Operation Screw
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: The
Fed's Campaign
With yesterday's
Fed decision and press conference, Chairman Ben Bernanke finally
and decisively laid his cards on the table. And confirming what
I have been saying for many years, all he was holding was more of
the same snake oil and bluster. Going further than he has ever gone
before, he made it clear that he will be permanently binding the
American economy to a losing strategy. As a result, September 13,
2012 may one day be regarded as the day America finally threw in
the economic towel.
Here is the
outline of the Fed's plan: buy hundreds of billions of home mortgages
annually in order to push down mortgage rates and push up home prices,
thereby encouraging people to build and buy homes and spend the
extracted equity on consumer goods. Furthermore, the Fed hopes that
ultra-cheap money will push up stock prices so that Wall Street
and stock investors feel wealthier and begin to spend more freely.
He won't admit this directly, but rather than building an economy
on increased productivity, production, and wealth accumulation,
he is trying to build one on confidence, increased leverage, and
rising asset prices. In other words, the Fed prefers the illusion
of growth to the restructuring needed to allow for real growth.
The problem
that went unnoticed by the reporters at the Fed's press conference
(and those who have written about it subsequently) is that we already
tried this strategy and it ended in disaster. Loose monetary policy
created the housing and stock bubbles of the last decade, the bursting
of which almost blew up the economy. Apparently for Bernanke and
his cohorts, almost isn't good enough. They are coming back to finish
the job. But this time, they are packing weaponry of a much higher
caliber. Not only are they pushing mortgage rates down to historical
lows but now they are buying all the loans!
Last year,
the Fed launched the so-called "Operation Twist," which was designed
to lower long-term interest rates and flatten the yield curve. Without
creating any real benefits for the economy, the move exposed US
taxpayers and holders of dollar-based assets to the dangers of shortening
the maturity on $16 trillion of outstanding government debt. Such
a repositioning exposes the Treasury to much faster and more painful
consequences if interest rates rise. Still, the set of policies
announced yesterday will do so much more damage than "Operation
Twist," they should be dubbed "Operation Screw." Because make no
mistake, anyone holding US dollars, Treasury bonds, or living on
a fixed income will have their purchasing power stolen by these
actions.
Prior injections
of quantitative easing have done little to revive our economy or
set us on a path for real recovery. We are now in more debt, have
more people out of work, and have deeper fiscal problems than we
had before the Fed began down this path. All the supporters can
say is things would have been worse absent the stimulus. While counterfactual
arguments are hard to prove, I do not doubt that things would have
been worse in the short-term if we had simply allowed the imbalances
of the old economy to work themselves out. But in exchange for that
pain, I believe that we would be on the road to a real recovery.
Instead, we have artificially sustained a borrow-and-spend model
that puts us farther away from solid ground.
Because the
initials of quantitative easing – QE – have brought to mind the
famous Queen Elizabeth cruise ships, many have likened these Fed
moves as giant vessels that are loaded up and sent out to sea. But
based on their newly announced plans, the analogy no longer applies.
As the new commitments are open-ended, quantitative easing will
now be delivered via a non-stop conveyor belt that dumps cheap money
on the economy. The only variable is how fast the belt moves.
Fortunately,
the crude limitations of the Fed's only policy tool have become
more apparent to the markets. If you must stick with the nautical
metaphors, QE3 has sunk before it has even left port. The move was
explicitly designed to push down long-term interest rates, but interest
rates spiked significantly in the immediate aftermath of the announcement.
Traders realize that an open-ended commitment to buying bonds means
that inflation and dollar weakness will likely destroy any nominal
gains in the bonds themselves. To underscore this point, the Fed
announcement also caused a sharp selloff in Treasuries and the dollar
and a strong rally in commodities, especially precious metals.
Given that
30-year fixed mortgages are already at historic lows, there can
be little confidence that the new plan will succeed in pushing them
much lower, especially given the upward spike that occurred in the
immediate aftermath of the announcement. Instead, Bernanke is likely
trying to provide the confidence home owners need to exchange fixed-rate
mortgages for lower adjustable rate loans – which would free up
more cash for current consumer spending. He is looking for homeowners
to do their own twist. If he succeeds, more homeowners will be vulnerable
to increasing rates, which will further limit the Fed's future ability
to increase rates to fight rising prices.
The goal of
the plan is to create consumer purchasing power by raising home
and stock prices. No one seems to be considering the likelihood
that unending QE will fail to lift bond, stock, or home prices,
but will instead bleed straight through to higher prices for food,
energy, and other consumer staples. If that occurs, consumers will
have less purchasing power as a result of Bernanke's efforts, not
more.
The Fed decision
comes at the same time as the situation in Europe is finally moving
out of urgent crisis mode. While I do not think the ECB's decision
to underwrite more sovereign debt from troubled EU members will
work out well in the long term, at least those moves have come with
some German strings attached [For more on this, see
John Browne's article from earlier this week]. As a result,
I feel that the attention of currency traders may now shift to the
poor fundamentals of the US dollar, rather than the potential for
a breakup of the euro.
In the meantime,
the implications for American investors should be clear. The Fed
will try to conjure a recovery on the backs of currency debasement.
It will not stop or alter from this course. If the economy fails
to respond to the drugs, Bernanke will simply up the dosage. In
fact, he is so convinced we will remain dependent on quantitative
easing that he explicitly said he won't turn off the spigots even
if things noticeably improve. In other words, the dollar is screwed.
September
15, 2012
Peter
Schiff is president of Euro Pacific Capital and author of The
Little Book of Bull Moves in Bear Markets and Crash
Proof: How to Profit from the Coming Economic Collapse. His
latest book is The
Real Crash: America's Coming Bankruptcy, How to Save Yourself and
Your Country.
Copyright
© 2012 Euro Pacific Capital
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