Showing posts with label US economy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label US economy. Show all posts

Friday 5 November 2010

Fed to Spend $600 Billion to Speed Up Recovery



Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg News
The Federal Reserve building in Washington.




WASHINGTON — The Federal Reserve, getting ahead of the battles that will dominate national politics over the next two years, moved Wednesday to jolt the economy into recovery with a bold but risky plan to pump $600 billion into the banking system.
A day earlier, Republicans swept to a majority in the House on an antideficit platform, virtually guaranteeing that they would clash with the Obama administration over the best way to nurture a fragile recovery.
The action was the second time in a year that the Fed had ventured into new territory as it struggles to push down long-term interest rates to encourage borrowing and economic growth. In a statement, the Fed said it was acting because the recovery was “disappointingly slow,” and it left the door open to even more purchases of government securities next year.
The Fed is an independent body, its policy decisions separated from the political pressures of the day. But it acted with a clear understanding that the United States, like many other Western countries, seems to have taken off the table many of the options governments traditionally use to give their economies a kick, particularly deficit spending.
The Republicans regained control of the House for the first time in four years in part by attacking the stimulus plan — begun by the Bush administration and accelerated byPresident Obama — as a symbol of government spinning out of control, contributing to a dangerously escalating national debt.
This political reality has left Washington increasingly reliant on the Fed to take action, though its chairman, Ben S. Bernanke, has said the Fed cannot fix the problem alone.
But in stepping in so aggressively, the Fed is taking risks. The action not only expands the Fed’s huge portfolio ofTreasury bonds, it makes it a target of a Congress whose new members include some who are hostile to the Fed’s independent role.
On Wall Street, analysts said the move appeared to be a balancing act that met expectations and stock prices rose.
Ordinarily the Fed’s main tool for spurring economic growth is to lower short-term interest rates. But those rates are already near zero. With no more room to go, it has to find another route to stimulate demand.
That route is to buy government bonds, which increases demand for them and raises their prices, pushing long-term interest rates down. “Easier financial conditions will promote economic growth,” Mr. Bernanke predicted in an essay for Thursday’s Washington Post.
Representative Mike Pence of Indiana, the outgoing chairman of the House Republican Conference, said shortly after the announcement that the Fed was overstepping its bounds. “Diluting the value of the dollar by continually increasing the supply of money poses an incalculable risk,” he said. “Instead, Congress needs to embrace progrowth fiscal policies to stimulate our economy rather than masking our fundamental problems by artificially creating inflation.”
In making that argument, Mr. Pence and his allies are replaying a dispute that permeated Washington in the mid-1930s, when the economy was crawling out of the Great Depression. Conservative Democrats pushed Franklin D. Roosevelt to cut back on spending, and argued for tight monetary policy. Many economists argue that the result was a second downturn just before the outbreak of World War II, but others say the conditions today differ in so many ways that the comparison is misleading.
While the Fed step was telegraphed to the markets in recent weeks, most experts had expected $300 billion to $500 billion in purchases of Treasury debt. Still, the pace — $75 billion a month for eight months — disappointed some investors.
The Fed said it would also continue an earlier program, announced in August, of using proceeds from its mortgage-related holdings to buy additional Treasury debt, at a rate of about $35 billion a month, or $250 billion to $300 billion by the end of June.
So in total, the Fed will buy $850 billion to $900 billion, just about doubling the amount of Treasury debt it currently holds.
If the Fed’s bet is right, lower long-term rates should ripple through the markets, pushing down rates for mortgages and corporate bonds. That could encourage homeowners to refinance into cheaper mortgages, though it would not help the millions of Americans facing foreclosure. It could push businesses to make investments instead of sitting on piles of cash.
In a sign of its willingness to do even more, the Federal Open Market Committee, the central bank’s policy arm, left open the possibility of even more purchases beyond June, saying it would “adjust the program as needed to best foster maximum employment and price stability.”
Only one committee member dissented, for reasons that are similar to the complaints that some Republicans are likely to raise. Thomas M. Hoenig, an economist who is president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, said he believed the decision could create more risk for the financial system by enticing too much borrowing.
There are other risks, as well. The actions are likely to further drive down the dollar. That could worsen trade and exchange-rate tensions that have threatened to unravel cooperation among the world’s biggest economies.
Moreover, the Fed is exposing itself to the risk that the assets it has acquired could shrivel in value when interest rates eventually rise. That could reduce the amount of money the central bank turns over to the Treasury each year, and expose the Fed, already vulnerable for its failure to prevent the 2008 financial crisis, to even more criticism.
On Wednesday, the standoff between the parties was on display as the two sides argued over tax cuts and the desirability of government investment to create jobs.
It was this impending gridlock that might have pushed Mr. Bernanke to move, said Laurence H. Meyer, a former Fed governor. “Bernanke has said that fiscal stimulus, accommodated by the Fed, is the single most powerful action the government can take for lowering the unemployment rate, when short-term rates are already at zero,” Mr. Meyer said. “He has nearly pleaded with Congress for fiscal stimulus, but he can’t count on it.”
But Leonard J. Santow, an economic consultant, said he feared that the Fed was reacting to one mistake — the failure of fiscal policy — by adding another. “The main problem is on the fiscal side, and there is nothing wrong with the Fed chairman making budget recommendations and admitting there is not a great deal left for monetary policy to achieve when it comes to stimulating the economy,” he said.
One of the main questions raised by the Fed’s action was whether it had waited too long. While economists disagree on that, the Fed’s announcement completed a U-turn. Earlier, speculation was that the Fed would gradually raise interest rates and tighten the supply of credit, as it would normally do after a recession..
But this downturn and its painful aftermath have been anything but normal. Markets were set back in the spring by the European debt crisis. By late summer, as continuing high unemployment, slow growth and low inflation became clear, Mr. Bernanke became convinced that the Fed needed to act again.


http://www.nytimes.com/2010/11/04/business/economy/04fed.html?src=me&ref=business

High unemployment in Fed cross-hairs


November 5, 2010 - 7:06AM
    The United States faces the prospect of high unemployment for some time as the Federal Reserve embarks on a risky and unproven course to bring back solid economic growth.
    All eyes will be on the October labour market report on Friday, expected to show a dip in job creation and an unemployment rate stuck at 9.6 per cent for the third consecutive month.
    The Federal Reserve announced on Wednesday it would inject an additional $US600 billion ($A598.12 billion) into the struggling economy, through the purchase of new Treasury debt from financial institutions at a rate of around $US75 billion ($A74.76 billion) a month.
    Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said the extraordinary action was necessary because the central bank has a duty to help promote increased employment and sustain price stability.
    Though the current low level of inflation was "generally good" it poses the risk of morphing into deflation, a dangerous cycle of falling prices and wages, Bernanke said in an opinion article published Thursday in the Washington Post.
    But it was the suffering job market that spurred the stimulus move, known as "quantitative easing."
    Bernanke said that in the panel's review of economic conditions, "we could hardly be satisfied."
    "Unfortunately, the job market remains quite weak; the national unemployment rate is nearly 10 per cent, a large number of people can find only part-time work, and a substantial fraction of the unemployed have been out of work six months or longer," he said.
    "The heavy costs of unemployment include intense strains on family finances, more foreclosures and the loss of job skills."
    The Fed action came a day after Tuesday's nationwide congressional and local elections that handed big victories to Republicans, who have called for less government interference in the US economy.
    Republicans won control of the House of Representatives and whittled the majority of President Barack Obama's Democrats in the Senate.
    At the top of voters' complaints was persistently high unemployment more than a year after the recession officially ended, along with massive federal spending to rescue the economy from recession that has produced record deficits.
    The government's weekly snapshot on unemployment trends reinforced the picture of a depressed labour market treading water.
    Initial unemployment claims rose more than expected in the week ending October 30, up 4.6 per cent from the prior week, the Labor Department reported.
    "Unfortunately, there is nothing in the data that suggests the employment sector is on the cusp of entering a prolonged hiring expansion.
    "Instead, the stability suggests that employment growth is going to be slow and sluggish for the foreseeable future," said Jeffrey Rosen at Briefing Research.
    Andrew Gledhill at Moody's Analytics noted that businesses remained anxious about economic conditions and were being cautious about payroll decisions, while layoffs were still climbing at a rate consistent with minimal job growth.
    "The stalled labour market will not significantly break out of this trend until the second half of next year," Gledhill said.
    "Even once widespread hiring resumes, it will take considerable job creation to restore employment to its pre-recession level; we forecast that won't occur until 2013."
    AFP

    http://www.smh.com.au/business/world-business/high-unemployment-in-fed-crosshairs-20101105-17g4d.html

    Thursday 4 November 2010

    Fed spends big to fight deflation



    Stuart Washington
    November 4, 2010 - 9:43AM
      Quantitative easing barely registered on world markets but the message from the US Federal Reserve was heard throughout the world: it would use every measure possible to ward off deflation.
      The move to support US asset prices through printing money served to slightly bolster already-high equity markets and pushed the Australian dollar to trade above parity with the US dollar for most of the morning.
      George Tharenou, an economist with investment bank UBS, said the Fed’s announcement overnight of $US600 billion ($600 billion) in treasury purchases was combined with a commitment to continue buying troubled mortgage securities, bringing the total value of the package close to $US1.1 trillion.
      The second round of quantitative easing, or QEII, adds to $US1.7 billion in unconventional measures it launched after the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008.
      Mr Tharenou said the Fed was continuing action in an environment in which it could not cut already low official interest rates.
      ‘‘Whether or not the Fed can actually stop deflation is a matter of debate (but) I think the Fed is taking the best possible action it can,’’ Mr Tharenou said.
      Andrew Pease, the chief investment strategist for fund manager Russell Investments, said the Federal Reserve had highlighted its commitment to restoring inflation and warding off deflation, with early signs being positive.
      ‘‘It’s a big package,’’ he said. ‘‘The question is what impact is it going to have. Is it going to be pushing on a string or is it going to do something? My guess is its going to reinforce positive price expectations.’’
      Mr Pease said of deflation, which occurred in Japan after its own debt crisis in 1990: ‘‘People don’t spend, businesses can’t make profits ... there’s a whole lot of problems when an economy falls into deflation.’’
      Mark Reade, a director of credit strategy for investment bank Citi, said the lack of market reaction was due to the package being broadly in line with expectations.
      ‘‘The Fed reiterated its commitment to keep rates low for an extended period of time,’’ he said. ‘‘That commitment is going to support asset prices.’’
      He said the willingness to support prices also supported people's willingness to continue to invest in riskier assets - including equity markets and the Australian dollar.
      On the news, the US dollar fell slightly below parity with the Australian dollar and remained there around midday.
      However, Mr Pease warned the Australian dollar was ‘‘overvalued by just about any metric’’.
      swashington@smh.com.au

      Friday 29 October 2010

      Pimco likens US to 'Ponzi' scheme: Quantitative Easing in the trillions is not a bondholder's friend; it is in fact inflationary.

      US authorities are operating a "brazen" Ponzi scheme in government debt by buying trillions of dollars of bonds to stimulate the economy, according to Bill Gross, managing director of Pimco, the world's biggest bond house.

      Pimco likens US to 'Ponzi' scheme
      Mr Gross said more QE is a huge gamble, but necessary because the US is "in a 'liquidity trap'
      In a bid to restart the stalling recovery, the US Federal Reserve is next week expected to unveil a second round of quantitative easing (QE) of as much as $500bn, on top of the $1.2 trillion already completed.
      In typically robust comments, Mr Gross said the Fed had run out of other options but warned that more QE would in the long-term mean "picking the creditor's pocket via inflation and negative real interest rates".
      "[Cheque] writing in the trillions is not a bondholder's friend; it is in fact inflationary, and, if truth be told, somewhat of a Ponzi scheme," he wrote on his investment outlook, arguing that creditors have always expected to be paid out of future growth.
      "Now, with growth in doubt, it seems the Fed has taken Ponzi one step further," he said. "The Fed has joined the party itself. Has there ever been a Ponzi scheme so brazen? There has not."
      More QE is a huge gamble, he said, but necessary because the US is "in a 'liquidity trap', where interest rates or QE may not stimulate borrowing or lending because consumer demand is just not there."
      Mr Gross is best-known in the UK for saying gilts were "resting on a bed of nitroglycerine" as a result of the nation's high debt levels. Pimco has since reversed its position on the UK and advised clients to gamble on a British recovery.

      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/economics/8090902/Pimco-likens-US-to-Ponzi-scheme.html

      Saturday 9 October 2010

      It perhaps seems strange that SOME investors don't invest in American shares.

      Are British investors missing a trick by shunning Wall St?
      Nine of the world's biggest brands are American. Should we be backing Gekko's greed?

      By Paul Farrow, Personal Finance Editor
      Published: 11:30AM BST 08 Oct 2010


      As Gordon Gekko returns to the big screen, should British investors be rethinking their lack of American exposure?  Talk of investing in the US evokes images of Gordon Gekko, the king of Wall Street, all braces and pinstripes, making multi-million-dollar deals and living the high life. Yet the Eighties blockbuster film did little to encourage British investors to grab a slice of the American investment pie.

      More than two decades on and Michael Douglas has reprised his role as Gekko in the sequel Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps. Yet, Wall Street might as well take 40 winks where British investors are concerned, as they continue to shun the world's biggest stock market – it was the least popular sector according to the latest monthly statistics from the Investment Management Association.

      It perhaps seems strange that British investors don't invest in American shares. After all, nine of the world's biggest brands are American – they are names we know and we contribute to their prominence. Take an IBM laptop into McDonald's, sip a Coca-Cola, check your email on Microsoft Outlook and surf on Google, and you will have embraced five of the top six in one swoop.

      Yet despite its familiarity, financial advisers have never been too keen on selling the US story to investors.

      Brian Dennehy at advisers Dennehy Weller & Co has been avoiding the US since 1996 and said that few have found good reason to buy the US market since: "The US is all too often at the epicentre of investment stupidity, from the Long Term Capital Management (LTCM) saga in 1998, the technology bubble of 2000, the property bubble that is still painfully deflating – and the greedy and feckless are now being set up for a roller-coaster in gold from which few will exit with profits [if a classic bubble inflates].

      "There is dynamism and resilience built into the US economy. But what's the point for a UK investor when we can opt for more reliable growth areas in Asia?" he said. Hargreaves Lansdown simply thinks British fund managers aren't that good at delivering the goods. But it also agrees with Mr Dennehy and said that when it comes to investing on the other side of the Atlantic, other overseas sectors such as global emerging markets are more exciting.

      Mark Dampier at Hargreaves Lansdown said: "In my 27 years in the industry I have never bought an American fund, perhaps that tells you everything."

      Not that all financial advisers are downbeat.

      Alan Steel at Alan Steel Asset Management is baffled as to why British investors shun the US. But he suggests that it is difficult to ignore a nation whose GDP is equal in size to the GDP of France, the UK, Italy, Brazil, Canada, Spain, Russia and India added together.

      "The US market has always gone up strongly following the first two years of a new president's first term, going back to the Thirties, and we are about to enter the sweet spot," Mr Steel said.

      "On top of that, demand has come in the past from times when a new generation is significantly bigger than the previous one. Generation Y, as it is known, is reckoned to be 20pc bigger than the baby boomers. No other country has this phenomenon as far as I can see."

      The US economy is still in recovery and continues to run in fear of a double dip. Its latest job data showed an unexpectedly poor reading on private-sector hiring as employers cut 39,000 jobs in September, according to the ADP Employer Services report – the largest monthly loss since January.

      Tom Walker, a fund manager at Martin Currie, the Edinburgh investment house, said the economic news continues to be "very mixed". "We do not expect a 'normal' economic recovery, but do expect growth to continue, albeit at a modest rate."

      Mr Walker admitted that valuations look promising, but that there will be as many hits as misses. "This is not an environment where all boats are going to float and stock selection is more crucial than ever. The market valuation, looking exceptionally cheap, remains key," he added.

      Felix Wintle, who manages Neptune US Opportunities, thinks many investors have seen the S & P500 remain flat for a decade and therefore not thought they had missed out. "The US market is 5,000 strong and companies are at the heart of innovation – these companies, such as Apple, create new world themes, plus we have hundreds of different business models from which to choose the best," he said.

      Mr Wintle points to technology where in the UK, he says, British investors are limited to the likes of Logica and Sage, or in the retailers there are just a handful of shares such as Tesco and Next. "In the US we have so much choice because it is such a big market," he said. "The latest earnings figures are smashing the ball out of the park. Companies have restructured and become leaner organisations over the past couple of years."

      Advocates of the US also argue that its companies are a conduit to emerging markets, which makes them an intriguing play for the contrarian investor who thinks that the likes of China are overcooked. "The US is a bit like the UK in that it is not a domestic play," said Tom Stevenson, investment director at Fidelity. "But its companies have been far more aggressive in making cuts than most and they are relatively cheap. It is one for the contrarian to consider."

      http://www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/personalfinance/investing/8050267/Are-British-investors-missing-a-trick-by-shunning-Wall-St.html

      Thursday 12 August 2010

      Stocks and interest rates tumbled overnight as investors around the world took a bleaker view of the US economy.


      Offshore overnight
      Stocks and interest rates tumbled overnight as investors around the world took a bleaker view of the US economy.
      The Dow Jones industrial average fell 265 points, its biggest drop in six weeks, and all the major indices fell more than 2 per cent.
      The yield on the Treasury's 10-year note fell to its lowest level since March 2009 as investors worried about the economyand avoiding stocks sought the safety of government securities.
      Companies across a wide range of industries dropped.
      Only 442 stocks rose on the New York Stock Exchange, while 2627 fell, a sign that investors expect all businesses to suffer if the economy continues to weaken.
      Investor gloom deepened a day after the Federal Reserve said it would begin buying government bonds as a way to stimulate the economy.
      News of slower industrial growth in China and a disappointing economic indicator in Japan helped send stocks plunging first in Asia, then in Europe and the US.
      Investors got more bad news after trading ended in the US Cisco Systems Inc's revenue in the company's latest quarter fell short of analysts' expectations.
      When markets settled, the Dow had dropped 265.42, or 2.5 per cent, at 10,378.83, its largest slide since it fell 268.22 on June 29.
      The Standard & Poor's 500 index fell 31.59, or 2.8 per cent, to 1089.47, slipping below 1100, a key psychological level.
      Falling and holding below that level could lead to more selling as computer-driven trading sets in.
      The Nasdaq composite index fell 68.54, or 3.01 per cent, to 2208.63.
      The Nasdaq tends to have the biggest losses when stocks are falling sharply because many of its component companies are smaller businesses that struggle the most in a weak economy.
      Trading volume was fairly light on the NYSE at 1.2 billion shares.
      Trading has been particularly slow, even by summer standards in recent days as uncertainty about the economy led many investors to exit the market completely.
      Low volume also can exaggerate swings in the market.
      The Chicago Board Options Exchange's Volatility Index rose 3.02, or 13.5 per cent, to 25.39.
      The VIX is known as the market's fear gauge because a rise signals traders are expecting more drops in stocks.
      European stock markets closed sharply lower on Wednesday after the US Federal Reserve warned that the US recovery was stalling and that it would take fresh stimulus measures to get it back on track.
      Dealers said the warning only confirmed what many had feared after recent disappointing data, especially last week's worse-than-expected employment report, which stoked growing fears of a double-dip recession.
      Data earlier on Wednesday also showed a marked slowdown in the Chinese economy, hitting sentiment badly in Asia and compounding fears that one of the world's growth engines might not be able to drag its peers forward.
      At the same time, a Bank of England growth downgrade for the British economy added to the negative tone and offset recent strong eurozone figures.
      Second quarter German growth figures, due on Friday and which are expected to be very good, will be closely examined for any sign of approaching weakness.
      In London, the FTSE 100 index of leading shares closed down 131.2 points, or 2.44 per cent at 5245.21 points.
      The German DAX lost 132.18 points, or 2.10 per cent, to 6154.07 and in France, the CAC 40 tumbled 102.29 points, or 2.74 per cent, to 3628.29.
      How we fared yesterday
      Australian shares joined a global retreat, dropping the most in nine weeks, as worries about the global economy outweighed a bumper profit result from the Commonwealth Bank. Banks, miners and information stocks led falls.
      The benchmark S&P/ASX200 Index ended the day down 85.2 points, or 1.9 per cent, at 4455.5 points, while the broader All Ordinaries Index had fallen 83.3 points, or 1.8 per cent, to 4479.5 points.
      Commodities
      World oil prices fell sharply in line with tumbling global equity markets as investors set aside a positive International Energy Agency report on demand.
      New York's main contract, light sweet crude for September, dropped $US2.23 to end the day at $US78.02.
      London's Brent North Sea crude for delivery in September sank $US1.96 to $US77.64 a barrel.
      News of falling US oil reserves and increased demand worldwide did little to push prices higher.
      The US government reported on Wednesday that crude inventories fell by three million barrels last week to 355 million barrels.
      Earlier, the Paris-based International Energy Agency raised its estimate for world oil demand this year by 80,000 barrels per day, and for next year by 50,000, on the basis that the global economy grows 4.5 per cent this year and 4.3 per cent in 2011.
      The revised figures mean total demand this year would rise 1.8 million barrels per day or 2.2 per cent to 86.6 million. It would then rise by 1.3 million barrels per day or 1.5 per cent to 87.9 million next year, according to the IEA.
      Economic recovery is pushing up estimates of oil demand this year and next, but there are dangers to growth in advanced nations and some emerging countries, the IEA added.
      The IEA is the oil strategy and monitoring arm of the 31-member Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
      December gold was the only key metal to rise in overnight trading, closing up $US1.20 at $US1199.20 per fine ounce.
      September silver closed down 25.6 US cents at $US17.902 per fine ounce, and September copper fell 5.85 US cents to $US3.2540 per pound.
      October platinum fell $US16.40 to $US1,520.60, and September palladium also fell, by $US5.90 to $US464.70.
      AAP, with BusinessDay