The Economist - UK (2022-04-09)

(Antfer) #1
The Economist April 9th 2022 Finance&economics 65

HousinginAmerica

FOMOfroth


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vyzelmanknowsa thingortwoabout
theAmericanhousingmarket.Shewas
rareamongmainstreamanalystsinwarn­
ingoftroublein2005,ayearbeforethe
bubblestartedtoburst.In2012,whenma­
nyinvestorswerereluctanttogetbackinto
property,shedeclaredthesectorhadhit
rock­bottom;priceshavemorethandou­
bledsincethen.Soit isworthpayingatten­
tiontoherlatestpronouncements.“It’seu­
phoricrightnow,”shesays.“Therearedefi­
nitesignsofexcess.”
ButMsZelman,whohasgonefromin­

WASHINGTON,DC
Thepropertymarketisonceagain
lookingbubbly

Limited stocks only
United States

Sources:FreddieMac;FederalReserve
BankofSt.Louis;Realtor.com

8
6
4
2
0
22201816141210082006

Average30-yearfixedmortgagerate,%

90
60
30
0
DNOSAJJMAMFJ

Property listings, median
number of days on market

0

2021

2020

2017-1 average

TheFederalReserve

Goodbye, QE.


Hello, QT


Q


uantitative easing, orqe, once an
unconventional tool of monetary poli­
cy, has become commonplace over the past
decade.  During  the  pandemic  alone  the
Federal  Reserve  bought  a  staggering
$3.3trn  in  Treasuries  and  $1.3trn  in  mort­
gage­backed securities as it sought to keep
borrowing  costs  low.  The  reverse  process,
quantitative tightening (qt), when central
banks  shrink  their  balance­sheets,  has
been  far  rarer.  The  Fed  is  the  only  central
bank to have truly attempted it, and it had
to stop abruptly in 2019 because of market
ructions.  So  its  plan  for  reducing  its  as­
sets—trailed in the minutes of its meeting
in March, published on April 6th—takes it
into relatively uncharted territory.
Officials  like  to  downplay  the  signifi­
cance of qt. When at the Fed’s helm, Janet
Yellen  compared  it  to  watching  paint  dry.
Jerome  Powell,  her  successor,  says  it  will
operate  in  the  background.  In  truth  it  is
akin to dismantling an auxiliary engine for
the economy, with only hazy knowledge of
the consequences.
As Lael Brainard, a member of the Fed’s
board, noted on April 5th, this round of qt
will be more aggressive than the Fed’s pre­
vious  iteration.  With  inflation  racing
aheadand the labour market tight, the cen­
tral bank wants to cool the economy quick­
ly.  Coupled  with  interest­rate  rises,  qtis
likely to be a drag on growth.
So  far  the  Fed  has  reinvested  the  pro­
ceeds of maturing bonds in order to main­
tain  its  stock  of  assets.  The  minutes  sug­
gest it is likely to shrink its balance­sheet

not  by  making  active  sales,  but  by  letting
some  maturing  bonds  “roll  off”,  without
reinvestment.  The  roll­off  may  start  in
May. Come July, all going well, the Fed will
raise  the  maximum  roll­off  to  $95bn  per
month, split between $60bn of Treasuries
and  $35bn  of  mortgage­backed  bonds.  At
full  tilt,  the  Fed  could  shrink  its  balance­
sheet  by  more  than  $1trn  over  a  12­month
period,  twice  as  fast  as  its  first  go  at  qt.
“Even if it’s done in a predictable way, this
is a big adjustment for markets,” says Brian
Sack of D.E. Shaw, an investment firm. 
Multiple  rounds  of  bond­buying  by
central  banks  since  the  financial  crisis  of
2007­09 have yielded some understanding
of how qeworks. It signals a commitment
to  ultra­low  interest  rates.  It  suppresses
long­term rates. And it supports liquidity,
ensuring that markets operate smoothly. 
qtlooks  like  qein  reverse.  Instead  of
creating central­bank reserves (held by the
private  sector)  by  purchasing  bonds,  the
central  bank  drains  reserves  by  refraining
from  reinvesting  as  bonds  mature.  The
three channels through which qeworks al­
so operate in reverse. First, qtsends a sig­
nal  that  rate  rises  are  coming.  Notably,  it
was in early January, when the Fed discuss­
ed  a  faster  approach  to  qtthan  many  had
expected, that market rates shot up. 
The second channel—qt’s direct impact
on  yields—involves  heroic  guesstimates.
Some analysts think the Fed will shrink its
balance­sheet by $3trn over the next three
years (taking it to about 20% of gdp, down
from  36%  now).  Mark  Cabana  of  Bank  of
America reckons this could equate to any­
where  between  a  quarter  point  and  1.25
percentage  points  of  rate  increases—a  re­
markably  wide  range.  Mr  Powell  has  also
noted the uncertainty about qt: “We have a
much better sense, frankly, of how rate in­
creases affect financial conditions.”
When the Fed raises interest rates, it is
raising  overnight  borrowing  rates,  which
then ripple along the yield curve. With qt,
the main impact is on longer­term yields.
For  some  economists,  such  as  Kristin
Forbes  of  the  Massachusetts  Institute  of
Technology,  this  means  that  qt could  be
more potent than rate rises, since it would
target  hot  segments  of  the  credit  market,
such as mortgages (see next story). The Fed
has said that it will stick with rate increas­
es—the devil it knows—as its main tool. If,
however, qtdoes hit longer yields, it may
need fewer rate rises to tame inflation.
The final channel is liquidity. As the Fed
buys fewer bonds, there may be fewer tran­
sactions  overall.  Indeed,  a  Bloomberg  in­
dex that measures the ease of trading Trea­
suries recently worsened to levels last seen
at  the  pandemic’s  start.  That  echoes  un­
comfortably  with  the  past  round  of  qt,
which culminated in a liquidity crunch in
the  overnight­borrowing  market.  But  the
Fed  is  better  prepared  this  time.  There  is

much  more  cash  in  the  market  to  begin
with. And the Fed has set up an overnight­
lending facility, which should let banks get
funds  if  needed.  “The  risk  of  a  spike  in
rates  like  we  had  in  September  2019  is
much,  much  lower,”  says  Bill  Dudley,  for­
mer president of the New York Fed. 
Yet new concerns will emerge. The Fed’s
mortgage  bonds  have  long  tenors,  so  pas­
sive roll­offs would take decades. The cen­
tral  bank  may  have  to  make  active  sales,
which  it  wants  to  avoid.  Another  concern
is the Fed’s $326bn in short­term Treasury
bills. Some observers think it will roll them
off,  supercharging  qt;  others  fear  that
would stoke volatility. But the biggest wor­
ry is whether qt willwork as intended, tak­
ing heat out oftheeconomy without caus­
ing undue harm.n

WASHINGTON, DC
The Fed prepares a little-understood
policy tool
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