Fed Faces Three Uncomfortable Truths

IMF deputy head Gita Gopinath

IMF deputy head, Gita Gopinath, recently highlighted three uncomfortable truths for monetary policy:

  1. Inflation is taking too long to get back to target.
    Financial conditions may not be tight enough and sustained high inflation could make the task of bringing inflation down more difficult.
  2. Central banks’ price and financial stability objectives conflict.
    Central banks can provide liquidity to struggling banks but are not equipped to deal with problems of insolvency which may be caused by a sharp rise in interest rates.
  3. We face more upside inflation risks.
    The past two decades of low inflation are over and the global economy faces inflationary pressures from:
    • On-shoring of critical supply chains;
    • Rising geopolitical tensions (with Russia, China and Iran);
    • Transition away from coal, oil and gas to low-CO2 energy sources (renewables & nuclear); and
    • Spiraling demand for critical materials needed to meet the above challenges.

Balancing monetary policy is going to be difficult, especially where prices are under pressure from a number of challenges. We expect central banks to tolerate higher inflation for longer in order to preserve financial stability.

Fed only expects to hit 2.0% inflation target in 2025

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell recently highlighted the above conflict between policies to tame inflation and maintain financial stability. During a recent ECB panel discussion, Powell indicated that he only expects the Fed to hit their 2.0% inflation target for core inflation in 2025.

The Fed Chair says job creation and real wage gains are driving real incomes and increased spending. That raises demand which in turn drives the labor market. (WSJ)

Unemployment increased slightly to 3.7% in May but remains near record lows. The tight labor market continues to fuel strong growth in hourly earnings.

Unemployment, Average Hourly Earnings Growth

Tighter monetary policy would drive up unemployment — as demand slackens and layoffs increase — and dampen inflationary pressures. But at the risk of financial instability.

Conclusion

Further monetary tightening is necessary in order to increase the slack in labor markets, weaken demand, and curb inflation in the short-term. But the required policy steps — rate hikes and QT — are likely to crash the economy.

Rather than create financial stability through vigorous monetary tightening, the Fed is likely to tolerate higher levels of inflation — above their 2.0% target — for a longer period.

A less-hawkish stance from the Fed would be bullish for Gold.

IMF warns about Chinese debt

From FT (via the Coppo Report at Bell Potter):

China’s leaders need to look beyond the current solutions being floated to tackle the country’s mounting corporate debt problems and come up with a bigger plan to do so, the International Monetary Fund’s top China expert has warned. The IMF has been expressing growing concern about China’s debt issues and pushing for an urgent response by Beijing to what the fund sees as a serious problem for the Chinese economy. It warned in a report earlier this month that $1.3tn in corporate debt — or almost one in six of the business loans on Chinese banks’ books — was owed by companies who brought in less in revenues than they owed in interest payments alone. In a paper published on Tuesday, James Daniel, the fund’s China mission chief, and two co­authors, went further and warned that Beijing needed a comprehensive strategy to tackle the problem. They warned that the two main responses Beijing was planning to the problem — debt­-for­-equity swaps and the securitization of non­performing loans — could in fact make the problem worse if underlying issues were not dealt with. The plan for debt­ for equity swaps could end up offering a temporary lifeline to unviable state­ owned companies, they warned. It could also leave them managed by state­ owned banks or other officials with little experience in doing so.

Bad debt is bad debt …… and nonproductive assets are nonproductive assets. Financial window-dressing like securitization or debt-for-equity swaps will not change this. The assets are still unproductive. Effectively, China has to stump up $1.3 trillion to re-capitalize its banks. And that may be the tip of the iceberg.

BOE’s Carney Tells Bankers to Clean Up Their Acts | Real Time Economics – WSJ

By Jason Douglas

Bank of England Gov. Mark Carney said Tuesday the misdeeds of the financial sector risk undermining public support for free markets and called on bankers to radically improve their behavior, a sign of simmering frustration in policy circles over a string of misdemeanors.

In a forthright speech, Mr. Carney said recent scandals in currency and commodity markets highlight “a malaise in corners of finance that must be remedied,” saying such “corruption” has hurt trust in modern capitalism, according to the text of his speech.

His remarks echoed criticism of the financial sector earlier Tuesday by International Monetary Fund Managing Director Christine Lagarde, who accused banks of delaying much-needed reforms to the financial system, which were agreed to in the wake of the crisis that tipped the world into recession in 2009…..

Read more at Bank of England’s Carney Tells Bankers to Clean Up Their Acts – Real Time Economics – WSJ.

Buy Yen on Debt Debacle? | WSJ

Ian Talley at WSJ reports:

In, “The Curious Case of the Yen: A Safe Haven Currency without Inflows” (see p.142) the IMF studied 11 shocks between the August 1990 U.S. savings and loan crisis and the August 2011 U.S. debt ceiling confrontation that pushed the volatility index 10 percentage points higher than its previous 60-day average. “The yen has tended to appreciate on average during these episodes, against the U.S. dollar, the euro and in nominal and real effective terms,” the IMF found.

Read more at Buy Yen on Debt Debacle? – Real Time Economics – WSJ.

IMF downgrades world outlook [video]

Chief economist Oliver Blanchard on the IMF’s latest forecast.

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  • IMF revises forecast down, global growth projected at 3.3 percent this year
  • World trade slumps, hurting emerging markets, developing countries
  • Prospects could improve if clouds over euro area, U.S. “fiscal cliff” are lifted

Download the full report.

IMF stress tests China/Australia bust – macrobusiness.com.au

I don’t wish to be too alarming. These are stress tests and scenarios not yet reality. But, there is logic in the thought that we currently face the possibility of the final two scenarios happening simultaneously. That is, a Western recession triggered by European and US austerity (not to mention financial tumult) and a Chinese real estate pop.

via IMF stress tests China/Australia bust – macrobusiness.com.au | macrobusiness.com.au.

EU Super-Bailout Option Slips Away – WSJ

Financial markets rallied around the globe Monday as investors saw the first glimpse of real hope for containing the European debt crisis. Problem was that the lead advocates of the deal, the IMF’s Christine Lagarde and the European Commission’s Olli Rehn, are bureaucrats who don’t have to answer to electorates every few years.

Decidedly not on board were the actual governments of the 17 euro-zone nations. Euro-zone finance ministers came home from Washington doubting they could sell more risk to voters already grumbling at past and present tax money being put behind insolvent state treasuries in Greece, Portugal and Ireland.

via EU Super-Bailout Option Slips Away – The Source – WSJ.

How the IMF Could Try to Bolster Economy – WSJ.com

Europe needs to create a tightly coordinated fiscal policy among nations, even though European voters are wary that would mean something akin to a United States of Europe. Ms. Lagarde, a former French finance minister who is in the honeymoon phase of her IMF presidency, has credibility in Europe. Her task: come up with a specific plan for a tighter union, which she could argue benefits ordinary Europeans.

via How the IMF Could Try to Bolster Economy – WSJ.com.

Portugal Braces for Austerity Battle – WSJ.com

Portugal has little choice but to take tough steps. The country sought international help in April after failing to convince investors it was doing enough to shore up its shaky finances. In exchange for a €78 billion, three-year loan, Lisbon promised the European Union and the International Monetary Fund that it would slash its deficit and make structural changes to spur growth in key sectors.

The problem is these efforts are expected to prolong the economic slump at least two years and drive up unemployment, already at 12%.

via Portugal Braces for Austerity Battle – WSJ.com.