Month: November 2013

On Investment Ideas

On Investment Ideas

Where do I get investment ideas?

1) I get them from articles I read.? I print them out and put them in a stack, and then I wait.

2) I get them from my industry ranks and Value Line.? I use Value Line’s screener to screen for my favored industries, subject to a financial stability limit and minimum expected returns.? Then I wait.

3) I look through the 13Fs of 77 clever investors every quarter.? I look at all of the new names that none of them have owned in the prior quarter.? I look at all of the companies that my clever investors own 5% of, which they have added 2% of the market cap to their holdings.

4) I look for indicators of change.? I look for companies where management is changing dramatically, and add them to my review list.? Then I wait.

Once I have have part 3 done, my waiting stops.? I quantitatively score all the companies in my portfolio against their competitors, using fundamental, technical, sentiment and other variables.? The main idea is this: buy companies with better prospects than those being sold.

The quantitative process aids my qualitative evaluations, as I analyze new attractive companies.? Many get thrown out because there is a reason for the cheapness.? Others survive and get added to the portfolio, as I sell names that are less attractive.

Now ordinarily when I do this analysis, I don’t share my results.? This time, I will share the competitor list.? Here it is:

AA AAMRQ ACNB ADS ADT ADTN AEGN AEO AFCE AFL AGRO AGU AKAM AL ALSN AMH AMX ANF APC APD APO ARCC ARII ASC ASIA ATHL ATI ATVI ATX AVB AWRE AZSEY BA BAGL BALT BANC BAP BBRY BERK BH BID BIDU BIOF BIOS BMR BNCL BODY BRE BYD CACB CACH CACI CAG CAM CBI CCI CF CHK CHS CLDT CLDX CLR CMCCMSB CNHI CNP CODE COH CPN CPSI CREE CRI CRK CRMT CSBK CSCO CTO CTRP CTSH CTWS CUBE CVC CVI CVS CXO DD DDS DEG DF DISCA DMD DNR DOOR DOV DRC DRI DRIV DRYS DSW DVA DWA EA EBSB ECTE ENDP ENZN EOX EPAM EPL EQIX ESLT ESRX EVBS EVTC EW EXP FCX FDML FI FIVE FL FLIR FLTX FOXA FUR GACR GCBC GD GES GEVA GIL GOGO GRH GTAT GTS HBAN HBI HCBK HCN HCP HDB HDY HFFC HLF HOG HOS HP HPP HUN HW HXM IACI ICA ICE ICUI IDIX IEP IGTE INFA INFY INGR INS INTL INVN IP ISBC ISRG JACK JAZZ JCP JCS JDSU JKS JONE JPM KAMN KFFB KLAC KMT KRNY LEAP LGF LMT LNN LORL LPI LPX LRN LSBK LSTR LVLT LYB MEI MGA MGYR MIND MLR MNK MON MRO MSM MU MYGN MYL NAV NBL NECB NEU NKTR NM NMM NRG NTES NTI NTK NUAN NUE NVAX NWS NWSA NX NYLD OFED OIS OMED OPK ORAN ORIG OUTR P PACB PCLN PCRX PENN PETM PKX PMT PPC PTRY PVA QCOM QLGC QSII QTM RAX RBS REIS RESI RFP RH RHHBY RLD RNWK ROMA RPXC RT S SALE SB SFM SGMS SHOS SIFI SIX SNBC SODA SPRD SQM SRC SRNE SSLT SSNC SSTK ST STC STND STPFQ STSI STZ SUSS SWI SWN SWRL SYKE SYNL TA TCPC TDG TEVA TFSL TGI THOR THR THS TPH TPX TRW TSCDY TSM TSO TSS TTEK TUP TXI TXTR UEPS UIL UMC URS UTHR UTSI VAR VIVHY VLRS VMC VSAT WCG WLFC WMPN WPO WR WSBF WSM XON XOOM XPO XXIA XYL YRCW YUME Z ZIGO ZNGA

Oddly, there are exactly nine competitors for every company in my portfolio.? That should give me a good set of companies to analyze as I sell three or so companies and buy three replacements.? Remember, it is always easier to make binary choices — do I like this better than that, than to try to maximize over a wide realm of choices.

Full disclosure: I own none of the above mentioned companies.? I will probably buy 2-5 of them in the next two days.

Stagflation and Financial Repression

Stagflation and Financial Repression

This post is an experiment.? Don’t hold me to high standards here.? I want to explore the area where governments extract value out of their citizens via inflation.

With stagflation, we have high inflation and high unemployment.? Financial Repression has inflation higher than safe interest rates.

In the current situation, we have a lot of discouraged workers.? We also have a government sucking value out of savers because short interest rates are so low.

The main thing to understand here is that the government is not here to help you, but to milk you.? The government does not care about you.? It cares about its survival.? If it can’t get sufficient taxes out of the populace, it will use its financing arm, the central bank, to lend to it at preferential rates, while passing on losses to the populace via inflation.? Also note that inflation tends to hit the poor more than the rich.? Food and energy, two things that can’t be printed, have prices that rise more rapidly.? Food and energy price rises affect the poor more than the rich.? As such, the current Fed policy that tends to raise commodity and asset prices discriminates against the poor and in favor of the rich.? From unelected bureaucrats, it’s hard to think of a more unaccountable policy.

Both policies, stagflation and financial repression, come about because the government and central bank are trying to force the economy to do more than it can do, leading to greater poverty on the low end of society, leaving aside the fine-sounding words of the liberals.? You have to get this: there is no constituency for small business and poor people in Washington, DC.? The policies align with big business and rich individuals.? The purple party reigns, sucking in donations from both sides.? Significant donations only come from big business and rich individuals.? (Purple is significant of Monarchy, aside from being the mix of red and blue.)

My main point is this: it will be difficult for most developed country governments to fulfill all the promises they have made.? The results of this may involve stagflation, financial repression, and/or defaults.

What a world we bequeath to our children and grandchildren.

An Alternative To Federal Reserve Forward Guidance

An Alternative To Federal Reserve Forward Guidance

I hesitate to write this piece, because I think doing this would be a bad thing.? Then again, I don’t believe that most of the jawboning done by the Fed is useful.

So let the Fed put its money where its mouth is, and, hey, improve its asset-liability match in the process.? After all, over the last five years, the Fed discovered that they have an asset side of their balance sheet.? They decide that they can try to twist the Treasury curve, lowering long rates, and stimulate the housing market via QE.

But aside from monetizing debt, which often leads to serious inflation, QE has not shown much potency to do anything good.? Thus the Fed thinks that enhanced guidance will be the tool to use to breathe life into this over-leveraged economy.? A possible example: “We promise not to raise the Fed funds rate until 2017.”

Deeds, not words, I say.? I challenge the Fed to do the following: Offer multiple tenors (maturities) of Fed funds.? At present, Fed Funds is an overnight rate.? Offer 1, 3 and 6-month Fed funds.? Offer 1, 2, 3, 5, and 10-year Fed funds.? Give the banks the ability to lock in funds for lending or investing for longer amounts of time.? Create the Fed funds yield curve.

Rather than merely promise that Fed funds will remain low for so many years, offer banks a way to have a guarantee of low Fed funds rates for that time period.? That would be powerful.? Whether it would be powerful for good is another matter.? Personally, I doubt it would be good, and I think the same of enhanced guidance.

In doing this, the Fed might realize that they have a liability side of the balance sheet, and one that does not have a zero duration.? If they have long term assets, why not long term liabilities?

Sigh.? In the old days it was easy.? The Fed did not have an over-leveraged economy, and so they invested in short-dated Treasuries, and adjusted Fed funds as their major policy lever.? Open market operations took care of the rest.

Introducing long term liabilities to the Fed means that policy accommodation can no longer be removed instantly.? The longer dated Fed funds would only shift as it matures.? It would give strength to monetary policy in the short run, but weaken it in the long run.? But hey, we are a short-run society, so why should we care?? Bleed our grandchildren dry, and have the great-grandchildren ready to be bled for our good.

Eventually we have to question why we are pursuing policies that harm the long-run in order to goose the short-run. Once we start doing that, we might be on the road to maturity, even if it means we get a severe recession, or even a depression.? The “greatest generation” was the greatest because of character formed out of depression and war.? Sad that they sucked the blood of their grandchildren via Social Security and Medicare.? We live with the results of their short-term thinking.

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Sorted Weekly Tweets

Companies & Industries

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  • Ackman Makes Big Bet on Fannie, Freddie http://t.co/PdkKSwbUUq Depends on whether the government will sell it off cheaply if at all $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Maersk CEO Says Balancing Supply of Ships to Demand Is Years Off http://t.co/OVUJsS0gpO Will take 2+ years 4 the shipping mkt 2 normalize $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • GE To Exit Retail Lending, Refocus on Industrial Businesses http://t.co/krR5qVddsY I recommended $GE do that 8 years ago @ RealMoney. $$ Nov 15, 2013
  • Freddie Taps Reinsurer to Offset Loan Risks http://t.co/aeHzuaIwWV Would b a little skeptical of $ACGL ; financial reinsurance is risky $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • An iPhone Tester Caught in Apple’s Supply Chain http://t.co/Skt16fbqbo Very difficult to assure fair dealing w/high demand 4 labor $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Amazon, Postal Service to Start Sunday Package Deliveries http://t.co/TMHg1BIrdP USPS lives at the pleasure of Amazon $$ Nov 12, 2013

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Rest of the World

 

  • They’ll Pay You to Live in Switzerland! http://t.co/nAhFS0MOO2 Minimum income plan may replace other safety nets, sounds like a disaster $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Spain Free-for-All Pitting Apollo Against Blackstone http://t.co/8ggvCGBNv3 Global demand 4 vacations in Spain support lodging prices $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • China Leadership Pledges Expansion of Economic Freedoms http://t.co/yJhlS8bKyl More kids, more freedom w/real estate, SOEs get taxed more $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Japan’s Lenders Roiled by Credit for Criminals http://t.co/KadKx16r6I Many Japanese banks lend to the Yakuza, embarrassing them & govt $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Secret Israel Housing Boom Defies Settlement Discord http://t.co/PGfpjFKRsP Settlements keep growing w/tacit assistance of Israeli govt $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Terrifying Charts For Saudi Arabia http://t.co/jbVyUlDfHQ Fascinating charts showing possibility of falling oil revenue 4 Saudi Arabia $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • CIA warily watches for threats to US now that 87 nations possess drones http://t.co/Dew0nwV1xx drones from Israel & China compete vs US $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Banks in Sweden Told to Reduce Market Reliance for Mortgages http://t.co/Lecx4QO08V Not sure that basing off of kronor deposits is best $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Gold Vault Opens in China as Bullion Goes From West to East http://t.co/BVhFqCNSrG If you didn’t trust fiat currencies u would buy gold 2 $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Bloomberg Is Said 2Curb Articles That Might Anger China http://t.co/eP0LbI1rHm @Bloomberg hides articles critical of China from China $$ Nov 12, 2013

 

Obamacare

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  • Obamacare Is Whatever Obama Says It Is http://t.co/5vVzcjcFpv Other presidents would be impeached for taking the law into their own hands $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Obamacare’s Creative, Or Illegal, Rule-Making http://t.co/QgUi9mG0gw Obama was critical of Bush’s signing statements & this is worse $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Sebelius Drops New Bombshell: Employer Plans Will Also Drop Workers From Coverage http://t.co/sDQxErpTiw “Substandard” plans of employers $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • ObamaCare Questions Nobody Asked http://t.co/GXw5PmNxEy Laws must fit a culture; Americans don’t have a high degree of “social trust” $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Hope Is All Obamacare Has Left http://t.co/M5MzuvG1Od Tactical retreat 4a time comes to mind, but are they humble enough to consider it? $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Rieder: An empty pledge comes back to haunt Obama http://t.co/TG1LjSM7wm Obama promised people they could keep their insurance & doctor $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • The Obamacare Debacle Should Have Obama And Biden Seriously Considering Resignation. http://t.co/eqoNgu841Z Nice thought, but not likely $$ Nov 12, 2013

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Central Banking

 

  • Bank Regulation Dominates Yellen Confirmation Hearing http://t.co/wzXnBemjwI Given all of the regulatory failures of the Fed this is fair $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Yellen Rejoins QE Debate as Hearing Gives Critics Forum http://t.co/OJgjwPqfxS Pursuing policies that have never worked as if reasonable $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Central Banks Risk Asset Bubbles in Battle With Deflation http://t.co/sseHM2iFPU Imbalances r growing. Which way will policymakers err? $$ Nov 13, 2013
  • White House Takes Lessons From Bernanke Close Call http://t.co/d7AOphMltK Works 2manage approval process 4 Yellen, given unpopular policy $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Race to Bottom Resumes as Central Bankers Ease Anew: http://t.co/CEE1QS13kL Everybody aims 4advantage; as a result no one gets advantage $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Yellen’s Confirmation Hearing Likely to Stir Up Other Fed Issues http://t.co/eIgTuaYvnI Incompetent Fed gets 2 spread incompetence via DF $$ Nov 12, 2013

 

Financial Markets

 

  • Moody?s Lowers Ratings of Four US Banks After Review http://t.co/3F6tQyzmm9 $GS $MS $JPM $BK will not b bailed out, thus ratings fall $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Bid Wars Wane in US Housing Markets on Supply Rise http://t.co/1R2LH3qOHq Note: we never eliminated the housing glut; reality returns $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • O?Shaughnessy warns on crisis in long-duration bonds http://t.co/wHmJB6pt9Q Really depends on how strong economic growth is from here $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Rules Force Banks to Innovate for Survival http://t.co/y3guFfxVdj! Same old thing — Returns on assets r low, so lever up 4 high ROEs $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Pension Terminations May Spike in the Near-Term http://t.co/UjIqJ3ipiD DB pensions will continue 2 shrink; no reason y it should speed up $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Nonbank Mortgage Servicers Rapid Growth Alarms Investors http://t.co/bE7WrXxmk5 Independent mtge servicers grow & have compliance issues $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Group Pushes for Bigger ‘Tick’ Sizes http://t.co/xgkRDHnwfG Very dumb; deregulate tick sizes,& let markets compete 4 business $$ Nov 12, 2013

 

Politics & Policy

 

  • In Blow to Coal, TVA to Shut 8 Units http://t.co/9xOAXI25PE Coal has issues in the short run, will provide power to the world 20+ yrs out $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • A Nuclear Cleanup Effort Leaves Questions Lingering at Scores of Old Sites http://t.co/mm6KzJ47BO Long article; radiological waste maps $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Bad idea: Firms Get More Wiggle Room on Soured Deals http://t.co/B1sakHXSQc Goodwill should b rigorously tested & written down frequently $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Patty Murray, Democrats’ Budget Leader, Faces a New Test http://t.co/bq430FlJgT A lot of theater here; whatever cuts spending wins $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • No state has all of its employee benefit plans funded at an acceptable earnings rate, as well as rainy day funds, highway, funds, etc $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • State and local government austerity is over http://t.co/4usGgnZDGI Jobs r growing, & so is investment. Only problem: underfunded plans $$ Nov 12, 2013

 

Other

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  • Woods Makes Caddie?s Beef Jerky Golf-Bag Accessory at $54-Pound http://t.co/5RsL9zX1qu At the Merkel house we r planning on making jerky $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • Silicon Valley Nerds Seek Revenge on NSA Spies With Coding http://t.co/YkemYyJRLu They double the length of encryption keys; Nyaah, NSA! $$ Nov 16, 2013
  • StreetEYE – Tops on Twitter http://t.co/n5X0euq6IP Interesting ranking of those who share on finance on Twitter $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Focusing too narrowly in college could backfire http://t.co/sqAMID8KyG Narrow degrees presume too much about the future; be prepared $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Record Number of Foreign Students Flocking to US http://t.co/PCwwPyeE6o This rescues a wide number of incompetent colleges $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • Strange Doings on the Sun http://t.co/HdgxOoAbz4 We do not understand the Sun well; sunspots r few, & magnetic poles puzzle. $$ #humility Nov 12, 2013
  • Baby Boom in Stronger States Signals US Birth Recovery http://t.co/DPrkEofea8 No surprise, the US has always been more optimistic w/kids $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • I Am The One Who Blogs: TRB Turns Five http://t.co/xQuhAHQB9D @reformedbroker is one of the heroes of financial blogging; I salute him $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • When enough people do power poses, it will lose its impact, and will cease to give confidence. http://t.co/sp0j1bAO8n Nov 11, 2013

Cato Conference / Hard Currencies

  • R. David Ranson #catoonmoney argues that easy monetary policy has not created faster economic growth http://t.co/fUxhAJfL2F $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • PANEL 4: THE CASE FOR A NATIONAL MONETARY COMMISSION AND FUNDAMENTAL REFORM #catoonmoney Kevin Brady going to speak on Fed Reform $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Argues that European nations would be better off w/their own national currency. Fiscal union not well defined $$ #catoonmoney Nov 14, 2013
  • Leszek Balcerowicz Former Chairman, National Bank of Poland finishes a rambling, interesting talk on Eurozone & US $$ policy #catoonmoney Nov 14, 2013
  • Cato Monetary policy conf, panel 2 — ALTERNATIVES TO DISCRETIONARY GOVERNMENT FIAT MONEY #catoonmoney Sumner will provide alternatives $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • U.S. Mint?s Silver-Coin Sales Reach Annual Record http://t.co/IBJLw2wICe U can laugh; fascinating 2c so many trying to preserve value $$ Nov 14, 2013
  • Gold is much harder to manipulate; same for any money with real backing. http://t.co/HnXQLaqU2a Nov 12, 2013

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Comments, Retweets, Replies

  • @Frank_McG I don’t think I mentioned bitcoins, but there are certainly some that trust in them… Nov 14, 2013
  • “Junk science causing people to avoid food that is good for most, and yummy too.” ? David Merkel http://t.co/xQhXrM0hyd $$ Nov 12, 2013
  • RT @SJosephBurns: Learning curves of different professions–> http://t.co/Nuy9CVTYp9 Nov 11, 2013
  • RT @AmbroseEP: Oxygen thinning. Shiller P/E ended week 47pc over-valued. Good blow-off chart from Husmann. http://t.co/XPq6hmzUR6 Nov 11, 2013

 

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 7 (Final, Recap)

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 7 (Final, Recap)

What I wrote in the prior six pieces were the thoughts of the speakers, mostly.? Now for what I think.

There were a number of free banking advocates at the session today.? I do not favor their views.? Though I am ordinarily libertarian, with finance I believe that depositary institutions must be required to match assets and liabilities, because the losses to society as a whole from financial panics are big, and they can be easily avoided with modest regulation.? This is true whether we are under a gold standard or a fiat money standard, or anything inbetween.

I personally favor a gold standard because it leads to fewer problems than a fiat currency standard.? If you don’t agree with this, wait a few years for the current monetary policy approach to blow up, and you might agree with me.

Does the gold standard burn in my heart?? No, I just think it is a better idea — we could have a fiat currency standard, and constrain the slope of the Treasury yield curve, and that would work also, just not as well.

I agree with most at the meeting today that the Fed was a bad idea, but it will not be easy to eliminate the Fed.? That said, if we have a significant crisis because of Fed policy, it will be time to bring out the long knives and eliminate it — replace it with a gold standard, a commodity standard, or a constrained central bank not allowed to do bailouts, and constrained by yield curve slope.

One thing that most agreed on is the need for a single mandate, not a dual mandate.? Inflation should be the only target of the Fed.? I agree, largely because the ability of monetary policy to affect employment is weak.

Allison’s talk was a highlight of the conference.? His experience with BB&T gives him unique insights into how banking regulation works, really, how it doesn’t work.? is characterization of how bank regulators worked was spot-on.? They exacerbate crises.

The conference had a strong sense that the Fed is creating asset bubbles via QE, and that it discriminated against the poor in favor of the rich.? I agree, as did Ron Paul two years ago at the conference.

As with many at the conference, I agree that the Fed has created most of our problems. Central banks are the problem, not the solution.? Their actions tend to be pro-cyclical, not anti-cyclical.

Finally, Scott Sumner, the most controversial guy of the day.? If I didn’t much care for NGDP targeting before, I care less for it now.? If he can’t see that monetary policy was too loose 2001-7, then to me, he is like Keynes, a man for whom monetary policy could never be too loose.

Final notes:

I care more that we constrain the banks such that they match assets and liabilities, than over the medium of exchange.? Crises happen because illiquid, long-dated assets are financed by short liquid liabilities.? This allows for run on the bank scenarios, which occurred through the repo markets, and portfolio margining in the last crisis.? This was not focused on at today’s meeting, and was an intellectual weakness of the meeting today.

All that said, it was a really good meeting, and I am glad that I went, mostly for the people I met.

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 6

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 6

CLOSING ADDRESS

Lewis E. Lehrman
Chairman, The Lehrman Institute

Whither the Fed?? (DM: Wither the Fed? 😉 )

Monetizing debt often used to fund wars.

Keynes’ book on India — informal gold exchange standard in India.? Felt it would be a step toward a better currency in the future.? Rueff felt it would lead to greater instability.? Bretton Woods was much the same, and thus collapsed in 1971.? Rueff criticized it in advance.

Rueff restored convertibility after both wars.

The Fed cannot determine the total amount of money on its own. Keynes disagreed and thought it could be centrally planned.? Neoclassical economists still think they can do it, whether Keynesian, Chicago school, etc.? Velocity has dropped like a stone.

Don’t target interest rates, money supply, price levels — proposes targeting excess cash balances.? Rueff reformulated Say’s Law — supply creates it’s own demand.

Argues that a gold standard (not a gold exchange standard) is not costly.? Gold doesn’t manipulate us.? Competitive devaluations don’t add anything — they just create deferred inflation, and enable the government to run larger deficits.

Free trade without a gold standard will fail, in his opinion.? Speculation would be reduced.? Global rebalancing might ensue.

The Federal Reserve has not served us well, even with the good intentions of those who ran it.? We need Congress to revisit the Fed, and give us a better medium of exchange.

He says he will never give up, and neither should we.

Q&A

Q1 — Don’t all gold standards fail?? All human institutions fail.? Don’t we want the least imperfect monetary standard?

Q2 — Article 1 section 10 — Gold and Silver should be the only currency? Constitutionally he thinks so.? Coinage Act of 1792.

Q3 — No inflation now?? There is asset inflation, and QE is pushing it.? QE benefits the rich and hurts the poor.

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 5

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 5

Panel

Rep. Kevin P. Brady
Chairman, Joint Economic Committee

Gerald P. O?Driscoll Jr.
Senior Fellow, Cato Institute

R. David Ranson
President and Director of Research, Wainwright Economics

Quaint idea that savers should get a return on their money by the moderator, Judy Shelton.

Kevin Brady

Talks about punk GDP growth and employment.? If not now to re-examine the Fed, then when?? The Centennial Monetary Commission might find ways improve matters.

Gerald P. O?Driscoll Jr.

Can we get rid of the Fed?? Politically not possible in the short-run, but in the long run, it is possible.? Thus propose it now, and when the time is right, the knowledge will be there to execute the idea.

The Fed does what is best for the Fed, not necessarily what is best for the country.? There have been eras that had rules.

  • ’20s — modified gold standard
  • ’50s — era of balanced budgets, Fed never tested (DM: note that even Martin gave in to LBJ at the end)
  • early ’80s — Volcker made the rule — control the money supply
  • ’90s-’00s — modified Taylor rule

Argues that Fed should follow a rule.? Rules allow the Fed to have independence on a good basis.

How do we get for discussions to action?? More frequent meetings, with a greater focus on action.

R. David Ranson

Is monetary policy helping or hurting us?? “Last call at the bar”? Raising fed funds rates shift growth into the present, and lowers future growth.? Falling fed funds rates shift growth into the future, and lowers present growth.? Volatility of Fed policy is negatively correlated with growth.

Fed policy has gotten weaker over the last 50 years, as the economy has learned to anticipate it.

Compares QE with debt monetization — QE is more explicit and planned.

Easy monetary policy lowers employment, GDP growth, stock prices, raises gold, CPI, PPI

Q&A

Q1 — which is more important to GDP growth, regulation or monetary policy?? Brady says both are important, and monetary policy adds to uncertainty.

Q2 — should the Fed try to manage interest rates? Ranson — they don’t do it well.

Q3 — shouldn’t monetary policy be governed by the Constitution? Brady: Don’t tinker with the Constitution, but hold your congressmen accountable.

Q4 — Selgin suggests Ranson’s work is just correlations.? We need the fed funds rate vs the natural rate to know whether policy is tight or loose.

Q5 — To Brady: Interest on Reserves? No real answer…

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 4

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy Conference, Part 4

Panel:

Rep. Jeb Hensarling
Chairman, House Financial Services Committee

John A. Allison
President and CEO, Cato Institute, and retired Chairman and CEO, BB&T

Kevin Dowd
Professor of Finance and Economics, Durham University

Hensarling is going to have to run back to Congress.? Somewhat obsequious to the Cato Institute.

“When Democrats put ‘affordable’ in front of something, it somehow doesn’t work that way.”

Not a lack of regulatory ability, but timidity to use powers that they did have.

Fed had the ability to prevent the crisis and did little in the midst of the boom.? Toto has pulled back the curtain on the Fed; they are but mere men.? (DM: if that)

Dodd-Frank gives the Fed more powers that they will also not use.

Not a dual mandate, but multiple — add in market stability, low long-term rates, landlord for the CFPB.? Argues for auditing the Fed.? Also argues for cost-benefit analysis in gauging regulation.? Wants a lower attorney-to-economist ratio… Argues that Volcker rule harms corporate bonds — I find that unlikely.

He wants to regulate the Fed more tightly.? Where does the Fed deserve independence, and where not?

Seniors and savers punished.? Why is the Taylor Rule not followed?

Q&A

Disses CFPB, argues that people should be free to have more options in financing.

Q2 — gold & silver in the constitution, why is fiat money Constitutional?? Says that will be reviewed by the House.

Q3 — virtual currencies, and what should the Fed role on those.

Q4 — Asked about EPA.? Says it not his area.

Q5 — asked about Fannie & Freddie now that they have paid back… argues that have not paid it back.? They crowd out the private market.? Argues that monetary & fiscal policy is generally procyclical.

John A. Allison

Regulatory discipline will always trump market discipline.? Regulators are always late, even after failure, they tend to make matters worse.

Regulators regulate for regulatory good.? During booms, even if they find something fishy, if they speak up, it will be deemed speculative, and will lose politically.? So they say nothing during booms.

Regulators driven by politics — until Clinton, fair lending.? Bush, Jr. — Patriot Act, Sarbox, etc.? Bush did not deregulate.? Fed creates negative real rates and inflates the housing bubble.? Obama loves ALL regulation.

During bad times, regulators overdo it, which constrains credit.? Rule of law suspended, couldn’t predict what policy would be during the bailout.? Failure of mathematical modeling at banks and Fed.? Led to irrational risk taking.

Criticizes mathematical modeling because the tails are too small.? People become too complacent, because of the false precision of mathematics.

Small business lending is an art and a science.? When it is only a science, errors get made,and valid loans don’t get made.

Qualified lenders test — standards below subprime, with a lot of paperwork.? Can’t make the consumer loans on a decentralized basis because of the paperwork.

Fed is making it difficult to make loans. He would:

  • End deposit insurance
  • End the Fed
  • Go back to gold

He would end most regulations, and raise capital standards to 15-20% of assets.

Kevin Dowd (free banking advocate)

Pre-Fed bailouts were done by a coalition of the willing.? When the Fed came, many things that were self correcting were lost.

Easy money ’20s –> depression.? Easy money ’60s –> inflation. Easy money ’00s –> recession.? Now we try to inflate our way out.? Bigger bubble being created in government debt.

Will we finally let badly run banks fail?? Politics does not favor it.? Deposit insurance incentivizes moral hazard.? People stopped checking the solvency of banks.? Dodd-Frank 848 pages, and empowers regulators to create a lot of regulations off of committee studies.? (DM: not concerned with type II errors)

Securitizations, hidden hypothecations, SPV hide-and-seek, hidden rehypothecations — many ways to fuddle game-able regulations.? Also regulatory capture.? Volcker Rule was simple, but banks complexified it, and then argued that it was too complex to follow.

Regulation follows failure, and fights the last war.? Suggests double liability for bankers should be restored.

Q&A

Q1 — Allison for President?

Q2 — Comment on penalties on acquisition of failed banks?? Scare tactics.

Q3 — Where is the gold?? On the books of the Federal Reserve.

Q4 — How encouraged should we be on the economy, as much as Janet Yellen?? Allison worries, so does Dowd.? The Fed is creating the next crisis.

Q5 — Businesses are afraid of politics.? What can we do?? Allison: we need to encourage freedom, and avoid crony capitalism.? Big business has been aided by the crisis.

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy, Part 3

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy, Part 3

Post-luncheon address from Leszek Balcerowicz, Former Chairman, National Bank of Poland

Going to talk about the euro, problems and solutions.? Eurozone masks a lot of variation in growth and productivity.

Baltics, Ireland may have suffered boom/bust but have on the whole grown well.

Sometimes fiscal crises lead to financial crises.? Sometimes financial crises lead to fiscal crises.

Not, what can central banks do to constrain credit booms, but what can be done to constrain central banks?? Also, how to de-politicize central banks.

Why were credit spreads so similar during the boom years of the Eurozone?? (No clear answer given — I view it as naive speculation.)

Should not be trying European solutions to what are essentially national problems.

Economic models are flawed and do not consider the effects of unconventional monetary policy.? Also neglect the effects of financial markets.

Fed is dictating monetary policy across the world.? Any nation trying to tighten will see its export sector suffer.? Asset bubbles will pop.

Finally, argues that bold policies must be tried if other policies have no chance of success.

 

 

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy, Part 2

At the Cato Institute Monetary Policy, Part 2

The next panel:

Lawrence H. White
Professor of Economics, George Mason University

Richard H. Timberlake
Author, Constitutional Money

Scott B. Sumner
Professor of Economics, Bentley University

Lawrence White begins with obstacles to alternative means of exchange.? Why should the government have a monopoly on what is money?

Liberty Dollar — one ounce silver pieces denominated in dollars. When silver was $5 denominated at $10.? When silver was $10 re-denominated at $20.? Arrested based on code 18-486 outlaws minting your own coins, dating back to the Civil War to compete with greenbacks.? Still awaiting sentencing.

eGold — Accused of money laundering, and transmitting money without a license, even though gold is not “money.”? Essentially a gold credit card.

Ability to transfer money is a human rights issue.? Government interest not just legal tender laws and trying to tax capital gains.

Moderator: FATCA compelling every bank to disclose customers.

Dick Timberlake

Talks about clearinghouse loan certificates, and how they became less than fully reserved over time, prior to the Fed.? Warns against tight relationships between the Fed and the Treasury.

Scott Sumner

NGDP targeting was a right-wing view, now viewed as left-wing.? Argues that monetary policy has been too tight over the last five years.? Again, ignores the overindebteness of the economy.? Confuses and ignores the loose monetary policy 2001-2007.? Views the fall of asset prices as evidence of tight monetary policy.

Makes lame argument that bubbles are hard to spot.? Gives a false dichotomy that the crash in housing did not cause rise in unemployment.? Of course, but that misses the real cause, that the US economy was over indebted.? Wages/GDP is his proxy for unemployment.

Europe worse than US…

Q&A

Q1 — argues NGDP targeting has forecasting problems.? Sumner says if Fed had followed TIPS, would have loosened policy sooner.

Q4 — Sumner says he does not trust the CPI.? All the questions are going to Sumner.

Q5 — Can the internet outsmart the regulators and create alternative money?? White: alternative currencies flourish in extreme situations.

Q6 — My question: was monetary policy policy too loose 2001-7?? Sumner downplays the monetary policy effect on the housing bubble, and says the banks were misregulated (I agree with the latter, but not the former).

Q7 — Weren’t clearinghouses exclusive? Timberlake seems confused.? Poor guy.? Argues clearinghouses were not exclusive generally.? It was a free banking era of sorts.

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