What an exceedingly strange period in our economic and financial history! Amidst a non-recovery economic recovery we have below par growth and high unemployment. Coupled with economic weakness we have above trend inflation. Let us consider some of the odder stories from last week:
Ben Bernanke and QE3
The first two exercises in quantitative easing have had mixed to negative consequences. While the stock market has almost doubled from its low, the “real economy” has languished. We can further document the relationship between QE and poor economic performance with a look at price hikes in key commodities such as food and energy.
Yet here is Dr. Ben Bernanke before Congress, once again selling us a product repair that simply does not work. On Wednesday, he made it clear that QE3 was part of his thinking. And even he is not altogether sure. On Wednesday, he backed away from an immediate move to start a third round of Fed money printing and bond buying. See QE3 Guaranteed to Fail
Is there any reason that Dr. Bernanke still holds his job? While his supporters point to a rise in stocks, the “real economy” has suffered. Aren’t there better candidates for his job, who will try some new ideas? Are money printing and market manipulation the only ideas that any of our leaders can come up with? And to further the irritation with our Princeton economic guru, note that stocks used to rise and fall on company earnings and the economic outlook, not on which side of the bed the Fed chairman woke up on.
Don’t Worry Be Happy: Just Disregard Europe’s Problems
David Goldman in Inner Workings points out that the financial crisis in Europe will not be a rerun of Lehman’s 2008 meltdown:
Under the headline “A Fate Worse Than Banking Crisis” my friend John Dizard at the Financial Times points out that any run on Europe’s banks would be instantly countered by swap lines from the Fed and ECB. His point (one I have been making for some time) is that the scope of the European banking problem is well known and that mechanisms have long been in place to deal with the worst-case scenario. Not so with Lehman, where a sort of China syndrome applied: no-one knew the amount of contingent liabilities that might be affected. See Once Again: It’s Not Lehman II
Mr. Goldman continues to calmly assure us that European problems will not create another financial meltdown:
My conclusion: there is no reason to panic over the present kerfluffle, but there is no reason to own any exposure to southern Europe. Ever again. See Hopeless, But Not Serious: Once Again.
It’s too early to blow the “all clear” whistle on capital markets, but today’s recovery in the major US stock indices reassures me that this is not another financial crisis on the September 2008 scale, just a particularly nasty negotiation after which Italians, Greeks and Spaniards will end up poorer (along with Minnesota teachers, Wisconsin firemen and New Jersey policemen). It was amusing to see the usual suspects among the Street strategists issue dire warnings about increased tail risk just as markets turned around. See Ken Lewis, George Soros and Other Hedgehogs
So Mr. Goldman is assuring us of financial recovery based on one day of a US stock market rally? His prognostications eerily remind me of 2007 and the assurances from Ben Bernanke, Hank Paulson and other financial luminaries that the subprime crisis was well contained. Stock markets rallied then too, only to decline disastrously a year later.
Yesterday was a stark reminder of how unsafe Europe really is:
Greece 2 year interest rate on sovereign date: 34.5%
Portugal 2 year: 21.2%
Ireland 2 year : 23.3%
Italy 2 year : 4.65%
Spain 2 year: 4.55%
America is only marginally safer than Europe. American research firm Egan-Jones recently also downgraded US Treasury debt. See Europe is *Not* “Safe”
Are We Better Off Now Than In 2008?
We live in a financially interconnected world, and I am not at all reassured by Mr. Goldman. I doubt that anyone knows what the effect of a bankruptcy in Portugal or Italy would have on world financial markets. Could anyone have predicted that the 2008 financial crisis would take down AIG and Lehman and send US banks scurrying to the Treasury for TARP funds? Do we think the world and the major financial institutions can better weather a storm now than in 2008? While I may not know, I am more fearful that Bernanke, Goldman, Dimon and Blankfein do not know either, and they are out there making predictions and advocating policy.
Europe, China and the US have spent trillions of dollars trying to bolster their economies. What if we have used all our money-printing ammunition and the next crisis is even worse?
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