Sunday, January 17, 2016

With liftoff done, the Fed revisits a US$4.5 trillion quandary

With liftoff done, the Fed revisits a US$4.5 trillion quandary

[WASHINGTON] Federal Reserve officials who spent months debating their first interest-rate increase in almost a decade are turning next to the thorny question of what to do with a balance sheet equivalent to the size of Japan's economy.
A month after liftoff, turmoil in global financial markets has pushed out expectations for more rate hikes and raised concern about what tools are available to fight the next downturn. Vice Chairman Stanley Fischerhas suggested the US$4.5 trillion balance sheet could be maintained as a way to hold down longer-term Treasury yields while the short-term policy rate was lifted.
Mr Fischer's idea - discussed in a Jan 3 speech partly on strategies for pulling the short-term rate away from zero - was taken up in more practical terms by New York Fed President William Dudley Friday. Reinvesting maturing bonds and putting off a reduction in the balance sheet until the federal funds rate is raised somewhat higher "makes sense," Mr Dudley said.
"Having more 'dry powder' in the form of higher short-term interest rates seems more desirable than less dry powder and a smaller balance sheet," he said.
Fed Chair Janet Yellen made similar comments in her Dec 16 press conference, meaning the three most senior officials still view the central bank's vast holdings of debt as an active policy tool rather than a relic of the financial crisis that needs to be shrunk as soon as possible.
"Dudley's view is if we get to choose our tool" to tighten policy, "then we are going to choose interest rates," said Michael Hanson, senior economist at Bank of America Corp. That's the safer choice, Hanson said, because officials are highly uncertain what shrinking the balance sheet would do to financial markets.
The preference to maintain trillions in bond holdings for months to come, however, isn't likely to be popular with all Federal Open Market Committee participants. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker favors an "expeditious" unwinding of the Fed's bond holdings.
The Fed's balance sheet swelled to US$4.5 trillion in 2014 from about US$900 billion in 2008 on purchases of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities, during three stages of a strategy known as quantitative easing.
The Fed keeps its assets at that level by reinvesting the proceeds of maturing debt, a tactic it pledged to end when rate hikes are "well under way." Some private economists define that as a federal funds rate, currently in a range of 0.25 per cent to 0.5 per cent, of at least 1 per cent, and probably higher. Mr Dudley said there shouldn't be a "numerical tripwire" for ending the program, and economic conditions should shape the decision.
"The risk is that this period of financial volatility is sustained and results in actual slowing of economic activity that brings rate hikes down to two this year," said Robert Martin, US economist at Barclays Capital Inc. in New York, which expects the Fed to begin shrinking the balance sheet in March 2017. "That will start pushing balance-sheet normalization out" to a later date, he said.
"Well under way' doesn't mean one or two rate hikes," said Lou Crandall, chief economist at Wrightson ICAP LLC in Jersey City, New Jersey. "The expected trajectory of rate hikes has gotten flatter and that means 2017, not 2016" for allowing run- off to begin, he said.
The timing of the Fed's expected tightening is getting pushed back in part because the economy appeared to lose momentum heading into this year. Barclays Plc lowered its fourth-quarter GDP forecast to 0.3 per cent growth at an annual pace from a 0.7 per cent rate, while Credit Suisse Group AG cut to 0.8 per cent from 1 per cent. In the third quarter, the economy expanded 2 per cent.
With more than US$1 trillion in Treasury debt maturing over the next four years, according to data compiled by Bloomberg, the decision to shrink the portfolio is as important as last month's increase in the benchmark rate, and the debate may be even more contentious.
For now, the committee is in no hurry, with many members considering the balance sheet a still useful tool of stimulus. Keeping it high while the short-term rate creeps higher is consistent with the committee's outlook for "gradual" rate increases.
In their September 2014 exit strategy principles, the Fed left the answers about what's next for the balance sheet open to interpretation. They called for holding "no more securities than necessary to implement monetary policy efficiently." JPMorgan Chase & Co Chief US Economist Michael Feroli said he isn't convinced the 2014 statement is the final say on the matter. Just what they mean by "efficiently" is "the most tangible aspect of the debate," he said.
Meanwhile, raising short-term rates while leaning against long-term rates by maintaining holdings of Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities carries some parallels to Operation Twist - a strategy the Fed used in 2011 to flatten the yield curve.
"The crucial question is whether the Fed should be using quantitative measures like Operation Twist during normal times," said Andrew Levin, an economics professor at Dartmouth College in Hanover, New Hampshire, and a former policy adviser to Ms Yellen when she was the Fed vice chair.
"It's hard to answer that question without having a clear understanding of how quantitative easing works or how effective it is."
BLOOMBERG

Blame, anger, frustration as China's stock rescue effort looks defeated

Blame, anger, frustration as China's stock rescue effort looks defeated

[SHANGHAI] A Chinese government campaign to restore confidence in the country's volatile stock markets appeared to be in tatters as the benchmark Shanghai index wiped out all the gains made since the depths of last year's crash.
Among a flurry of measures, a so-called national team of institutional investors had promised last summer to buy and hold stocks on the index until it returned to 4,500 points - a level which at the time was considered in reach.
However, the Shanghai Composite Index - the most closely watched by Chinese investors - fell through the lows seen during the depths of last year's crash and closed on Friday at 2,900 points - its weakest level since December 2014.
Irate retail stock investors crowded social media to gripe about Xiao Gang, the embattled head of the China Securities Regulatory Commission and threatened to sue state media for predicting a bull market revival rally that never happened. "What hope is left in the stock market? Regulatory incompetence is creating starvation!" wrote one blogger posting as "Song Jiliang" on a microblog service. "Ordinary people shouldn't pay the price." The CSRC did not discuss Friday's stock market performance during a regularly scheduled press conference and it did not take questions from reporters.
Emailed requests for comment on the future of Mr Xiao Gang - who faced internal criticism last year from the Communist Party over his handling of the stock market slump - were not answered. Calls to CSRC after business hours were also not answered.
More than US$5 trillion has been wiped off the capitalisation of the Shanghai and Shenzhen stock markets since they peaked in June 2015 - more than Japan's GDP.
Many retail investors have fled the market already, buying into the perceived safe-haven of gold, bonds and US dollars.
Others told Reuters they would not put their faith in future government bailouts; one investor surnamed Liao in Guangdong said she will only buy back into the market when it falls to 2,500 points.
The government marshalled several arms of government to prop up China's crumbling stock markets last year as policymakers scrambled to prevent a full-blown financial crisis.
Reuters analysis showed that at one point China had enlisted US$800 billion worth of public and private money to prop up share prices.
The central bank cut interest rates and bank reserves. A national team of major institutional investors committed to buying shares and major stakeholders were prevented from selling for six months.
China also applied a mixture of political carrots and sticks. Retail investors were rallied to "defend the stock market" from what were frequently painted in domestic media as nefarious foreign forces.
The government also suppressed trading in futures and derivatives markets, and conducted what many fund managers complained were campaigns of intimidation against traders, both foreign and domestic.
The experience may have soured relationships between China's legions of finance professionals - supposed to play a key role in rationalising the country's clunky capital markets - and their regulators for some time to come.
Some high-ranking brokerage executives were charged with insider trading and market manipulation.
But most importantly, regulators came together to promise a potent policy mixture that would revive economic growth through a combination of monetary easing and institutional reform. "(The crash) is evidence of a failure of intervention, but it is mainly evidence that the government didn't do what it said it would do," said Oliver Barron, an analyst at NSBO research in Beijing.
He said China has not implemented any significant market reforms since September and it has yet to rejuvenate economic growth. Indeed, GDP figures due for release on Tuesday are expected to show the weakest economic growth since the global financial crisis. "Beijing did buy shares, but they are short on market reform, short on pro-growth policies and we are short on monetary easing, which are the three things that could drive the market higher." Analysts said the yuan's sharp depreciation has encouraged capital to not only move out of Chinese stocks, but out of China. Since an unexpected devaluation in August, the yuan has fallen some 5 per cent against the dollar and spurred capital outflows.
Mr Barron and others said central bank data also suggested the national team may have sold some stock in November and December as the Shanghai index struggled to hold above 3,500 points.
Signs that Beijing may replace a key cabinet official to help fight the market turmoil points to a top leadership increasingly concerned the government is losing its grip on the market.
Some retail investors are also looking to slake their taste for bureaucratic blood. "First, I think the government should fire Xiao Gang," said a 22-year old retail investor surnamed Liang. "Seriously."
REUTERS

SpaceX launches climate satellite but botches ocean landing

SpaceX launches climate satellite but botches ocean landing

[AIR FORCE BASE, California] A SpaceX Falcon 9 rocket blasted off from California on Sunday and put a climate-monitoring satellite into orbit, but botched an attempted return landing on a platform at sea, officials said.
The first stage of the rocket made it back to the platform, which was floating in the Pacific Ocean, but one of the rocket's landing legs failed to latch into position, SpaceX founder and Chief Executive Elon Musk wrote on Twitter. "It tipped over after landing," the technology entrepreneur said.
The 22-story tall rocket lifted off through thick fog from Vandenberg Air Force Base on the central California coast at 10:42 am PST (1842 GMT).
A successful ocean landing would have marked a second milestone for SpaceX a month after it nailed a spaceflight first with a successful ground landing in Florida, a key step in Musk's quest to develop a cheap, reusable rocket.
The company's two previous ocean-landing attempts in 2015 were also unsuccessful. Being able to land at sea would give the company flexibility to recover rockets used on more demanding missions, such as launching heavy satellites, when boosters do not have enough fuel left to reach land.
Sunday's SpaceX launch succeeded in its primary goal to put the US- and European-owned Jason-3 satellite into orbit 830 miles (1,336 km) above the planet.
The 1,200-pound (550 kg) spacecraft is the fourth in a series of ocean-monitoring satellites taking center stage in monitoring Earth's climate. "More than 90 per cent of all the heat being trapped in the Earth's system ... is actually going into the ocean," said Laury Miller, Jason-3 lead scientist with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. "This makes the ocean perhaps the biggest player in the climate change story." NOAA is one of five agencies partnering on the US$180 million, five-year Jason-3 program.
Jason-3 is designed to bounce radio waves off the ocean and time how long it takes the reflected signals to return. Scientists can use the information to figure out ocean heights to within 0.2 inches (0.5 cm), said Josh Willis, with NASA's Jet Propulsion Laboratory in Pasadena, California. "This is one of the most important yardsticks we have for human-caused climate change," Mr Willis said, adding that heat, plus runoff water from melting ice sheets, causes ocean levels to climb.
Jason-3 can also chart ocean currents, which impact weather phenomena such as this year's powerful El Nino system, monitor tsunamis and track oil spills.
REUTERS

Qualcomm unveils US$280m joint venture with Chinese province

Qualcomm unveils US$280m joint venture with Chinese province

[NEW YORK] Qualcomm Inc and the provincial government of Guizhou in southwest China unveiled on Sunday a US$280 million joint venture for the design, development and sale of advanced server technology, as the US chipmaker deepens its Chinese relations.
Qualcomm officials in Beijing signed a strategic cooperation agreement with the government of Guizhou province and announced the Guizhou Huaxintong Semi-Conductor Technology Co Ltd, a joint venture with initial capital of 1.85 billion renminbi.
Qualcomm also will establish an investment company in Guizhou that will serve as a vehicle for future investments in China, the company and the provincial government said in a statement.
The joint venture, cooperation agreement and formation of an investment company are important steps for Qualcomm as it deepens its cooperation and investment in China, said Derek Aberle, president of Qualcomm Inc.
Mr Aberle said that in addition to its capital investment, Qualcomm was licensing its server technology to the joint venture, assisting with research and development and would supply expertise to implement the project. "This underscores our commitment as a strategic partner in China," Mr Aberle said in the statement.
REUTERS

Three US prisoners freed by Iran on their way to Germany: official

Three US prisoners freed by Iran on their way to Germany: official

[GENEVA] Three of the four US citizens freed by Iran in a prisoner swap were headed to a US military base in Germany after a brief stop in Geneva, a Swiss foreign ministry spokesman told AFP on Sunday.
Among those who had left Iran was The Washington Post's Tehran correspondent Jason Rezaian, who had been detained in Iran for nearly 18 months.
"Overwhelmed to greet Jason #Rezaian, his wife, Yegi, mother, Mary + Saeed #Abedini + Amir #Hekmati to #Geneva after safely departing #Iran," senior US diplomat Brett McGurk wrote on Twitter earlier.
The group arrived in Geneva aboard a Swiss air force plane, touching down at around 1700 GMT before departing for Germany shortly after.
The Swiss foreign ministry had earlier said that after landing in Switzerland, the freed prisoners, all of whom have dual US-Iranian citizenship, would then leave for an American base in Germany.
Neither US nor Swiss officials had explicitly named those on board the plane, but Mr McGurk's tweet confirmed reports that the three freed prisoners were Rezaian, Saeed Abedini, a Christian pastor, and former US Marine Amir Hekmati.
Iran had announced their release on Saturday, just hours before Tehran's historic nuclear deal with world powers was implemented, in exchange for Washington pardoning seven Iranians accused of sanctions-busting or violating trade embargoes.
"When Americans are freed, that's something we can all celebrate," US President Barak Obama said in a televised statement from the White House.
But he also sounded a note of caution, adding that the US would continue to have problems with the Iranian government's "destabilizing activities" in the region, including its support for militant groups.
The Swiss foreign ministry said the prisoner swap followed 14 months of confidential discussions in Switzerland.
The fourth Iranian-American released as part of the swap, Nosratollah Khosravi-Roodsari, has not yet left Tehran, senior US officials said.
Speaking on condition of anonymity, officials said Khosravi-Roodsari - about whom little is known - elected not to board the plane for Switzerland.
"Those who wished to depart Iran have left," said one official. Another said "it's his free determination where he wants to go." A fifth American, Matthew Trevithick, was released in a separate process, a US official has said.
The Post had earlier reported that the flight out of Iran was delayed because Rezaian's mother Mary and wife Yeganeh, who also were on the plane, initially did not appear on the flight manifest.
US Secretary of State John Kerry told reporters travelling with him from Vienna to Washington that Iranian Foreign Minister Javad Zarif resolved the problem.
"Zarif had no question about it," Kerry was quoted as saying. "It was part of the agreement, it was clearly stated. The problem was, one of the guys on the ground, at a military base, didn't have it on the manifest." Iranian state television said the seven Iranians - Nader Modanlou, Baharam Mechanic, Khosrow Afghahi, Arash Ghahreman, Tooraj Faridi, Nima Golestaneh, and Ali Saboonchi - "will be freed today".
The family of former US Marine Hekmati, who faced a death sentence as an alleged spy, welcomed the news that he had left Iran.
"It is hard to put into words what our family feels right now. But we remain in hopeful anticipation until Amir is in our arms." Washington Post publisher Frederick Ryan said in a statement: "We are relieved that this 545-day nightmare for Jason and his family is finally over." The 39-year-old Rezaian, a dual US-Iranian citizen born in California, was detained in Iran on July 22, 2014 on espionage charges.
The Post statement thanked those "around the world who have spoken out on Jason's behalf and against the harsh confinement that was so wrongly imposed upon him." Iran's ambassador to the United Nations, Gholam Ali Khoshroo, said on Saturday that Switzerland played a "positive role" in the prisoner swap.
The UN nuclear watchdog announced late Saturday that Iran had complied with its side of the July 2015 accord, allowing the lifting of sanctions.
AFP

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