Investors have had plenty of market-moving Federal Reserve news to digest this week: Janet Yellen apparently is a shoo-in as the next Fed chief after Larry Summers dropped out of the running, while Ben Bernanke kept monetary policy on hold for now by not tapering quantitative easing (QE).
So what does all of this mean?
For one, elevated volatility in securities prices, as we’ve already seen. But here’s the most important take-away: Don’t get fooled by the knee-jerk reaction in stocks, bonds, commodities and the dollar. On days when key economic news is released, whether it’s a Fed meeting, jobs report or gross domestic product, the initial market reaction is often a head-fake.
It’s best to wait a few days, even a
week, to determine if an actual shift in a market trend is under way. That
said, I’m going to focus today on one high-profile market that’s overdue for a
short-term trend reversal: Treasury bonds.
Bond Investors Overreact
Borrowers including prospective home
buyers, businesses and consumers are already suffering sticker shock as
interest rates have surged in recent months. And I believe they’ve risen too
far, too fast, and are due for reversal, meaning lower interest rates and
higher bond prices.
To put that in perspective, consider
that the average rate on a 30-year mortgage jumped to 4.8 percent recently from
a low of 3.3 percent in May. That’s a 45 percent increase.
As a rule of thumb, every 1
percentage point increase in home-loan rates translates to a 10 percent drop in
housing affordability. And that, of course, has a multiplier effect throughout
the economy, reducing consumer spending on cars, at retailers and the like.
That tells me the Fed — with or
without Bernanke at the helm — is likely to move slowly on
tapering as we learned today cautiously gauging the impact on the economy.
Let’s face it: The Federal Reserve
doesn’t need to do tapering, or reduce its bond buying. By talking publicly
about a slower pace of bond purchases in June, Bernanke has already sent
10-year Treasury yields soaring.
Investors not only got the message
loud and clear, but appear to have over-reacted.
The irony is that the Fed’s
expressed intent in launching multiple rounds of QE since 2009 was to hold down
long-term interest rates and promote job growth. Instead, interest rates have
surged,
investors have experienced the biggest bond market sell-off since 2004
and banks are cutting thousands of jobs as demand for loans weakens.
Post-QE Repeat
What’s the likely effect on bond markets in a post-tapering world? It may surprise most investors because we have seen this movie before, and it has an unexpected ending.
Each time the Fed has reduced or
removed quantitative easing over the past four years, bond markets have reacted
by rallying, with yields falling, as shown in the chart above. That may seem
counter-intuitive. After all, fewer purchases by the Fed should mean lower
prices and higher yields. But in reality, the exact opposite happened every
time.
QE1, the first round of quantitative
easing, ended in March 2010, and 10-year Treasury yields were just over 4
percent at the time. They declined to 2.5 percent before the Fed launched QE2
in November 2010.
When the second round of bond buying
ended in June 2011, 10-year yields were above 3 percent, and steadily declined
over the next three months to less than 2 percent when Operation Twist began in
September.
Treasury yields were again below 2
percent when QE3 was launched about this time last year. And now, as tapering
heralds the beginning of the end for QE3, yields are back up near 3 percent. Do
you see a pattern here?
The reason: After each round of QE
ended, investors reasoned (correctly, as it turns out) that the economy would
inevitably slow again in the absence of stimulus, resulting in lower bond
yields. And eventually another round of QE to help the economy avoid
stall-speed would be needed.
Rinse, lather, repeat! This picture
has played in a continuous loop since 2008.
Granted, it could be
different this time. The U.S. economy may finally be ready to stand on its own
two feet without the need for monetary stimulus and accelerate from here,
despite the headwinds that higher interest rates are already inflecting both at
home and abroad. Call me skeptical.
The Terrible Twos
Historically, when key economic data
points fall below a 2 percent growth rate, the economy is stalling and at risk
of recession within a year. They include:
* GDP, which is expanding only 1.6
percent annually …
* Real consumer spending, which is growing at an annual rate of 1.7 percent.
These are the terrible-two indicators for the U.S. economy. And the graph below shows our economy remains perilously close to stall-speed right now.
This leads us back full circle to
the hubbub over Fed tapering. Does tapering
really mean tighter monetary policy? I don’t think so, but to
understand why, recall that in past business cycles the Fed usually begins
tightening monetary policy because the economy is growing too fast.
The Fed overreacts to the threat of
accelerating inflation by hiking interest rates too quickly until growth gets
choked off, the economy contracts, and then interest rates fall again.
The current cycle is quite unique in
that the Fed has gone out of its way to be ultra-accommodative in holding the
Fed funds rate near zero since 2008 — even adding multiple rounds of QE for
good measure — and still our economy remains near stall-speed.
I expect the Fed to eventually follow its widely telegraphed tapering plan by reducing asset-purchases only gradually until QE3 completely winds down by next summer, just as Bernanke has stated.
But even when tapering finally begins, it’s not the same as tightening, and interest-rate increases are even farther away. If that’s the case, and economic data remain soft or take a turn for the worse, then 10-year Treasury yields near 3 percent look too high in the near term.
Another global-slowdown scare would hit the replay button on the same old picture show we’ve seen since 2008. Recession fears, perhaps from Europe (again), emerging markets or even weaker-than-expected U.S. growth, could easily send bond yields lower again as rumors surface of another round of QE from the Fed.
Ben will be a tough act to follow. I wonder what Janet Yellen has up her sleeve?
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