SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Idea Of The Day -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (44406)8/22/2003 2:38:27 AM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Respond to of 50167
 
MORGENSON: MARKETS OUT OF CONTROL In writing so much about Paul Krugman I have, to some extent, become distracted from writing about the most common and most dangerous media manifestation of the conspiracy to keep you poor and stupid. Krugman's only a very special case of it: his writings about the economy and the markets are the work of a knowledgeable expert who is willing to tell bald-face lies for the sake of political partisanship. But a column in Sunday's New York Times by Gretchen Morgenson is actually a much better example of the way the conspiracy really works. Morgenson's column is based outright ignorance about the economic subject matter being discussed; it is imbued with contempt for markets and market participants; it identifies a crisis where there is no crisis; and it blames a scapegoat for the crisis that doesn't exist in the first place.

The headline says it all: "Mortgage Markets Are Out of Control." So Morgenson must believe that other markets are in control. Who controls them? Who controls the stock market, or the pork belly futures market -- are any other market? What is so wonderful about markets is precisely that everyone controls them -- and yet no one does. That seeming self-organizing quality of markets is what makes them so effective in price discovery and resource allocation -- and what makes them so threatening to elitists like Morgenson, who believe that everything of importance should be under state control (with the state to be controlled by people like... them).

The essence of Morgenson's column is that interest rates are now being determined by the mortgage-back security market, which is now the single largest sector of the US bond market. She explicitly dismisses the idea that interest rates are determined by economic growth expectations. That, she says, is only believed by "folks wearing the rose-colored shades" -- as though the whole idea that economic growth could possibly be accelerating is simply a delusion.

No, what determines interest rates "is a force so large and brutish that it could propel rates higher and faster than many investors expect: the huge mortgage-backed securities market and the leveraged traders who call it home."

How is that supposed to happen? Morgenson explains that mortgage-backed securities traders hedge their holdings "by selling short Treasury securities with maturities roughly equal to the average life of the mortgages in their portfolio." She explains -- quite approximately -- how when mortgage rates rise and fall, the average life to be hedged changes (bond experts call that effect "convexity"), driving the need to adjust the Treasury hedge. When mortgage rates fall, hedgers must buy Treasuries (because, presumably, these brutish people find themselves short -- how very Hobbesian); when they rise, hedgers must sell them. That, she claims, produces "a snowball effect that can push rates far lower or higher, and faster, than in previous years."

Okay, there's nothing basically wrong with that explanation of increased Treasury volatility. Although my friend Jameson Campaigne noted in an email to me that much the same point was made last week in much the same language in the August 2003 Whitebox Market Observer -- oh, surely a coincidence! A Pulitzer Prize winner like Morgenson would never plagiarize from a publication affiliated with her old boss Steve Forbes...

Be that as it may, to the extent that the fixed income market has become increasing populated by high-convexity securities, there will be some spill-over to lower-convexity securities, insofar as all markets are linked. This is entirely natural and basically harmless (and probably averages out over time). If there are some market participants who would rather that Treasury yields not be so volatile as a result of this effect (or any other), well... there are many nice things that one can wish for, but the fact that one must wish does not mean that there is anything wrong in the world. It just means one must do something to earn one's wish -- other than kvetching.

And none of this says anything about what determines interest rates. However mortgage rates and Treasury rates are determined, neither of them are interest rates per se -- they are both nothing more than the yields of particular securities that reflect interest rates (just as stocks, and -- to differing extents -- everything else in the economy reflects interest rates). Interest rates are an abstraction. They are, by definition, the opportunity cost of money across time -- and opportunity cost is a function, mostly, of expected growth rates and expected inflation.

Thus Morgenson's explanation of rates being determined by mortgage trading is left looking very much like that so-called "proof" of the existence of God holds him to be the "prime cause." One can ask, "what caused God?" If moves in mortgage rates are the prime cause of interest rates, one can ask what moved mortgage rates? The answer is -- expected growth rates and expected inflation. Opportunity costs.

Morgenson inadvertently confesses as much, in a paragraph that she must not realize contradicts her entire thesis. Immediately after explaining how mortgage traders "helped push interest rates down to ridiculous levels earlier this year" and then later made "interest rates spike," Morgenson states,

"Last week, the Federal Reserve rattled the bond market by promising to keep rates low for as long as possible. Traders feared that the accommodative stance could be inflationary. They sold Treasuries, and rates rose."

Huh? First she says that the violent move in rates are caused "mortgage-backed securities market and the leveraged traders who call it home." Then, without taking a breath, she cites an explanation that has nothing to do with the mortgage market whatsoever. I have no idea (and either does Morgenson) what, if anything, "traders feared" last week. But at least this explanation gets to one of the true definitional drivers of interest rate changes -- inflationary expectations. Such expectations move mortgage markets and Treasury markets (and those two markets move each other, too, as all markets move each other to some extent).

Having described -- and contradicted -- a problem that is not a problem, Morgenson looks for a scapegoat. And so the inevitable conclusion to a Gretchen Morgenson column -- the pointing finger, and the dire warning:

"It is unfortunate that the problems of mortgage traders can create such havoc. But these traders drove down rates, benefiting consumers, companies and bondholders. Now, it is higher borrowing costs — and their grimmer implications — for which everyone must prepare."

Why not say just the reverse? It works too: "these traders drove down rates, impoverishing investors, savers, retirees and companies invested in money market funds. Now, it is higher income -- and all its delightful implications -- for which everyone must prepare." Why didn't she include that perspective? Because the conspiracy to keep you poor and stupid requires that think of the market as a terrifying place where you are a likely victim of people who deliberately "create such havoc." When you think that, you'll want to be protected. And there is no shortage of politicians and regulators -- and the journalists who pimp for them -- who are only too happy to protect you... right into poverty.

BET YOU DIDN'T KNOW THAT TAX CUTS CAUSED THE BLACKOUT From Der Spiegel, as dutifully reported on the New York Times website:

"The discrepancy between demand and reality has becoming increasingly clear to Americans under George W. Bush. The President who, like several of his cabinet secretaries, is a man with roots in the oil industry, has placed little emphasis until now on improving the infrastructure, as long as it doesn't recognizably serve the interests of Big Business. According to American economics professor Paul Krugman, public services have been cut back in many areas to the benefit of "tax breaks for the rich."

And how does shutting down commercial life for 20% of the American population "serve the interests of Big Business" or "the oil industry"? The reality is that Big Business has been chomping at the bit to earn a fair profit upgrading America's electrical transmission infrastructure. But environmental and economic regulations -- put in place by a half century of Democratic congresses -- have effectively legislated away any hope of gain (and any hope of upgrading).

Anyone want to take a bet? Krugman's New York Times column tomorrow will be a litany of infrastructure horror stories of all sorts -- from potholes on up -- and it will all be blamed on the "denial and deceit" of the Bush administration. Who'll fade me? Give me 2-to-1 on the topic, with a special double 4-to-1 payoff if he uses the expression "denial and deceit." Email me at don@poorandstupid.com. I'm serious. We'll settle via PayPal.

Posted by Donald Luskin at 11:57 AM | link

Get new major postings to this weblog via email -- free.
Click here to sign up!
MORGENSON: MARKETS OUT OF CONTROL In writing so much about Paul Krugman I have, to some extent, become distracted from writing about the most common and most dangerous media manifestation of the conspiracy to keep you poor and stupid. Krugman's only a very special case of it: his writings about the economy and the markets are the work of a knowledgeable expert who is willing to tell bald-face lies for the sake of political partisanship. But a column in Sunday's New York Times by Gretchen Morgenson is actually a much better example of the way the conspiracy really works. Morgenson's column is based outright ignorance about the economic subject matter being discussed; it is imbued with contempt for markets and market participants; it identifies a crisis where there is no crisis; and it blames a scapegoat for the crisis that doesn't exist in the first place.

The headline says it all: "Mortgage Markets Are Out of Control." So Morgenson must believe that other markets are in control. Who controls them? Who controls the stock market, or the pork belly futures market -- are any other market? What is so wonderful about markets is precisely that everyone controls them -- and yet no one does. That seeming self-organizing quality of markets is what makes them so effective in price discovery and resource allocation -- and what makes them so threatening to elitists like Morgenson, who believe that everything of importance should be under state control (with the state to be controlled by people like... them).

The essence of Morgenson's column is that interest rates are now being determined by the mortgage-back security market, which is now the single largest sector of the US bond market. She explicitly dismisses the idea that interest rates are determined by economic growth expectations. That, she says, is only believed by "folks wearing the rose-colored shades" -- as though the whole idea that economic growth could possibly be accelerating is simply a delusion.

No, what determines interest rates "is a force so large and brutish that it could propel rates higher and faster than many investors expect: the huge mortgage-backed securities market and the leveraged traders who call it home."

How is that supposed to happen? Morgenson explains that mortgage-backed securities traders hedge their holdings "by selling short Treasury securities with maturities roughly equal to the average life of the mortgages in their portfolio." She explains -- quite approximately -- how when mortgage rates rise and fall, the average life to be hedged changes (bond experts call that effect "convexity"), driving the need to adjust the Treasury hedge. When mortgage rates fall, hedgers must buy Treasuries (because, presumably, these brutish people find themselves short -- how very Hobbesian); when they rise, hedgers must sell them. That, she claims, produces "a snowball effect that can push rates far lower or higher, and faster, than in previous years."

Okay, there's nothing basically wrong with that explanation of increased Treasury volatility. Although my friend Jameson Campaigne noted in an email to me that much the same point was made last week in much the same language in the August 2003 Whitebox Market Observer -- oh, surely a coincidence! A Pulitzer Prize winner like Morgenson would never plagiarize from a publication affiliated with her old boss Steve Forbes...

Be that as it may, to the extent that the fixed income market has become increasing populated by high-convexity securities, there will be some spill-over to lower-convexity securities, insofar as all markets are linked. This is entirely natural and basically harmless (and probably averages out over time). If there are some market participants who would rather that Treasury yields not be so volatile as a result of this effect (or any other), well... there are many nice things that one can wish for, but the fact that one must wish does not mean that there is anything wrong in the world. It just means one must do something to earn one's wish -- other than kvetching.

And none of this says anything about what determines interest rates. However mortgage rates and Treasury rates are determined, neither of them are interest rates per se -- they are both nothing more than the yields of particular securities that reflect interest rates (just as stocks, and -- to differing extents -- everything else in the economy reflects interest rates). Interest rates are an abstraction. They are, by definition, the opportunity cost of money across time -- and opportunity cost is a function, mostly, of expected growth rates and expected inflation.

Thus Morgenson's explanation of rates being determined by mortgage trading is left looking very much like that so-called "proof" of the existence of God holds him to be the "prime cause." One can ask, "what caused God?" If moves in mortgage rates are the prime cause of interest rates, one can ask what moved mortgage rates? The answer is -- expected growth rates and expected inflation. Opportunity costs.

Morgenson inadvertently confesses as much, in a paragraph that she must not realize contradicts her entire thesis. Immediately after explaining how mortgage traders "helped push interest rates down to ridiculous levels earlier this year" and then later made "interest rates spike," Morgenson states,

"Last week, the Federal Reserve rattled the bond market by promising to keep rates low for as long as possible. Traders feared that the accommodative stance could be inflationary. They sold Treasuries, and rates rose."

Huh? First she says that the violent move in rates are caused "mortgage-backed securities market and the leveraged traders who call it home." Then, without taking a breath, she cites an explanation that has nothing to do with the mortgage market whatsoever. I have no idea (and either does Morgenson) what, if anything, "traders feared" last week. But at least this explanation gets to one of the true definitional drivers of interest rate changes -- inflationary expectations. Such expectations move mortgage markets and Treasury markets (and those two markets move each other, too, as all markets move each other to some extent).

Having described -- and contradicted -- a problem that is not a problem, Morgenson looks for a scapegoat. And so the inevitable conclusion to a Gretchen Morgenson column -- the pointing finger, and the dire warning:

"It is unfortunate that the problems of mortgage traders can create such havoc. But these traders drove down rates, benefiting consumers, companies and bondholders. Now, it is higher borrowing costs — and their grimmer implications — for which everyone must prepare."

Why not say just the reverse? It works too: "these traders drove down rates, impoverishing investors, savers, retirees and companies invested in money market funds. Now, it is higher income -- and all its delightful implications -- for which everyone must prepare." Why didn't she include that perspective? Because the conspiracy to keep you poor and stupid requires that think of the market as a terrifying place where you are a likely victim of people who deliberately "create such havoc." When you think that, you'll want to be protected. And there is no shortage of politicians and regulators -- and the journalists who pimp for them -- who are only too happy to protect you... right into poverty.



To: IQBAL LATIF who wrote (44406)8/22/2003 2:44:10 AM
From: IQBAL LATIF  Respond to of 50167
 
PARIS The euro's rally is turning into a fizzle as investors, sensing a rebound in the United States and Asia, start to bet that the single currency is not the investment it used to be.
.
The euro hit a four-month low against the dollar and the yen on Thursday, battered by growing evidence that the European economy is not keeping up with a global recovery.
.
"For the next few months, the euro is going to be vulnerable," said Holger Schmieding, senior economist at the Bank of America in London.
.
The euro fell to $1.0927 from $1.1118 on Thursday in New York, continuing its slide from a record $1.1933 in late May as Europe's largest economies - including Germany and Italy - headed into a recession.
.
Signs that Japan's long moribund economy is shaking off a recession have also sparked a selloff in the euro against the yen, with the euro closing at ¥103.92 from ¥132.09.
.
Still, analysts said it was too early to call the present trend a turnaround in the dollar, and they warned that the U.S. currency could lose ground again next year as investors begin to focus in earnest on ballooning federal deficits and the persistent current-account deficit.
.
"Saying this is the turning point might be taking it a bit far," Schmieding said of the dollar's recent rally against the single currency. "But the prospects for the euro do look dimmer than a few months ago."
.
With the overseas environment improving, investors are, at least for now, weakening the euro by taking funds out of European money markets and piling them into foreign equities.
.
The flow of capital toward higher-returning investments is giving a boost to American and Asian stock markets.
.
The Dow Jones industrial average has gained more than 13 percent since the start of the year, and the technology-laden Nasdaq is up more than 32 percent.
.
In Japan, the Nikkei 225-stock average floated above 10,000 this week from just over 7,600 in April.
.
Further news of U.S. recovery came on Thursday when a government report suggested that American employers might be slowing the pace of layoffs. A separate index of leading economic indicators from the Conference Board suggested that the recovery was gathering speed.
.
With the U.S. manufacturing sector improving and consumer confidence and spending running apace, some economists are predicting that the world's largest economy grew even more quickly in the second quarter - as fast as 2.8 percent at an annualized rate - than the 2.4 percent pace originally estimated by the government.
.
The Japanese economy, to the surprise of many analysts, is not far behind. It expanded at an annual rate of 2.3 percent in the second quarter, and the government this month raised its assessment of the economy's health, citing recent stock-price gains and the acceleration in the United States.
.
By contrast, the European Union's statistical office, Eurostat, has forecast that the euro bloc in the second quarter grew by only 0.4 percent from a year earlier. With France's economy contracting sharply in the second quarter, the agency said Wednesday that it would revise its forecasts for growth from the previous quarter to show the bloc contracting by 0.1 percent.
.
Analysts agreed that this confluence of factors would weigh on the euro in the second half of the year, although forecasts differed on magnitude by which it would weaken. Schmieding said the currency was likely to hover around $1.09 through year-end.
.
But Hans Redeker, the global head of foreign exchange strategy at BNP Paribas in London, said he saw the dollar taking a fast ride upward. Redeker said he expected the euro to possibly fall toward $1.05 in the coming months and to as low as $1.02 by the end of the year as investors continue to shift money away from European money markets and bonds, whose yields have become less attractive than those of U.S. Treasuries.
.
"What is currently opportune in the market is that people are looking for higher returns - they are more willing to invest in equities," he said.
.
Redeker also urged caution over the dollar's fortunes next year. That is when European economies are expected to start to emerge from the doldrums, driven by a revival of exports as the global economy continues to improve.
.
And despite Thursday's optimism about the gathering pace of an American recovery, some troubling questions linger. Bond yields have shot up in the last month, raising borrowing costs for everything from houses to automobiles and fanning concern among some analysts that American consumers - the driving engine of economic growth - may become more hesitant about spending.
.
The U.S. current-account deficit remains stubbornly above 5 percent of gross domestic product, while the U.S. deficit is expected to balloon to a record $455 billion in the fiscal year, threatening to undermine investment and growth.
.
When U.S. presidential elections roll around in November 2004, budget consolidation will become a real issue for markets, Redeker noted.
.
"I believe we are in a multiyear downward trend for the dollar," he said.
.
Aside from the temporary gains that he expects the U.S. currency to make this year, these persistent structural issues, if not addressed, will fuel a longer-term decline in the dollar a year from now, he predicted.
.
International Herald Tribune
PARIS The euro's rally is turning into a fizzle as investors, sensing a rebound in the United States and Asia, start to bet that the single currency is not the investment it used to be.
.
The euro hit a four-month low against the dollar and the yen on Thursday, battered by growing evidence that the European economy is not keeping up with a global recovery.
.
"For the next few months, the euro is going to be vulnerable," said Holger Schmieding, senior economist at the Bank of America in London.
.
The euro fell to $1.0927 from $1.1118 on Thursday in New York, continuing its slide from a record $1.1933 in late May as Europe's largest economies - including Germany and Italy - headed into a recession.
.
Signs that Japan's long moribund economy is shaking off a recession have also sparked a selloff in the euro against the yen, with the euro closing at ¥103.92 from ¥132.09.
.
Still, analysts said it was too early to call the present trend a turnaround in the dollar, and they warned that the U.S. currency could lose ground again next year as investors begin to focus in earnest on ballooning federal deficits and the persistent current-account deficit.
.
"Saying this is the turning point might be taking it a bit far," Schmieding said of the dollar's recent rally against the single currency. "But the prospects for the euro do look dimmer than a few months ago."
.
With the overseas environment improving, investors are, at least for now, weakening the euro by taking funds out of European money markets and piling them into foreign equities.
.
The flow of capital toward higher-returning investments is giving a boost to American and Asian stock markets.
.
The Dow Jones industrial average has gained more than 13 percent since the start of the year, and the technology-laden Nasdaq is up more than 32 percent.
.
In Japan, the Nikkei 225-stock average floated above 10,000 this week from just over 7,600 in April.
.
Further news of U.S. recovery came on Thursday when a government report suggested that American employers might be slowing the pace of layoffs. A separate index of leading economic indicators from the Conference Board suggested that the recovery was gathering speed.
.
With the U.S. manufacturing sector improving and consumer confidence and spending running apace, some economists are predicting that the world's largest economy grew even more quickly in the second quarter - as fast as 2.8 percent at an annualized rate - than the 2.4 percent pace originally estimated by the government.
.
The Japanese economy, to the surprise of many analysts, is not far behind. It expanded at an annual rate of 2.3 percent in the second quarter, and the government this month raised its assessment of the economy's health, citing recent stock-price gains and the acceleration in the United States.
.
By contrast, the European Union's statistical office, Eurostat, has forecast that the euro bloc in the second quarter grew by only 0.4 percent from a year earlier. With France's economy contracting sharply in the second quarter, the agency said Wednesday that it would revise its forecasts for growth from the previous quarter to show the bloc contracting by 0.1 percent.
.
Analysts agreed that this confluence of factors would weigh on the euro in the second half of the year, although forecasts differed on magnitude by which it would weaken. Schmieding said the currency was likely to hover around $1.09 through year-end.
.
But Hans Redeker, the global head of foreign exchange strategy at BNP Paribas in London, said he saw the dollar taking a fast ride upward. Redeker said he expected the euro to possibly fall toward $1.05 in the coming months and to as low as $1.02 by the end of the year as investors continue to shift money away from European money markets and bonds, whose yields have become less attractive than those of U.S. Treasuries.
.
"What is currently opportune in the market is that people are looking for higher returns - they are more willing to invest in equities," he said.
.
Redeker also urged caution over the dollar's fortunes next year. That is when European economies are expected to start to emerge from the doldrums, driven by a revival of exports as the global economy continues to improve.
.
And despite Thursday's optimism about the gathering pace of an American recovery, some troubling questions linger. Bond yields have shot up in the last month, raising borrowing costs for everything from houses to automobiles and fanning concern among some analysts that American consumers - the driving engine of economic growth - may become more hesitant about spending.
.
The U.S. current-account deficit remains stubbornly above 5 percent of gross domestic product, while the U.S. deficit is expected to balloon to a record $455 billion in the fiscal year, threatening to undermine investment and growth.
.
When U.S. presidential elections roll around in November 2004, budget consolidation will become a real issue for markets, Redeker noted.
.
"I believe we are in a multiyear downward trend for the dollar," he said.
.
Aside from the temporary gains that he expects the U.S. currency to make this year, these persistent structural issues, if not addressed, will fuel a longer-term decline in the dollar a year from now, he predicted.

www.iht.com