The Fed's Tightening Pipe Dream
by
Peter Schiff
Recently
by Peter Schiff: US
Debt Crisis Will Be Worse Than Europe’s
Testifying
before the US Senate this past Tuesday, Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
made an extraordinary claim about its bloated balance sheet: "We
could exit without ever selling by letting it run off." What Bernanke
means here is that the Fed could simply hold its Treasuries and
agency bonds until they mature, at which point the government would
then be forced to pay the Fed back the principal amount. Through
this process, the Fed's unprecedented and inflationary position
will be gradually and placidly unwound.
Growing rumors
last month of a potential "tightening" of monetary policy – seemingly
confirmed by the Fed minutes released on Feb. 20th – have spooked
the precious metals markets, leading to a 5.8% correction in gold
and 10.2% in silver.
However, these
fears are preposterous on two counts.
First, the
Fed just spent the past year and a half extending the maturities
of its entire portfolio. That was the entire purpose of Operation
Twist. The average maturity of the entire portfolio is now over
10 years. That means any wind-down using the strategy Bernanke outlined
would play out over the course of decades – not months or years.
Fortunately
for hard asset investors, it is unlikely to play out at all.
The second
reason these fears are unfounded is that there is no exit strategy.
Listening to Bernanke's testimony, it was clear that here was a
man simply speculating about when an exit might be undertaken –
or perhaps if it would ever be taken. Senator Corker from
Tennessee accused Bernanke during the hearing of being "the biggest
dove since World War II." "I think it's something you're rather
proud of," the Senator continued. The Chairman's response to the
charge of recklessly endangering the nation's currency? "In some
respects, I am."
The Fed Chairman
has been talking about tightening for some time. In 2010, he said,
"As the expansion matures, the Federal Reserve will need to begin
to tighten monetary conditions to prevent the development of inflationary
pressures."
Back then,
the same mainstream analysts were predicting recovery and a reversal
of quantitative easing (QE). Instead, we have subsequently seen
QE2, Operation Twist, and now QE3 to eternity.
While these
mainstream commentators are at best guessing as to why or when the
Fed might reverse course, I understand that it is extremely unlikely
to do so for the foreseeable future. In fact, I've bet my net worth
on it.
There is no
exit strategy because the results of the Fed withdrawing its artificial
support would be disastrous for the US Treasury and in the short-term,
the US economy.
The Fed is
expected to buy nearly 90% of new Treasury bonds in 2013, according
to Bloomberg. This is a tremendous subsidy that has kept 10-year
Treasury yields below 1.95% on average this year so far. Last year,
with 10-year yields averaging 1.8%, the Treasury spent $360 billion
on interest payments alone. That represented nearly 10% of all expenditures.
Let's assume
a Fed tightening causes these rates to triple – not unreasonable
for a government facing over 100% debt-to-GDP. If these rates triple
by 2015, and another $2 trillion or so is added to the debt, then
interest would make up over 30% of annual federal expenditures.
Just interest. Then, there are principal repayments, Medicare/Medicaid,
Social Security, the Armed Forces, and all the other entitlements
for which the Treasury is responsible. Is Washington going to default
on our creditors, our seniors, or our men and women in uniform?
I believe these
assumptions are still rosy compared to what might actually happen
if the Fed were to withdraw support. As I outlined in my January
Gold Letter, the US sovereign debt market is a house of cards
in which the Fed, foreign creditors, and domestic investors each
play a part. If the Fed were to signal that creditors might face
haircuts, then the reaction could be swift to the downside. If rates
went above 10%, as they have in Greece, then over half of
the federal budget would be committed to interest payments alone.
But that's
not all. Higher interest rates would cause the shaky housing market
to take another nosedive. Few Americans are in a position to buy
a $300K house at 10+% interest. Rather, prices would have to decline
to levels affordable for cash buyers and those willing and able
to take out high-interest mortgages. That might mean another 50%
decline or more, in real terms.
With housing
taking a second bath, we can expect the banks not to be far behind.
That sector remains bloated and dependent on various subsidies from
the Fed. With loan rates higher than their customers can afford,
banks would fail at a rate higher than 2007-8. This would trigger
another round of bailouts from the Treasury; but without Fed assistance,
where will the funds come from?
If there isn't
a bailout, the major money-center banks would collapse, crippling
Wall Street's reputation as the global financial center. The US
dollar's reserve status might then be abandoned once and for all.
Quickly, one
can see how the Fed's money-printing is the mask holding this charade
together.
To see in real
time what happens when the mask is pulled off, look to the Mediterranean.
Greece has seen the Golden Dawn neo-nazi party win 7% of seats in
the last two elections. Italy, meanwhile, just saw a comedian with
no political background grab 25% of its parliament in a satirical
candidacy. Street protests, unemployment, and other signs of instability
are rampant. The protestors are not learning a tough lesson about
the consequences of profligate spending; instead, they're simply
angry that the money has stopped flowing.
No one in Washington
– not least Ben Bernanke – has any intention of setting off a similar
episode in the US. Yet, that's exactly what a tightening of monetary
policy would do. So, at least as long as the CPI numbers can be
fudged to make inflation appear "contained," the Fed is going to
keep filling the punch bowl.
Returning to
the latest Fed minutes that have hard asset investors so upset,
it is telling that while there was some discussion of the dangers
of money-printing, only one of twelve governors actually voted against
continuing current policies. With no concrete actions being taken
and an overwhelming majority still in favor of current policies,
it seems gold bears are making much ado about nothing.
As investors
realize this, they will once again put their pedals to the precious
metals.
March
4, 2013
Peter
Schiff is CEO of Euro
Pacific Precious Metals 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 How
an Economy Grows and Why It Crashes.
Copyright
© 2013 Euro
Pacific Precious Metals
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