Showing posts with label Fed policy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fed policy. Show all posts

Monday, February 13, 2017

Edward Harrison — If foreigners are dumping Treasuries, how should you respond as an investor?

One of the lead stories at Bloomberg this morning is an article about foreigners shying away from “financing the US government”. And the conclusion of this article is that it could mean higher interest rates in the US. Is this conclusion the right one though, and how should you respond as an investor? I have some thoughts on that below....
Harrison opines that Bullard's view of Fed policy will likely prevail.

Credit Writedowns 
If foreigners are dumping Treasuries, how should you respond as an investor?
Edward Harrison

Sunday, November 1, 2015

Brad DeLong — Alan Greenspan (1994): Testimony before the Subcommittee on Economic Growth and Credit Formation of the Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs

Greenspan is announcing that the Fed is no longer asking in a Friedmanite mode “do we have the right quantity of money?”, but rather asking in a Wicksellian mode “do we have the right configuration of interest rates”
WCEG — The Equitablog
Alan Greenspan (1994): Testimony before the Subcommittee on Economic Growth and Credit Formation of the Committee on Banking, Finance and Urban Affairs
Brad DeLong

Also

Cracking the Hard Shell of the Macroeconomic Knut: “Keynesian”, “Friedmanite”, and “Wicksellian” Epistemes in Macroeconomics

Thursday, March 22, 2012

Explaining the recent spike in interest rates



There’s been a lot of chatter about the recent enormous “spike” in interest rates. I want to make some comments and observations.

First, this spike, while large in percentage terms over such a short period is really tiny in nominal terms. Take a look:













Once you have a little perspective the “enormous spike” becomes a joke.

Second point:

Rates are anchored by Fed policy and that doesn’t just mean short term rates, it means rates all along the curve. Whatever the Fed funds rate is will be reflected further out. A 10-year yield is nothing more than a reflection of Fed policy over that term. And since the Fed has been very clear about its intention to keep rates low and maintain a “highly accommodative” policy stance out until 2014, there is not going to be some big move up in rates. We’ve probably already hit the upside ceiling for rates.

Third point:

The rise in rates over the past several weeks has been due to a number of things, one of them being an improving forecast for the U.S. economy AND a dissipation of fears of a European meltdown. (In my opinion, the jury is still out on both of these views.)

In addition there has also been a largely unnoticed, but fairly sharp decline, in reserve balances over the past few weeks. (See chart below.) This has been due to the Fed allowing existing positions on its balance sheet to “roll off” (i.e. proceeds from maturing securities are not reinvested) AND a large amount of bond issuance by the Federal Government this month to cover expenditures, which has not been offset yet by Fed monetary operations.

On that last point, notice the recent upturn in reserve balances on the chart below. The Fed is once again stepping in to add reserves. Bottom line, the bond selloff is probably over.