The central bankers'
central bank, the Bank for International Settlements or BIS, recently released
its annual report on the worlds economy. In this posting,
I want to take a look at a few of the more interesting (and rather frightening)
comments made by the authors in this year's edition.
The authors open the
report with a chapter entitled "Is
the unthinkable becoming routine?". As shown on this
graphic, real interest rates for Japan, the United States and Germany have
never been this low for this long:
This has had a significant
impact on bond rates; between December 2014 and the end of May 2015, on
average, approximately $2 trillion in global long-term sovereign debt
(particularly euro debt) was trading with negative yields as shown on this
graphic:
Here is another graphic
showing how widespread negative yields had become in the first half of 2015:
While that situation has
corrected itself to some degree, at their trough, the yields on French, German
and Swiss sovereign bonds were negative out to five, nine and fifteen years
respectively.
These ultra-low rates are
evidence of a broad malaise in the global economy. The authors note that
debt levels and financial risks are still exceedingly high despite the fact
that we are 6 full years into the "recovery" and that the world's
leading central banks have used the aforementioned extraordinary tactic of
using near-zero interest rates and other non-conventional monetary policies to
prop up the global economy which is growing, but at unbalanced rates.
The authors note that the
current very low interest rates that have prevailed for such a lengthy period
of time are not "equilibrium rates" that are conducive to sustainable
global expansion, rather, the have contributed to the current global economic
weakness by fuelling financial booms and busts. The result is too much
debt, too little growth and low interest rates that "beget lower
rates". This is quite apparent in this graphic that shows what has
happened to the global public and private non-financial sector debt levels as a
percentage of GDP as shown on this graphic:
One point of concern is
the credit that has been given to non-banks in emerging market economies.
Since early 2009, the level of this credit has almost doubled to more
than $3 trillion. Countries that export commodities are particularly at
risk, including those in Latin America. At the end of 2014, China was the
world's eighth largest borrower in terms of cross-border bank claims, reaching
$1 trillion or double the amount just two years prior.
Ultra-low interest rates
have an impact on the private economy; low rates reduce banks' interest rate
margins and undermine the profitability of both pension plans and insurance
companies. Our current pervasive low rates have also resulted in severe
misplacing in both equities and corporate debt markets (i.e. they create asset
bubbles). Low rates can also create problems for the broader economy;
pension funding is less secure now than it has been in generations, increasing
the need for individuals to save more for retirement which can weaken consumer
demand.
Let's close with this
excerpt from the report:
"The resulting
picture is that of a world that has been returning to stronger growth but where
medium-term tensions persist. The wounds left by the crisis and subsequent
recession are healing, because balance sheets are being repaired and some
deleveraging has taken place. Recently, the strong and unexpected boost from
energy prices has helped too. In the meantime, monetary policy has done its
utmost to support near-term demand. But the policy mix has relied too much on
measures that, directly or indirectly, have entrenched dependence on the very
debt-fuelled growth model that lay at the root of the crisis. These tensions
manifest themselves most visibly in the failure of global debt burdens to
adjust, the continued decline in productivity growth and, above all, the
progressive loss of policy room for manoeuvre, both fiscal and monetary...Room
for manoeuvre in macroeconomic policy has been narrowing with every passing
year. In some jurisdictions, monetary policy is already testing its outer
limits, to the point of stretching the boundaries of the unthinkable. In
others, policy rates are still coming down. Fiscal policy, after the
post-crisis expansion, has been throttled back, as sustainability concerns have
mounted. And fiscal positions are deteriorating in EMEs where growth is
slowing."
It is
becoming increasingly apparent that the current environment of ultra-low
interest rates have left the world's central bankers ill-equipped to fight
the next economic crisis. The long-term monetary experiment has left
central bankers with little room to manoeuvre because, as the Federal Reserve
is discovering, they have backed themselves into a very uncomfortable
corner from which extrication will likely be extremely painful.
There will be no extrication. One only has to look at what China has done to combat falling asset prices to see the play book of all central banks. They have no stomach for rebalancing.
ReplyDeleteInstead what will happen is a deterioration of credibility of these central banks as they are found to be the ones, as Mr. Buffett says, not wearing underwear when the tide eventually goes out.
In a recent article written by bond king Bill Gross titled "Going To the Dogs" Gross describes some of the current economic conditions we face. His thoughts strongly dovetail with my concerns as to how these low rates distort and cause massive misallocation of resources throughout the economy.
ReplyDeleteThe growth in sub-prime auto loans is a glaring confirmation of this and the main reason for surging sales in the auto sector. This effort to offset the dwindling buying power of the public sector by encouraging them to take on more debt by easing terms and artificially low interest rates will not end well. Below is an article that looks deeper into the flaws in this policy.
http://brucewilds.blogspot.com/2015/03/low-interest-rates-and-unintended.html