAM #25 MONETARY POLICY Annenberg Foundation & Educational Film Center

Member of

December 6, Unemployment Trends. Nonfarm Payrolls

Global Financial Crisis. Econ 690 Spring 2019

International Macroeconomic Environment:

By John Praveen, Chief Investment Strategist of Prudential International Investments Advisers, LLC.*

Central banks new challenges. Intervention of José Luis Malo de Molina at the policy conference on Central Bank (R)evolutions.

Global Economic Outlook - January 2019

Interview with Klaus Regling, Managing Director, ESM. Published in Hospodárske noviny (Slovakia) on 16 September Interviewer: Tomáš Púchly

International & Global Commentaries

Perspectives: The impact of QE on European property markets

SPECIAL REPORT. How Long Will Your Retirement Income. Last You?

1. Remortgaging: The Basics

How Is Global Trade Financed? (EA)

International Money and Banking: 6. Problems with Monetarism

Market Review, and 2019 outlook Brace for the impact. If you are still standing, you are the WINNER The year when nothing worked.

GLOBAL ECONOMIC OUTLOOK

ECON 4325 Wednesday seminar 2016 The presentation package is complete

Trump is Right About Yen

ValueWalk Interview With Chris Abraham Of CVA Investment Management

ECON 4325 Wednesday seminar 2016

Debt and Austerity in Europe: Who Will Pay for Growth?

1. Introduction 2. Chart Basics 3. Trend Lines 4. Indicators 5. Putting It All Together

SEB MERCHANT BANKING COUNTRY RISK ANALYSIS 28 September 2016

Euro area economic developments from monetary policy maker s perspective

BOJ: Rethinking the Mandate

Economic and financial outlook

BANK OF RUSSIA FOREIGN EXCHANGE AND GOLD ASSET MANAGEMENT REPORT MOSCOW

No duplication of transmission of the material included within except with express written permission from the author.

QE Main Channels and its Impact (incl. impact exercise for a small-open economy Slovakia) Jan Toth Deputy Governor National Bank of Slovakia

Christiano 362, Winter 2006 Lecture #3: More on Exchange Rates More on the idea that exchange rates move around a lot.

Global Macroeconomic Monthly Review

Weekly Market Commentary

AUGUST PREVIEW ARE THE STARS ALIGNED FOR VOLATILITY? COMMENTARY AUGUST 4: AUGUST 11 AND 31: KEY TAKEAWAYS LPL RESEARCH WEEKLY ECONOMIC.

The ECB s sovereign quantitative easing will be supportive to the euro area economy but it is not panacea

Prudential International Investments Advisers, LLC. Global Investment Strategy June 2009

Jeremy Siegel s 2016 Forecast for Stocks

Quarterly Investment Briefing February 5, 2014

EUROPEAN LONG/SHORT JANUARY 2016

Economic and Portfolio Outlook 4th Quarter 2014 (Released October 2014)

Credit. What is Credit?

Investment Report With Profits Fund

Eurozone. Outlook for. Ernst & Young Eurozone Forecast. Summer edition 2012

1 di 7 06/04/ :39

Guide to Risk and Investment - Novia

Policy Reforms after the Crisis

EDITOR HANNES BARNARD BLOEMFONTEIN STOCKBROKERS

Investment Market Performance

How understanding the business life cycle helps in credit assessment. from businessbankingcoach.com in association with

Monetary Policy and Financial Stability

EUROPE LEADS FLIGHT TO QUALITY

What Should the Fed Do?

3 Price Action Signals to Compliment ANY Approach to ANY Market

By John Praveen, Chief Investment Strategist of Prudential International Investments Advisers, LLC.*

Transcription:

Whatever It Takes 2.0? April 9, 2014 by Axel Merk of Merk Investments If you are convincingly irrational the market may expect extreme measures and front run your bluff. It s in this spirit that ECB President Draghi is threatening the market with another bazooka. We discuss implications for investors. Page 1, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

During the ECB press conference on April 3, 2014 the official ECB Twitter account tweeted ( GC is the Governing Council, akin to the FOMC in the U.S.): Page 2, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

In fact, the entire press conference appeared focused on convincing the market that inflation in the Eurozone must move higher. Draghi argues that low inflation is a problem for a couple of reasons: First and foremost, the longer the period of low inflation, the higher the risk in terms of medium-term inflation expectations. (Eluding to the risk of a deflationary spiral) The second drawback of low inflation is that it makes the adjustment of imbalances much more difficult. It is one thing to have to adjust relative prices with an inflation rate which is around 2%, another thing is to adjust relative prices with an inflation rate which is around 0.5%. That means that the change in certain prices, in order to readjust, will have to become negative. And you know that prices and wages have a certain nominal rigidity which makes these adjustments more complex. The third drawback has to do with the presence of a debt level, which, both for the private and public sectors, is still elevated. And with low inflation, the real value of this debt does not go down as fast as it would if inflation were higher, so it makes the adjustment of the debtors, the deleveraging, more difficult. A key culprit for the low inflation? The euro. He said the exchange rate is an increasingly important factor in our medium-term assessment of price stability. A month earlier, on March 6, 2014, Draghi quantified the euro s drag on inflation: As a rule of thumb, each 10% permanent effective exchange rate appreciation lowers inflation by around 40 to 50 basis points. So we can say that between 2012 and today about 0.4 or 0.5 percentage points of inflation was taken out of current inflation because of the exchange rate appreciation If there was one thing puzzling about the euro last week it was that Draghi s salvos did not get the euro to plunge. As has happened many times over the past year, Draghi s verbal assault on the euro didn t convince the markets. That s despite threatening to impose negative deposit rates or to engage in QE. Trouble is that these tools may not get the job done. Let s look at the deposit facility at the ECB first: Page 3, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

What one sees is that the deposit facility is small for central bank standards. The facility under consideration is used by banks- we are not talking about negative rates on mom and pop savings accounts; at least not yet. In our assessment, the key implication of moving to negative rates is reputational risk: Northern European savers may lose the little confidence they have left in the ECB if their savings are explicitly robbed. A key role of a central bank is to foster confidence in a currency. Well, in this case, if the ECB wants to weaken the euro they may want to do quite the opposite but we caution policy makers that they are playing with fire. Policy makers, however, are concerned with the opposite risk: that low inflation is causing a revolt in weaker Eurozone countries where negotiating wages downward is incredibly painful. Then there is QE (quantitative easing). Most are not aware that the ECB has operated very differently from the Fed. Rather than printing money to buy securities, the ECB has provided liquidity against collateral. The key difference is that ECB facilities expire and banks have returned liquidity they don t want. Draghi phrases the difference this way: When the Fed buys assets or buys government bonds, it does change prices all across the spectrum of all assets, and this has an immediate or direct effect on credit, because most of the credit goes to the real economy via the capital markets. In our case, all these effects go through the banks Page 4, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

He realizes that US-style QE doesn t work in the Eurozone (emphasis added) The final effect on the real economy depends, of course, on the demand for loans, but also on the state of health of the banking system. The euro area cannot really go back to serious growth if the banking system is impaired. A healthy banking system is more essential to the euro area than to other financial systems that are more market-based. With weak demand in the economy and an impaired banking system holding back growth, what could QE do? Draghi may not be able to boost real demand but he is certainly trying to address the impaired banking system. He has been asked in the past why he conducts the stress tests when such tests might discourage banks from borrowing money from the ECB (as this admits weakness); Draghi correctly points out that weak banks don t lend whether stress tests are conducted or not. As such, it s important to identify weaknesses; then have a plan to address them. Note that Draghi is actually quite positive on aspects of credit growth in the Eurozone: What is happening is that new credit is actually expanding at relatively decent rates. But there is still deleveraging that has to take place Improvements in lending to new clients, but at the same time redemptions of old loans weighing on credit figures. To us this suggests the biggest problem appears to be a lack of patience at the ECB. This is confirmed by Draghi s own words that low inflation isn t really a problem as it was due to lower food and energy prices considered transitory and irrelevant by the Fed (at least when they go up!): If you take the actual inflation of the first quarter of 2012, it was 2.7%, and now it is 0.5%. Of these 2.2 percentage points of difference, 70% of this is due to lower energy prices and lower food prices. At the other end of the spectrum QE is supposed to increase bond prices to lower yields. In the Eurozone it s the cost of borrowing of weaker countries (the periphery ) that matters. I m not sure how many are aware that the cost of borrowing for Spain for 5 year money is now just about the same as it is for the U.S.: Page 5, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

Draghi s whatever it takes attitude has made peripheral debt securities in the Eurozone appear to be low risk. As such, the flight out of emerging market bonds didn t make it back to the U.S. but instead to the European periphery. So what exactly should QE achieve if the verbal intervention has already lowered the cost of borrowing; de facto providing a substantial stimulus to the Eurozone periphery, even as ECB short-term rates have only been lowered marginally. Draghi, never short of ideas, wants to improve the bank-lending channel. What follows is our own interpretation of what he is planning as he has only provided hints. Last year he referred to an Asset Backed Securities (ABS) program to ignite lending in the Eurozone. You may recall ABS as playing a key role in the financial crisis, however, not all ABS are evil. The goal would be to make the Eurozone economy less dependent on banks and more dependent on the markets. If one can securitize debt, credit could flow. Here s what Draghi said about ABS last week: There are obviously different preferences about which QE would be more effective, and we will continue working on that in the coming weeks It is not easy to design a programme of QE on private debt that is large in size and doesn t have risk for financial stability. That is why the ECB is so squarely behind the need to develop an ABS market, because that is where the largest pool of private sector assets lies, basically banking loans as I said before, we are a Page 6, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

bank-based economy. So, if we are able to have these loans being correctly priced and rated, and traded, like it would happen, like it used to happen in the ABS market before the crisis, then we naturally have a very large pool of assets. As a matter of fact, the ECB will present a joint paper with the Bank of England on this point at the next IMF meetings. We see two key challenges: Even if there were a perfect design, it takes a long time to build a large ABS market; A vibrant ABS market does not require a central bank to set it up. If it were such a great idea the smart kids at investment banks would have already developed this market. However, Draghi may not see these as a problem. That s because, just like the OMT (Outright Monetary Transaction) program that turned around the fortune in the Eurozone after being announced in August 2012, this may never be implemented. Draghi may hope that the very fact that it is on the drawing board, will convince the markets that credit spreads should tighten and financing conditions should improve for private sector borrowers. What does it all mean? In a nutshell: Axel Merk President Draghi appears to be out to convince the market to lower both the euro exchange rate and private sector credit spreads in anticipation of ECB action, without actually firing the proverbial bazooka that he s just hoisted onto his shoulder. Or, as we call it: Whatever It Takes 2.0 The ECB may feel ever more pressure to act. At some point they will. Whatever action they take is likely to have unintended consequences that, in our assessment, are not worth the little impact they are likely to have (especially given that the signaling has done all the work for them). Expect more talk from the ECB. They want a weaker euro, but in our assessment are unlikely to get it. We continue to believe a euro of 1.50 this year is a possibiliy. Axel Merk is President and Chief Investment Officer, Merk Investments, Manager of the Merk Funds. This report was prepared by Merk Investments LLC,and reflects the current opinion of the authors. It is based upon sources and data believed to be accurate and reliable. Merk Investments LLC makes no representation regarding the advisability of investing in the products herein. Opinions and forwardlooking statements expressed are subject to change without notice. This information does not constitute investment advice and is not intended as an endorsement of any specific investment. The information contained herein is general in nature and is provided solely for educational and informational purposes. The information provided does not constitute legal, financial or tax advice. You should obtain advice specific to your circumstances from your own legal, financial and tax advisors. As with any investment, past performance is no guarantee of future performance. Page 7, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.

Merk Investments Page 8, 2018 Advisor Perspectives, Inc. All rights reserved.