Don't Blame (or Credit) the Fed
A common question in our consumer culture is, "Where did the money go?" Less commonly asked, perhaps because it occurs on a macroeconomic stage, is, "From whence did this money come?"
If a Columnist Conversation from last Friday is any indication, and if we can view RealMoney contributors as a microcosm of the market, there is some intelligently designed confusion on the matter. Too many of us believe the Federal Reserve creates money through its open market operations, the buying and selling of Treasury securities. This is certainly a contributory factor, but it is only part of the story. The Federal Reserve's open market operations affect the level of free reserves in the banking system. It is the lending of these free reserves throughout the banking system that expands the supply of credit. If member banks have to keep a 10% reserve against their assets, each additional dollar of free reserves can expand the money supply by a multiplier of 1/(1-0.9) each time it is re-lent. This is a nice little textbook fiction in many ways. Much of the world's banking and credit activities take place offshore, where reserve requirements may be zero, or through notional derivatives where few actual dollars change hands. As noted here in a November 2003 column on this very same subject, commercial and industrial loans as a percentage of GDP have declined from 9.91% of GDP during the third quarter of 2000 to 5.1% at the end of June 2005. Corporate borrowers can raise funds directly in the commercial paper market, or they can borrow outside the U.S. and swap the proceeds into dollars. In addition, the world's credit demands for new plant and equipment increasingly are outside of the U.S. Instead of borrowing, building and producing domestically, it may be cheaper to produce outside of the U.S. and import the finished goods. But this is a larger topic for another day.Commercial Credit
The Federal Reserve's grand experiment in rate-cutting is noted on the chart below.| Does Your Bank Have A Commercial Credit Department? |
| Source: Bloomberg |
Velocity
The velocity of money confirms the same picture seen above. Velocity is the ratio of GDP to the money supply, or how many times a dollar turns through the economy during the course of a year. The velocity of M2 -- the measure of the money supply inclusive of currency, demand deposits, saving accounts, certificates of deposit and money market mutual funds -- declined sharply as the rate-cut era got underway. That we did not have a severe and protracted economic downturn in this period must mean the rate of money supply growth had to decelerate rapidly during this period despite the Federal Reserve's intentions.| Velocity Of M2 |
| Source: Bloomberg |
Inflation
If we define inflation as too much money chasing too few goods and services, it stands to reason that money supply growth in excess of GDP growth will put upward pressure on the price indices after an appropriate "long and variable" lag. Let's take the year-over-year growth rate in M2 and compare it to the growth rates of the PPI and CPI 30 months hence. These lead times are highly irregular; for example, the money supply grew rapidly during the 1984 and again in 1999-2000 without triggering a subsequent bout of inflation. Its growth rate at the end of August was a mere 3.9%, a level most likely below the growth of nominal GDP. Is this constrictive of the economy? We will not know until it is way too late to do anything about it; today's monetary conditions will not affect the economy until nearly two years from today, by which time the world will look very different.| Is Money Leading Inflation? |
| Source: Bloomberg |
Impact On Stocks
Now let's ask the question that really matters to investors: Does any of this make a difference to stock prices? Prior to the stock market's peak in 2000, the presumption would have been yes. If we map the S&P 500 against both M3 -- which is M2 plus institutional money market funds, Eurodollars, repurchase agreements and large time deposits and MZM, the St. Louis Federal Reserve's measure of zero-maturity money -- we can see a linear relationship of growth rates. Once stock prices turned lower between March 2000 and October 2002, the money supply measures continued to expand. Finally, the post-October 2002 relationship, marked in lighter shades of red and blue on the charts, are moving upward together again.| Stocks And Money, 1981 - 2005 |
| Source: |
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