by Tyler Durden
With the FOMC meeting currently in full swing, speculation is rampant what
will be announced tomorrow at 2:15 pm, with the market exhibiting its now
traditional schizophrenic mood swings of either pricing in QE 6.66, or,
alternatively, the apocalypse, with furious speed. And while many are convinced
that at least the "Twist" is already guaranteed, as is an IOER cut, per
Goldman's "predictions" and possibly something bigger, as per David Rosenberg
who thinks that an effective announcement would have to truly shock the market
to the upside, the truth is that the Chairman's hands are very much tied.
Because, all rhetoric and political posturing aside, at the very bottom it is
and has always been a money problem. Specifically, one of
"credit money." Which brings us to the topic of this post. When
the Fed released its quarterly Z.1 statement
last week, the headlines predictably, as they always do, focused primarily
on the fluctuations in household net worth (which is nothing but a proxy for the
stock market now that housing is a constant drag to net worth) and to a lesser
extent, household credit. Yet the one item that is always
ignored, is what is by and far the most important data in the Z.1,
and what the Fed apparatchiks spend days poring over, namely the update on the
liabilities held in the all important shadow banking system. And with
the data confirming that the shadow banking system declined by $278 billion in
Q2, the most since Q2 2010, it is pretty clear that Bernanke's choice has
already been made for him. Because with D.C. in total fiscal stimulus
hiatus, in order to offset the continuing collapse in credit at the financial
level, the Fed will have no choice but to proceed with not only curve flattening
(to the detriment of America's TBTF banks whose stock prices certainly reflect
what a complete Twist-induced flattening of the 2s10s implies) but offsetting
the ongoing implosion in the all too critical, yet increasingly smaller, shadow
banking system. And without credit growth, at either the commercial bank, the
shadow bank or the sovereign level, one can kiss GDP growth,
and hence employment, and Obama's second term goodbye.
As the two charts below demonstrate, the economy's ongoing inability to
create any growth in the shadow banking system, primarily as a result of the
complete shut down of the securitization machine, has been and continues to be,
the biggest threat to the Fed. Specifically, after hitting an all time high of
$20.9 trillion in March of 2008, this all too critical source of "credit money"
has collapsed by a whopping 25%: since the peak $5.5 trillion of credit,
and not just any credit, but shadow, and thus non-regulated credit, has
evaporated! And as Q2 demonstrated, after almost bottoming in Q1
following a decline of just $57 billion, or the smallest Q/Q decline since Q2
2008, the drop has picked up again, with a one year high $278 billion plunge in
Q2.
Among the liability components of the Shadow Banking system's credit money
abstractions, we look at:
- Money Market Mutual Funds: at $2.6 trillion, a decline of $41.6 billion Q/Q
- GSE and Agency Paper: at $6.5 trillion, a decline of $73.8 billion Q/Q
- ABS Issuers At $2.2 trillion, a decline of $80.4 billion Q/Q
- Repos at $1.2 trillion, a decline of $49 billion Q/Q
- Open Market Paper at $1.1 trillion, a decline of $50 billion Q/Q
- and these declines were offset by a tiny increase of $17 billion to $726 billion at Funding Corporations
Altogether, added across this amounts to a massive $278 billion in the second
quarter, and explains why GDP, when the manipulation from the Census Bureau is
eliminated would have probably declined. What is worse is that should this
decline continue without an offset, there will be no economic
growth guaranteed.
So where can said offset come from? Well, just as there is a shadow banking
system, so there is a traditional commercial bank system with listed
liabilities. To be sure, for the duration of collapse in the shadow banking
system, this has been the only offset, although granted one that is not nearly
doing a good enough job. Specifically, total liabilities of Commercial
Banks in Q2 were $13.4 trillion, an increase of $238 billion in the
quarter. Alas, this is nowhere near enough to offset the decline in
Shadow Banking, having grown by "only" $2.6 trillion since Q2 2008, even as
shadow liabilities declined by double this amount. Yet there was a brief saving
grace came in Q1 when the spike in Traditional liabilities more than offset the
drop in Shadow, as the cumulative total rose by $337 billion, the most since
2008. Too bad, however, that adding across these two categories (second chart
below), we once again witnessed a decline in Q2, amounting to $40.1 billion.
This explains not only why QE2 could only do so much, but why GDP growth has
rolled over and is now almost certainly negative.
What is most important to keep in mind, is that Traditional Commercial Bank
assets only grow courtesy of QE. And with Shadow banking continuing to implode,
Commercial Banks have to pick up the slack or else... Which in turn means
Bernanke has to keep pumping reserves. Whether banks use these to lend out, or
to buy shares of Netflix is irrelevant: remember - America, and the entire
developed world, is a credit driven system. Take away credit growth and it is
game over.
Which explains why tomorrow's decision is a formality: Bernanke has no choice
but to continue offsetting the relentless contraction in shadow liabilities,
which as of Q2 collapsed at an annualized rate of over $1
trillion. Incidentally this, +$1, is the very minimum that Bernanke
will have to bring into reserve circulation to offset the relentless
deleveraging of the once biggest contributor to American growth, which
ironically is now the biggest adverse factor.
That reversion to the mean sure can be a bitch.
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