暖冬cool夏

这里一年四季温暖如春,没有酷暑没有严寒......
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两篇华尔街日报文--不稳定种子已经再次萌芽,加息还是不加息?

(2018-03-14 21:40:57) 下一个

1.

A Decade After Bear’s Collapse, the Seeds of Instability Are Germinating Again

A big financial-firm collapse in near future is exceedingly unlikely, but another crisis isn’t

By Greg Ip

March 14, 2018 9:46 a.m. ET

Since the bailout of Bear Stearns Cos. a decade ago this week and the failure of Lehman Brothers six months later, regulators have made it their mission to prevent a repeat.

Yet even though a big financial-firm collapse in the near future is exceedingly unlikely, another crisis isn’t. Bear and Lehman were the manifestation of deeper economic forces that since the 1970s have produced crises roughly every decade. They are still at work today: ample flows of capital across borders, mounting debts owed by governments, corporations and households, and ultralow interest rates that nurture risk-taking in hidden corners of the economy.

For a quarter-century after World War II, the world was virtually crisis-free. Widespread defaults during the Great Depression and the war left a relatively debt-free path for economic growth, says Harvard University economist Kenneth Rogoff, co-author with Carmen Reinhart of “This Time is Different: Eight Centuries of Financial Folly.” Capital controls limited how much money could cross borders, while rules such as interest-rate ceilings limited who could borrow and how much.

By the early 1980s, though, deregulation had allowed capital to flow freely within and across borders and crises became a regular occurrence: the Latin American debt crisis that began in 1982, the U.S. commercial real estate and savings and loan crisis of the 1980s, the Asian and Russian financial crisis of 1997-98, the dot-com bubble of 1998-2000, the U.S. mortgage crisis of 2007-2009 and the European sovereign debt crisis of 2009-2013, interspersed with country-level crises such as in Scandinavia in the early 1990s and Japan throughout that decade.

Bear was both facilitator and victim of a housing bubble inflated by low interest rates and huge inflows of foreign capital—a “global saving glut” as then-Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke put it. It arranged mortgages that financed the housing bubble while borrowing heavily with short-term IOUs. When those mortgages went bad, Bear’s creditors yanked their funds—a de facto run on the bank.

Most of the regulatory effort since has been to ensure the largest financial institutions such as JPMorgan Chase & Co., which bought Bear Stearns in a fire sale brokered by the Fed, don’t succumb to anything similar: thicker buffers of capital to absorb losses, more reserves of cash and liquid assets to pay off skittish creditors, restrictions on trading and compensation that incentivize risk-taking, and new procedures for winding down failing institutions without taxpayer bailout or a chaotic bankruptcy. Though President Donald Trump’s appointees and Congress are beginning to dial back the regulations, the failure of a systemically-important institution now looks pretty remote.

But Hyun Song Shin, research chief at the Bank for International Settlements, warned in a 2014 speech against the tendency to “focus on known past weaknesses rather than asking where the new dangers are.” Banks may be stronger than a decade ago, but the financial system hasn’t returned to its pre-1980 repressed state.

Mr. Shin pointed out that bond markets are growing at the expense of banks in supplying credit, enabling business and government debt loads in many countries to surpass their precrisis peaks. Emerging markets have borrowed heavily in dollars, which leaves them vulnerable should the dollar’s value rise sharply. Before the crisis, 80% of investment-grade corporate debt world-wide yielded more than 4%; as of last October, less than 5% did, according to the International Monetary Fund.

Total U.S. debt, at around 250% of GDP, still stands at crisis-era peaks while debt levels in China have caught up and passed the U.S., according to the BIS. U.S. companies’ debts had reached 34% of assets by the end of 2016, the highest at least since 2000. Debt-servicing burdens haven't risen commensurately thanks to low inflation and low rates, but they have begun climbing. More than $1 trillion a year still flows into emerging markets each year, according to the Institute of International Finance.

The collapse of Bear Stearns marked a turning point for global markets and the world economy, presaging the financial crisis that would strike Wall Street six months later and rattle institutions in America and across the West for years afterward.

Market rumors say Bear may not have enough cash to do business. "There is absolutely no truth to the rumors of liquidity problems that circulated today in the market," Bear says. The company's shares fall 11% to $62.30.

This tells us little about when or where a crisis will happen or what may trigger it. Crises surprise because they usually start with an assumption so sensible that everyone acts on it, planting the seeds of its own undoing: in 1982 that countries like Mexico don’t default; in 1997 that Asia’s fixed exchange rates wouldn’t break; in 2007 that housing prices never declined nationwide; and in 2011 that euro members wouldn’t default. James Bianco, who runs his own financial research firm in Chicago, speculates that the equivalent today might be, “We will never see higher inflation or higher growth.” If either in fact occurs, the low interest rates that have raised household stock and property wealth to an all-time high relative to disposable income won’t be sustainable.

Mr. Rogoff concurs: “It’s much harder to get a crisis when you can borrow for virtually nothing and keep rolling it over.” A 1.5 to 2 percentage point increase in real interest rates, which he isn’t forecasting, would be small by historical standards but could potentially make the debts of Italy or Portugal unsustainable.

Central banks know this, of course, which is one reason they are wary of raising interest rates too quickly—while nervous that if they raise them too slowly, the problem will get worse.

Write to Greg Ip at greg.ip@wsj.com

 

2.

When the Fed Wishes for Inflation

Modest price increases but rising asset prices make the central bank’s job harder

By Justin Lahart

March 13, 2018 12:53 p.m. ET

Inflation is dead, at least for now, and that is making life more difficult for the Federal Reserve.

By all rights inflation should be accelerating, driven by a tight jobs market strengthening further, a big stimulus hitting the economy and a weak dollar. But it isn’t. The Labor Department on Tuesday reported that consumer prices rose 0.2% in February from a month earlier, putting them 2.2% higher than a year ago. Prices excluding food and energy—the so-called core that better reflects inflation’s trend—rose 0.2%, leaving them up 1.8% on the year. Friday’s strong jobs report makes the modest inflation numbers more vexing.

Inflation isn’t dead, of course. Economists point out that over the past six months core prices have risen at a 2.5% rate. Fed policy makers won’t hesitate to raise rates when they meet next week.

But if inflation remains quiescent, and the fiscal stimulus propels asset prices higher instead, the Fed could face some tough decisions. The housing and credit bubbles that led to the financial crisis came about during a period of unexpectedly low inflation and good economic growth. The same goes for the dot-com bubble.

The Fed, and economists in general, now think asset-price excesses can cause real economic problems. But acknowledging this isn’t the same as knowing what to do. Economists still don’t agree on what makes a bubble a bubble, so it comes to a gut call. At the moment, the stock market seems pricey, but doesn’t seem like a bubble. But where would the line between the two be? And at what point would it be appropriate for the central bank to start leaning against the market, and how should it go about doing it?

If the economy and job market keep doing well, but inflation stays low, the Fed can, and probably will, raise rates four times this year. But even if it is worrying about asset prices, it could have a hard time justifying raising rates any more than that. As far as the central bank is concerned, a little more inflation might be a welcome thing.

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评论
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '闲闲客' 的评论 : 闲闲好!差点漏了你的留言。我的报纸这个季度已经停了,看不过来了,所以索性不看了,反正也摸不透。谢谢闲闲留言,我也不懂的。
闲闲客 回复 悄悄话 暖冬爱学习,我不懂,看你们的评论 :)
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '夏圓' 的评论 : 师傅说得极是,防患于未然,但是呢,其实我们是防不了的,真正来不来,什么时候来,我们不知道,而且往往也来不及。问候师傅好!
夏圓 回复 悄悄话 厉害了,我的徒弟!
虽然不能掌控,但掌握信息有好处,有思想准备,比猝不及防要好。
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '水沫' 的评论 : 水沫周末好!哪里哪里,我只是关心股市股票,顺带关心的,不懂的,就是想保持警醒的,是有点怕了。谢谢水沫来访!
水沫 回复 悄悄话 记得以前买房子的时候很关心这个问题,最近对于这些完全不去关注了,暖冬厉害~~~
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 'qun0' 的评论 : 是的,一份华尔街相当一本薄薄的书,坚持下来,一定有成效,哪怕一天一小部分,自己感兴趣的内容。一般人会认为报纸就是时事新闻,WSJ的内容其实很广,有书评还有地产、艺术类的,我旧报纸都还舍不得扔,时间不够用。祝周末好!读报愉快!
qun0 回复 悄悄话 回复 '暖冬cool夏' 的评论 :
我也没有时间读全部的文章。主要是浏览首页的摘要,如果有感兴趣的文章或和我的讲课内容有关的文章,我会稍微详细地读,并下载。主要难度是大部分文章里还是有生词。华尔街的文章写得相对严肃严谨一些。多读肯定有益处。
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 'qun0' 的评论 : 欢迎qun0!你在美国当老师啊,厉害了。我以前在国内也当过几年老师,握个手!我去年一年的WSJ是用mileage换的,今年自己掏钱订,还有电子版的,每天坚持读,量很大的,我坚持不下来,你厉害了!你说的对啊,是会加息的,当然这些都是猜测,我们关注关注。谢谢来访留言!
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '菲儿天地' 的评论 : 菲儿谦虚了,你懂财务的,这个只是从债务的角度分析经济的不稳定性,我也不懂的,读一读有时只是警醒一下。菲儿周末愉快!
qun0 回复 悄悄话 回复 '暖冬cool夏' 的评论 :
个人观点,美联储前几年降息过了头,现在正在纠正,所以一定会逐渐加息的。这样也好为下一次危机做准备。
qun0 回复 悄悄话 我也读过这两篇华尔街日报的文章。由于要求学生阅读,报社每周6天免费送到家门口,所以多年来也必须每天都粗略的读一下。经济和市场以后会如何,大家都是在猜测,谁也不能肯定啊。
菲儿天地 回复 悄悄话 全英文的,不懂,不懂啊,尤其这个问题!:)
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '彩烟游士' 的评论 : 游士好!是啊,但愿历史不要重演啊,现在的情况是全球性的。我们退休的钱都在股市里啊,当然也可以选择保守的基金的。祝游士周末愉快!
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '山韭菜' 的评论 : 加肯定会加的,但是什么时候,加多少要问联邦:))祝韭菜周末好!
彩烟游士 回复 悄悄话 暖冬好!今天我也看了一些关于Bear Stearns的文章。但愿历史不要重演!

周末快乐!
山韭菜 回复 悄悄话 到底是加息还是不加息?问好!
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 'ziqiao123' 的评论 : 子乔早!是啊,股票居高很多年了,像前一阵的correction一来,大家就像无头苍蝇,恐慌的。但愿现在不是暴风雨前的平静和繁荣。子乔周五周末好!
ziqiao123 回复 悄悄话 最近的股市这么不稳定,多少也反映出人们的担忧。加息好像也势在必行,但愿不是熊市的开始。
暖冬cool夏 回复 悄悄话 回复 '每天一讲' 的评论 : Don't know too much about Kundlow. But look, how many people got hired and fired within a year of his presidency, and what Trump did so far, tax cut, tariff, trade wars, etc. We will see where we are heading. Thanks for your visit, Yijiang, and your comment.
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