I would make a similar argument for the stock market. Ben’s cheap money has added to equity values. But he can’t take all the credit for high stocks. I would give him kudos for about half of the fluff since the summer.
At some point in the near future Ben is going to defend QE. I think he will say that his policies are responsible for 90% of the stock market advance and less than 10% of the commodities. In other words; he will talk his book. There is one area that provides a clear-cut measure of what the Fed is doing. I doubt even Ben would argue that he is not 95% responsible for this success/failure. Inflation expectations have widened substantially since QE2 was first brought up by the Chairman in Jackson Hole. Consider these charts of 10-year coupons Vs Tips:
This is the post Jackson Hole period. Inflation expectations (Tens minus Tips) have risen damn near every week:
This looks back a few years. We are at the “wides”.
Bernanke can dodge a lot of things. He can’t dodge this. He might even celebrate this by pointing to it and saying, “Look what I have brought you!” “This is a greater measure of my success than the move in the S&P!” And that will hang him. Inflation expectations based on the Tips market have widened from 151 to 241 in just six-months. That comes to a real 60% increase. Inflation expectations have been rising by about 10% a month. Is there any wonder why global food supplies are getting short if key barometers on future inflation are in high gear in the USA? If expectations are rising 10% a month here, they are rising at 20% (or more) in dozens of countries around the world.
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A friend points out another way to look at the 2s vs 10s . The 280 number stands out (pushing the highs). Put that number into perspective. If you had a hundred G’s of spare cash you could eek out $3,360 bucks a year by putting it to work in the ten-year. If you were afraid of where rates are headed and just park it in the two-year you get a lousy $580 return. In order to get 3,360 of income you have to come up with 570,000 big ones. The yield on the 10’s is 6X’s richer than 2’s.
How could anyone not argue that the Treasury market is not distorted by QE? This is another thing that Ben will point as a measure of his success. He’ll eat those words too. There are some powerful forces being whipped up. Lots of records. Too many for my liking.




The answer to the question "How far can this (long yield rise) go?" depends on inflation expectations.
ReplyDeleteWhat I want to know is: how much of these expectations are driven by
a)belief in REAL economic & productivity growth - somewhere in the world;
b)fear of loss of purchasing power resulting from dollar weakening;
c)scarcities of key commodities.
I think industry & finance business leaders are smarter than is generally believed: they themselves probably don't believe the CNBC-touted "sustainable growth story", do they?
(Do they?)
And they certainly don't see the big picture of a declining U.S. world footprint & a slow long-term currency slide. They are not concerned with maintaining purchasing power. Or they are forced (through threat of redemptions, need for cash flow, need to pay out benefits, income streams, annuity payments, etc.) to desperately seek yield...
And perhaps high commodity & gold prices are a RESULT of this, not a cause.
So what gives? In any case, I'm surprised this isn't happening even faster.