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Central banks and the markets - The long goodbye

Jun 20th 2013, 10:21 by Buttonwood

CALL it a trifecta. After the Fed announcement yesterday, the Dow fell 200

points (and European equities are down 2% this morning), the 10-year Treasury

bond yield rose to 2.38% and gold is down more than 4% to a two-and-a-half-year

low. It takes a remarkable piece of news to send all three markets lower. Of

course, not everything has fallen; currencies are a zero sum game and the

dollar is up on the news (presumably on the grounds that the supply of dollars

is being restricted).

In essence, the Fed is talking of a three-stage process - tapering (the slowing

of asset purchases) which will start later this year if the economic

improvement continues; the ending of asset purchases (when unemployment falls

to 7%, perhaps next year); and a return to normal monetary policy (which could

involve higher rates or an unwinding of QE) which would require unemployment to

fall to 6.5%.

One could quibble with the details (why 7% and not 7.1% or 6.9%) but there is

an underlying logic that is easy to appreciate. Investors reacted, however,

like trust fund kids being told that daddy is going to cut their monthly

allowance. How are they going to cope without the Fed's largesse?

It is a sad state of affairs that the supposed "masters of the universe" who

pride themselves on their Darwinian skills in beating the market should be so

dependent on what is, in effect, an arm of central government. As has been

pointed out before, the rich have done very well out of QE; never mind "welfare

queens", these are the welfare kings. Bill White was warning about the dangers

of this approach at the BIS well before the crisis; he has an excellent update

here.

It looks as if we are headed for a period in which good news on the economy is

bad news for the markets. When unemployment falls (ordinary folks have jobs!),

equity markets will tumble because the end of QE is growing nearer. This also

creates a game, well known to parents of toddlers, in which investors, if they

scream and stamp their feet enough, might get their own way. Mr Bernanke seemed

sanguine about the rise in Treasury bond yields so far but what if the 10-year

hit 3%, or 4%? What if equity markets had another Black Monday, or at least a

25% fall over a matter of weeks? Perhaps the Fed would revise its sums.

The old saying is that the best way to make God laugh is to tell him your

plans. We might get to tapering but your blogger doubts whether the end of QE

is coming as soon as the markets fear. The US economy may not look that bad but

things are slowing in the emerging world; China recorded a weaker-than-expected

PMI today while there seems to be a credit squeeze going on.