Irwin Stelzer
We've made some changes
to The Sunday Times
LIKE the cavalry coming over the hill just as the Indians are about to overwhelm the wagon train, Ben Bernanke has ridden to the rescue of beleaguered investors. He opened the discount window, making it possible for those desperate for liquidity to show up, hand over some assets that no one seems willing to buy, and borrow cash against those assets. The Fed specifically listed “home mortgages and related assets” as acceptable collateral.
Bernanke once said that the way to end a liquidity problem was to hop into a helicopter, and shower the country with cash, leading to the nickname “Helicopter Ben”. Fortunately, he knows the difference between a professor’s joke and a Fed chairman’s policy. He knows, too, that he cannot bail out imprudent lenders and borrowers without creating moral hazard – encouraging a repeat of such behaviour. So he has made it possible for banks and other institutions to get their hands on sufficient cash to give them time to work out their problems, but only by paying interest rates that are higher than those routinely charged overnight borrowers. Walter Bagehot must be smiling from on high, as his prescription is applied to ailing markets: “Lend freely against good collateral at a penalty rate.”
Bernanke also met the economy’s liquidity needs without lowering overall interest rates, which he doesn’t want to do, at least not quite yet. One commentator called it a surgical strike, as opposed to carpet bombing the entire economy. Another suggested that Bernanke had gone from Scrooge to rock star overnight.
Not only has Bernanke managed to hold to his antiinflation stance by refusing to cut interest rates, but he has gone a long way towards eliminating the uncertainty that has been plaguing the markets. Given the complexity of the various asset-backed securities, and the lack of transparency, nobody knew which securities were infected with the problems related to the collapse of the market for troubled sub-prime mortgages. So they avoided the good as well as the bad and the ugly. Now holders of those pariah securities can use them as collateral at the discount window.
Even more important, he has abandoned the policy of restricting these loans to very short periods. The new liquidity will be available as long as it is needed. So two cheers for Bernanke and his colleagues on the Fed board of governors, who unanimously supported the opening of the discount window.
The third cheer has to be held until we see whether this move combines with other Fed policies to keep the economy on its current modest growth course. Wall Street is sighing with relief; Main Street is yet to be heard from. The Fed’s critics have not been appeased by its latest move. They want Bernanke to cut interest rates to reverse what they see as a major slowdown in the economy. He is hesitating. The inflation rate remains a bit above the Fed’s comfort range, the industrial sector remains strong, the jobs market is in good shape, and consumers’ incomes are rising.
But on Friday the Fed noted that “the downside risks to growth have increased appreciably”. This has many Fed watchers believing that Bernanke is on the verge of striking a new balance between inflation-fighting and economy-stimulating, and will cut interest rates next month.
Meanwhile, Main Street’s reaction is difficult to read. Consumer confidence dropped last month. This probably was due to a combination of the financial turmoil and continued problems in the housing markets. But the survey predated Bernanke’s surprise move on Friday.
Even with confidence dropping last month, and the troubles in the housing market, consumers did not retire from the malls and shops to their couches and television sets. Retail sales continue to grow, especially at the shops of middle and high-end merchants. Consumers have continued to snap up electronics gear, furniture, and clothing, more than offsetting their inclina-tion to hold on to their current carsa bit longer.
If the economy continues to grow, Bernanke will have done one of the things he has to do to earn that third cheer. The other is to complete the process of making it possible for the nation’s financial institutions to use the breathing space he has given them to work their way out of their difficulties. That might involve further injections of liquidity. Make no mistake: the Fed’s spectacular move on Friday is no panacea. Warren Buffett, “the sage of Omaha”, says “the hangover is commensurate with the binge”. And lenders have been on a binge that has produceda huge hangover.
There are still lots of securities out there that are backed with assets of unknown value; lenders are still skittish, and not eager to finance new mortgages; many lenders are going to have to write down the value of assets they have on their books at values far above what they can fetch in the market.
After all, the problems in financial markets transcend the sub-prime mortgage market. There are some $10,000 billion of residential mortgages outstanding in America. Only 15% of those are sub-prime mortgages, and only some 12% to 13% of those mortgages are delinquent (payment overdue for more than 30 days), with even fewer, perhaps 5% to 6% in foreclosure. That is less than 1% of all residential mortgages. This tiny tail has been wagging the big dog that is the US and world financial markets. If the banks avail themselves of the open discount window – something they have been reluctant to do because it has been seen as the last stop before the graveyard for a financial institution – Wall Street traders might get to their seaside mansions for a weekend for the first time this summer. Irwin Stelzer is a business adviser and director of economic policy studies at the Hudson Institute
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Alice in Wonderland seems to be a recurrent theme on the Times Business website at the moment. I particularly like the idea that central banks should lower interest rates at the very moment when banks have shown complete disregard for their masters' guiding hand.
Pierre Bernardi, Paris, France
Hang on. Before quoting Bagehot (see latest The Economist), I thought the problem with CDOs is that no one knows if they are good collateral? And as for the punitive rate, isn't 5.75% lower than the previous rate by 0.5%? Or didn't that rate actually mean anything?
Pierre Bernardi, Paris, France
Cutting rates now would only add another tot of cash to the drunken debt binger's cocktail - and reinforce the Greenspan Put that effectively says no risk is too high for the return if you have the Fed propping you and the punchbowl up.
In essence Bernanke would be saying: borrow beyond your means of repaying and the central banks will bail you out - every time. Until the next time when the crisis is even deeper because the risks taken were even higher and the contagion becomes uncontrollable.
Central banks need hard hearts and steady nerves (and should have raised rates sooner and faster when the asset bubble first appeared). Yes the hangover will be painful (that's always true in real life) but that is necessary reminder that the rewards of risk must come at a price.
We should not subsidise speculators. Volatility and pain are are part of a healthy economy, which, like nature, is red in tooth and claw - muzzle the teeth and cut the claws and you end up with a circus.
Huw Sayer, Norwich, England
The helicopter analogy is from Patinkin, which anybody who has read an economics textbook should know. I start to wonder about Mr Stelzer's educational background.
Ian, Fredrerick, USA MD
Yeah, the nationâs financial institutions which caused this mess to begin with are bailed out by the government. Which know doubt the regular John Doe on the street will have to payback in taxes. What a shambolic state of affairs. Bernanke has only delayed the fiasco which only time will tell how worse it will get. One final note...I laugh when people think there is no sub-prime issues in the U.K. Wake up people...
George, London, U.K.
What this column ignores is the huge amount of personal debt in the US that is in default in addition to mortgages. People default on their house loan last - the arrears on credit cards, car loans and consumer finance is now unsustainable.
Betty Gleave, Reading, England
Irwin Stelzer states that the sub-prime crisis is a case of the tail wagging the dog. Perhaps. But one of the key problems with what has happened is that nobody actually seems to have any idea of the true extent of the original issue, let alone of its ramifications. Stelzer believes that less than 1% of all residential mortgages are in foreclosure. Today's New York Times states that the FDIC is forecasting around 1.7m foreclosures in 2007/2008, which, if Stelzer is right, means that there are in the region of 170m residential mortages in the US. In a population of 300m at the last count ? It just doesn't add up.
Eburnant, London,
Bernanke may have bailed out the hedgies and Wall Street banks but is he also going to force the mortgage lenders to relax their underwriting standards so that they can take on more subprime borrowers and keep the housing market from going down the toilet? At the end of the day the problem is a crisis of confidence and a repricing of risk and all the liquidity in the world is not going to convince lenders to throw money down a bottomless pit. If you think I am off my rocker, just look at what happened in Japan in the 1990s: Interest rates went to zero and the economy still went flat on its back. It could happen again unless you want to believe it's different this time.
anthony, london, england