Following the announcement by the National Bureau of Economic
Research that a recession in the U.S. began last September, both
Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson and Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke
gave speeches.
Mr. Paulson said, “We are actively engaged in developing
additional programs to strengthen our financial system so that
lending flows into our economy.” Chairman Bernanke laid out
additional steps the Fed could take to lift economic activity,
including the purchase of Treasury bonds to boost the money
supply.
As has been typical in the past year, every time the government
comes out to explain what it will do to save the day, the markets
stumble. The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 670 points and
financial stocks had one of their worst days ever.
What is most amazing about this crisis is that the government is
unwilling to address one of the root causes of investor fears —
mark-to-market accounting. For some reason, normally stalwart
free market thinkers are willing to support trillions of dollars
of government intervention, but are unwilling to support a
suspension of mark-to-market accounting. They trust government
solutions more than private sector solutions.
This has happened before. In the 1970s, when inflationary
pressures were rising because of excessively easy monetary
policy, the government tried everything but tightening money to
fix the problem. A partial list includes: wage and price
controls, windfall profits taxes, tax hikes, credit controls, WIN
buttons, and price caps on energy products.
None of this worked because inflation was a monetary phenomenon.
But every convoluted attempt at fighting inflation that did not
address the real problem created even more problems elsewhere.
The end result of all of this was stagflation as government
interference in free markets undermined growth.
Milton Friedman, who understood the problem, and proposed the
solution that was eventually put in place by Paul Volcker, was
considered too narrow-minded. Many thought that inflation was
intractable and something we would have to live with.
Sadly, it seems that the U.S. government is repeating a similar
error all over again. Conventional wisdom argues that the
problems we face are fundamental in nature. That this is a
classic case of an economy gone awry, and that the only way out
is for government to bail us out.
But every new government bailout or injection of liquidity is
designed to offset the pain caused by Sarbanes-Oxley, FASB 157
and mark-to-market accounting. And even more sadly, it is these
convoluted attempts at bailing out the economy that pushed the
economy into recession.
The decision to let Lehman Brothers fail caused the financial
system to freeze up. Money under mattresses appeared safer than
money in the bank. For the first time in roughly 100 years the
velocity of money (the rate at which money changes hands)
collapsed in September. As a result, real GDP in the fourth
quarter of 2008 could well fall 4%.
This reality led the Treasury to propose a huge $700 billion
facility to purchase troubled assets. The idea was to encourage
more lending. Purchasing troubled assets would set a floor under
their prices, provide liquidity and protect capital at financial
institutions. It was the first real acknowledgement that the
downward spiral of asset prices, and fair value accounting, were
harming the financial system.
The plan never got off the ground. Instead, the Treasury invested
directly in banks. But this has not encouraged any more lending
because the vicious cycle of illiquid markets, fire sale prices,
a weak economy, and fair value accounting is impairing, or
threatening to further impair, capital. In fact, Citigroup, which
received $25 billion from Treasury back in October, came back for
more because the falling value of assets threatened its capital
ratios.
So last week, the Treasury announced another investment in
Citigroup, and also insured $306 billion of its troubled assets.
This arrangement is designed to limit the possibility that
falling asset values (and fair value accounting) could push Citi
into bankruptcy.
To understand this process, imagine that a forest fire one mile
to the east of your home in Montecito, California, was being
blown your way by the Santa Ana winds. How much would your home
be worth at that moment? How about the loan on the books of your
lender? Then imagine that the wind shifts to come from the ocean,
your house is saved, and its value is unimpaired once again.
Which set of books is right?
The only difference between this example and today’s economic
crisis is that no matter what price we place on the house, it
will not affect the direction of the wind or power of the fire.
But because marking-to-market impairs capital and therefore the
financial system as a whole, it is causing the fire to burn
hotter and the wind to blow harder. Marking to what might happen
forces the system to accommodate losses that may not occur in
reality.
Subprime loan problems, which started out as a $300 billion
problem, have morphed into a $1.5 trillion dollar problem
affecting many different markets and types of institutions. Even
if the wind shifted, and the fire moved the other way, the damage
would have already been done. In other words, it would not matter
if the house had actually survived because the bankruptcy would
have already occurred.
Suspending mark-to-market accounting will not keep institutions
that took excessive risk from failing. Bad loans are still bad
loans and there is no way to avoid the pain that they cause. It
will, however, end the negative feedback loop, which drags
everyone down. It allows time to see if the wind shifts and keeps
the flames from spreading.
In the 1980s, loan problems took down thousands of banks, but
because we did not force fair value accounting, the economy and
stock market actually thrived. Every money center bank would have
been insolvent in the early 1980s if they were forced to write
down Latin American debt to 10 cents on the dollar. Add in bad
oil loans, which took down Penn Square and Continental, and bad
S&L loans, and it is easy to see that the bank problems in
the early 1980s were much more severe than those of the 2000s.
But the rules were not as inflexible then as they are today.
Problems did not spread, many banks eventually recovered their
principal on Latin American debt and the economy grew.
In contrast, today’s problems are expanding, and have now caused
the government to put almost $4 trillion of taxpayer funds at
risk to support the financial system. This is an amazing sum of
money, equaling 28% of GDP, or 42% of total U.S. stock market
capitalization, or more than a quarter of all household debt
outstanding, or nearly 40% of all private household mortgage
debt, or three times the amount of subprime loans outstanding at
their peak.
The government has tried multiple strategies. The only thing they
all have in common is that they are designed to offset or stop
the damage caused by mark-to-market accounting.
For example, banks have increased their excess reserves from
virtually zero to over $630 billion because the Fed now pays
interest on those reserves. The Fed uses these funds to buy
commercial paper and other debt instruments. So banks are pushing
off credit risk to the Fed to avoid any chance of further
markdowns or losses. As long as there is a threat to the economy,
the Fed will not be able to extract itself from this arrangement,
and unless the Fed can extract itself there will be a threat to
the economy.
In addition, the Fed has decided to buy Fannie Mae and Freddie
Mac debt in order to bring mortgage rates down. One of the key
reasons that mortgage rates have remained elevated in recent
months is that lenders have become more risk averse, not less.
And much of that is due to the erosion in asset values and the
interplay with fair value accounting rules. Forcing interest
rates down may encourage more home buying, but it does not change
the underlying threat.
At some point the government will have thrown so much money at
this problem that it could overwhelm the negative feedback loop
of mark-to-market accounting. But, in the process, the government
will grow larger and the free market will suffer. Moreover, every
step on this path the government takes makes it harder to reverse
course.
After all, when Chairman Volcker finally put the brakes on the
money supply, inflation finally came to an end just like Milton
Friedman predicted. But by that time, the government had done
incredible damage to the economy as a whole and unemployment had
climbed to almost 11%.