In the following article Bill Bonner makes some excellent points about the problem with the current monetary policy. The first is that it is totally ludicrous to try to buy real goods with fake money. It has to cause distortions in the overall economy. “People make different decisions when they can borrow for practically nothing… ” Secondly, once it gets started, without some form of real recovery it will be impossible to stop. Kind of like a drug addict. The withdrawal will be painful and won’t happen until something forces the FED’s hand. And thirdly also just like drug addicts and unsuccessful people the world over the FED is taking a short term view. It is a proven fact that the most successful people take a long term view. Doctors are willing to spend many years studying before they ever earn a penny but eventually they are well rewarded for their forbearance. And looking at the other side of the long term view… just because penalties have not yet been assessed doesn’t mean they don’t exist. When conditions change the FED will have to find buyers for all this debt they are creating and where will they come from? ~Tim McMahon,editor
Between Improbable and Impossible
by Bill Bonner
“Buying Real things with Fake Money…”Stock market investors don’t seem to know or care that the main thing propping up their investments is the same thing that will ultimately destroy them. And that the longer the situation continues the bigger the mess will be when it finally blows up.
We’re talking, of course, about Fed, Bank of England, Bank of Japan and People’s Bank of China monetary policy. It is “experimental.” It is “bold.” It is also reckless and potentially catastrophic.
Lending money at negative real interest rates creates grotesque distortions in the market.
Savers get nothing for their trouble. In fact, they lose money in real (inflation-adjusted) terms. So they shift to speculating on stocks. The stock market goes higher… but it is not a market you can trust.
It is being driven by the printing of trillions of dollars, yen, pounds and renminbi. But central bank policy hasn’t been able to budge slumping economic fundamentals. And any attempted exit by central banks in the absence of a genuine economic recovery will be, in the words of hedge fund manager Paul Singer, “somewhere on the continuum between problematic and impossible.”
if you could pay for real things with fake money – you would do it all day long.
It is also unnatural for a central bank to print up new money and use it, indirectly, to pay for government operations. If you could do that without penalty – that is, if you could pay for real things with fake money – you would do it all day long.
Normally, central banks don’t even try. They know the penalties make it not worth the fleeting enjoyment.
Do you see any penalties, dear reader? We don’t.
But the fact that the penalties have not yet been assessed doesn’t mean they don’t exist. And the longer we go without paying them, the greater they will eventually be.
What’s Not to Like? At present, the feds get only rewards.
First, lower interest rates make it easier to finance federal debt.
Second, low debt interest payments reduce the outstanding debt in real (inflation-adjusted) terms.
Third, Fed Treasury bond buying indirectly funds government spending – to the tune of about $45 billion per month.
Fourth, the lack of yields in the bond market corrals investors into stocks. This pushes stock prices higher. Rich bankers and rich campaign contributors get richer.
What’s not to like?
For the moment, nothing.
But the markets won’t stay in this “sweet spot” for long. The time will come when the Fed will have to reverse its policies or face substantially higher inflation.
But how? Instead of buying bonds, the Fed will have to sell them. But to whom?
Fortune magazine reports:
Warren Buffett has a piece of advice for Ben Bernanke: It’s easier to buy than it is to sell.
Buffett, speaking on Saturday at Berkshire Hathaway’s annual meeting in Omaha, said he is worried about what will happen when the Federal Reserve tries to wind down its recent efforts to stimulate the economy. Via a program nicknamed “QE,” short for “quantitative easing,” the Fed in recent years has bought up over $2 trillion in bonds in order to lower interest rates and promote borrowing and investment.
Some have warned that when the Fed decides to sell its trove of bonds, or even just stops adding to it, stock markets could tank. Rising interest rates could cause banks to lose billions, perhaps igniting another financial crisis. Buffett says we don’t know what will happen, but he is concerned.
“QE is like watching a good movie, because I don’t know how it will end,” says Buffett. “Anyone who owns stocks will reevaluate his hand when it happens, and that will happen very quickly”…
“People make different decisions when they can borrow for practically nothing… It’s a huge experiment.”
Charlie Munger, Buffett’s long-term chief lieutenant, who was also talking at the meeting, says he worries about more than just inflation.
“What has happened in macroeconomics has surprised pretty much everyone,” says Munger. “Given that history, economists should be more cautious when they print money in massive amounts.”
See Also:
- How Have Inflation Indexed Bonds Really Performed?
- Its Weight in Gold: The Real Prices of Things
- What is Quantitative Easing?
- What are I bonds?
- What to Do When – Not If – Inflation Gets Out of Hand
- What is the Phillips Curve?
Recommended by Amazon:
- The Crisis of Crowding: Quant Copycats, Ugly Models, and the New Crash Normal
- The Alchemists: Three Central Bankers and a World on Fire
- Slapped by the Invisible Hand:The Panic of 2007– An authority on banking panics, Gorton is the ideal person to explain the financial calamity of 2007. Indeed, as the crisis unfolded, he was working inside an institution that played a central role in the collapse.
- The Monetary Policy of the Federal Reserve One of the great services Hetzel performs is dragging into the light quotes from old-line Keynesians (including some Nobel Laureates) who said it was impossible or impractical to bring inflation down from 6% to 1%, as well as quotes from famous Keynesians who argued that inflation-fighting wasn’t even the Fed’s business.
- A Monetary History of the United States, 1867-1960 by Milton Friedman
This article was originally published under the title: Buffett to Bernanke: It’s easier to buy than to sell in Bill Bonner’s Diary of a Rogue Economist and was reprinted by permission.
Image courtesy of Digital Art / FreeDigitalPhotos.net
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