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2012年6月23日 星期六

The Fed Keeps Twisting in Its Quest for Lower Rates

(Updates with economic projections and comments from Ben Bernanke’s press conference.)

The Federal Reserve will keep spiking the punch bowl at the economic dance party through the end of the year. The Fed said Wednesday it will continue what economists like to call Operation Twist, an attempt to bring down long-term interest rates to stimulate economic growth. The operation “should put downward pressure on longer-term interest rates and help to make broader financial conditions more accommodative,” the Federal Open Market Committee said in a written statement.

William McChesney Martin, who chaired the Fed in the 1950s and 1960s, once said that the central bank’s job was to “take away the punch bowl just as the party gets going.” But under Chairman Ben Bernanke, the Fed is more worried about the ho-hum party grinding to a complete halt. Rate-setters are trying to push mortgage rates to historic lows to revive the housing market, which is a key to overall growth.

The concept of Operation Twist is to sell some of the Fed’s short-term Treasury securities and use the money to buy long-term ones—to “twist” the maturity of the portfolio. Short-term rates are already super-low; the objective is to bring longer-term rates down as well by shifting demand. The original program, announced last September, was set to expire at the end of this month with $400 billion shifted. Now the Fed will reallocate a further $267 billion toward long-term securities through the end of 2012, leaving it with precisely zero in short-term Treasuries.

While the Fed is twisting, it isn’t quite shouting. Shouting would be taking the more extreme measure of adding to the size of its bond portfolio, which already stands at about $2.7 trillion. The current program shifts the maturity of the portfolio without making it bigger.

Will this help? Probably some, but not a lot. Low mortgage rates—the 30-year fixed rate average is currently 3.71 percent— have already made houses the most affordable they’ve been in decades. The problem for many potential buyers is not the cost, but their inability to get a loan because of damaged credit. The Fed’s initiative won’t do anything about that.

The rest of the Fed’s statement was as expected: It darkened its portrayal of the economy’s health and repeated its prediction that weak economic conditions “are likely to warrant exceptionally low levels for the federal funds rate at least through late 2014.” Jeffrey Lacker, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond, dissented from the open market committee’s decision, opposing the continuation of Operation Twist.

The Fed is now looking for 2012 economic growth of just 1.9 percent to 2.4 percent [PDF], down sharply from the range of 2.4 percent to 2.9 percent in April. That’s the range excluding the three highest and three lowest forecasts. It includes predictions from all of the Federal Reserve governors and bank presidents, not just the ones currently voting on the Federal Open Market Committee. The new unemployment prediction is for a fourth quarter 2012 average of 8 percent to 8.2 percent, up from 7.8 percent to 8 percent.

At a press conference, Bernanke fended off questions about whether the Fed wasn’t doing enough, or was doing too much. His most intriguing answer was in response to a question about a new initiative of the Bank of England–the Fed’s counterpart in Britain–to require that banks lend more to consumers and businesses as a condition for receiving new, long-term loans from the central bank. It’s called the “Funding for Lending” program, and details remain vague.

“We’re very interested in it and we’re certainly going to follow it,” Bernanke said. American banks have been criticized in some circles for taking funds from the Fed and not boosting lending. They say the problem is a lack of demand for loans, not an unwillingness to lend. Bernanke said the Bank of England’s plan may involve a subsidy from the British Treasury. A subsidy would presumably become necessary to compensate the Bank of England if banks defaulted on their loans. BBC Economics Editor James Peston says that, based on what he has been told, “the issue of whether taxpayers will guarantee the scheme is not definitively settled.”


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2011年5月21日 星期六

BRIC Divisions Contrast With Europe Solidarity in IMF Quest

May 21, 2011, 3:56 AM EDT By Shamim Adam and Simon Kennedy

(Updates with Brazil comment in Wall Street Journal in 13th paragraph. For more news on IMF succession, visit EXT2 .)

May 21 (Bloomberg) -- The failure of emerging-market nations to rally behind a single candidate to head the International Monetary Fund shows the effort still needed to link diplomatic might with growing economic strength.

As the IMF begins its search for a successor to Dominique Strauss-Kahn, Russia is endorsing Grigori Marchenko, the head of Kazakhstan’s central bank, while the Philippines and Thailand speak favorably of Singapore Finance Minister Tharman Shanmugaratnam. India, China, Brazil and South Africa have yet to throw their support behind anyone even as they urge selection be driven by merit rather than nationality.

By contrast, European Union nations have given overwhelming support to French Finance Minister Christine Lagarde to head the Washington-based IMF, the institution that approved a record $91.7 billion in emergency loans last year and provides a third of the euro-area’s bailouts. That left Asians, South Americans and Russia talking principles without agreeing on one person.

“The Europeans have the great advantage that they have institutional mechanisms to agree on a candidate upfront,” said Ousmene Mandeng, head of public-sector investment at Ashmore Group Plc in London and a former IMF economist. “The emerging markets may find it more difficult to identify a common candidate and then lobby to ensure that he or she obtains sufficient support from the U.S.”

As recently as last month the leaders of Brazil, Russia, India and China, known as the BRIC countries, were urging the U.S. and Europe to end their 65-year monopoly on leadership positions at the IMF and World Bank, which has always been headed by an American.

June 30 Goal

The IMF said it aims to complete the selection of a successor to Strauss-Kahn by June 30. Countries will be able to nominate candidates for the managing director’s position from May 23 to June 10, the IMF said in a statement.

“The governing structure of the international financial institutions should reflect the changes in the world economy, increasing the voice and representation of emerging economies and developing countries,” the BRIC leaders said in a statement after meeting in Hainan, China, on April 14.

Those positions were echoed by finance chiefs this week following the arrest and subsequent resignation of Strauss-Kahn. The new leadership should reflect changes in the world economy, People’s Bank of China Governor Zhou Xiaochuan said May 19.

‘Increasingly Strong’

Their failure to follow such calls with action probably highlights the political immaturity of the BRIC complex even when “the case for the new IMF head to come from the BRIC countries is increasingly strong,” said Jim O’Neill, who created the BRIC term and chairs Goldman Sachs Asset Management in London, said by e-mail on May 19.

Former Brazilian central bank chief Arminio Fraga, onetime South African Finance Minister Trevor Manuel and Indian policy maker Montek Singh Ahluwalia are among the emerging market representatives capable of leading the IMF, according to the fund’s former chief economist, Simon Johnson. He also suggests the possibility of Bank of Mexico Governor Agustin Carstens and Zhu Min, a former Chinese central banker now working at the IMF.

“The big political question is whether the largest emerging markets -- Brazil, China, India, South Africa, Turkey and perhaps Saudi Arabia, South Korea, Russia, Indonesia and Mexico -- can unify behind one candidate,” Johnson wrote in a May 18 Bloomberg News column. “That would be a breakthrough but it’s still not clear who will provide the diplomatic initiative to organize them into a coalition that speaks with a single voice.”

Chile, U.S.

The Chilean government said yesterday it has a “good opinion” of former Finance Minister Alejandro Foxley as a possible candidate and will consider nominating him.

Brazil Finance Minister Guido Mantega told the Wall Street Journal that his nation is open to backing a European and that “there should be no vetting based on nationality.”

U.S. Treasury Secretary Timothy F. Geithner has refrained from mentioning any names, insisting in a statement he wants a quick decision on a candidate who can command broad support.

“We are consulting broadly with the fund’s shareholders from emerging markets as well as advanced economies,” Geithner said. “It is important that this be an open process and one that moves quickly to select new leadership for the IMF.”

Shen Jianguang, a former IMF economist and now at Mizuho Securites Asia Ltd., said in a Bloomberg Television interview that one option is to name Zhu Min the first deputy managing director, the IMF’s No. 2 position.

“Zhu Min definitely can be a deputy CEO of the IMF” given the growing importance of China in the world economy, he said. “Emerging markets are not very happy with the situation that the head of the IMF has to be from Europe.”

Lipsky’s Term

John Lipsky, 64, is acting managing director after Strauss- Kahn’s resignation four days after his May 14 arrest in New York on charges of attempted rape and sexual assault. Lipsky’s term in the IMF’s No. 2 post, which has traditionally been filled by an American, ends in August.

The biggest emerging economies have focused on increasing trade and financial links among their nations. The state development banks of the BRIC countries agreed to help boost the use of local currencies when making loans within the five nations, Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh said last month.

While early signs point to Lagarde, the mood could swing in the weeks to come.

“The U.S. and Europe should take it upon themselves to really open this up to all candidates that are qualified, not necessarily just Europeans,” Philippine Finance Secretary Cesar Purisima said in a Bloomberg Television interview.

--With assistance from Simon Kennedy in Paris. Editors: Kevin Costelloe, Christopher Wellisz, Randall Hackley

To contact the reporters on this story: Shamim Adam in Singapore at sadam2@bloomberg.net Simon Kennedy in London at skennedy4@bloomberg.net

To contact the editor responsible for this story: Stephanie Phang at sphang@bloomberg.net


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