Yves Smith at Naked Capitalism submits:
Oh, I do so enjoy it when the Financial Times’ chief economics editor, the normally measured and thoughtful Martin Wolf, works himself into a lather.
Wolf blasts what he reads as the Fed’s vow of last week, uttered by Senate banking committee chairman Christopher Dodd, to keep the markets afloat (Dodd’s exact words were that Bernanke would “use all the tools at his disposal”). Traders took that as a promise that the Fed would cut rates at its regularly scheduled September meeting, although Fed officials had tried to dampen that notion. However, yesterday the Fed indicated that worsening conditions might warrant a policy response even sooner.
I admit I may have gotten this wrong. I saw having Dodd speak as a brilliant bit of stagecraft, since it might calm the markets (which were irrationally spooked) yet give the Fed chair plausible deniabilty. Note that the Japanese yen had spiked up sharply overnight, which could have led to a massive unwinding of the carry trade and in turn, large scale selling into an already deteriorating market.
But the fact that Bernanke even met with Dodd (and Paulson) was troubling (meeting Dodd without Paulson would have been more appropriate. The only reason for Bernanke and Dodd to talk would be about regulations, not the state of the financial markets).
Nevertheless, I hadn’t realized that Bernanke was present when Dodd made his remarks. That puts an entirely different coloration on things.
Wolf’s article, “Central banks should not rescue fools,” (subscription required) is a bill of indictment. The Fed should not become politicized, which is what giving Dodd such a visible role suggested. It needs to more clearly parse out the actions it takes to promote its two, not always consistent goals of economic stability and soundness of the financial system.
Martin bluntly characterizes the current game as one of finding a new sucker (the latest candidate being the taxpayer) and calls our current situation a “lemon crisis.” His solution is not to bail out lemon vendors, but to force them to turn lemons into something better than mere lemonade or let bottom fishers set a market clearing price.
From Wolf:
Sometimes a picture is worth a thousand words. The one last Wednesday showing Christopher Dodd… flanked by Hank Paulson….and Ben Bernanke….was such a picture. This showed Mr Bernanke as a performer in a political circus….The Fed has its orders: save Main Street and rescue Wall Street….
The question is how to help the system without encouraging even more bad behaviour….I think of the underlying game as “seek the sucker”: sucker number one is persuaded to borrow too much; sucker number two is sold the debt created by lending to sucker number one; sucker number three is the taxpayer who rescues the players who became rich from lending to sucker number one and selling to sucker number two.
The most recent game is a particularly creative one. This time the geniuses seem to have created a “lemons crisis”, after the celebrated paper by the Nobel laureate George Akerloff*. Consider the market in used cars. Suppose buyers cannot tell the difference between good cars and bad ones (lemons). They will then offer only an average price for cars. Sellers will withdraw any good cars from the market. This may continue until the market disappears entirely….
This seems to be precisely what has now happened to trading in certain classes of security…. With the suckers fled, the markets have frozen….
Yet the difficulty is not a lack of general liquidity… Nor is this a general crisis in lending…..
This then is a crisis in the market for financial lemons. So what should the authorities do about that? My answer is “nothing”….
Now suppose central banks….refuse to intervene in the afflicted markets. What would happen? Sellers must turn lemons into apples, pears, strawberries and all the rest. In other words, they must demonstrate the precise properties of what they are trying to offload. Where they cannot do this, they may have to hold securities to maturity. Meanwhile, vulture funds would invest in obtaining requisite knowledge. Losses will also have to be written off. How much of the market in securitised lending would survive this shake-out, I have no idea. But I do not care either. That is for the players to decide, after they realise the consequences of getting it wrong.
Burned children fear the fire. If some of the biggest and most powerful institutions in the world have been playing with fire, they need to feel the burns. It is not the central banks’ job to rescue them by creating a market in the incomprehensible. It is their job to preserve the banking system and the health of the economy. Neither seems now to be in grave danger.
Decisions made in panic are almost always bad ones. Stick to principles and let the masters of the financial system sort themselves out. They are paid enough to do so, after all.