empty
08.11.2022 11:33 PM
The Fed is short of liquidity - who will be sacrificed?

The balance sheet of the US Federal Reserve is continuously declining. This exacerbates low liquidity and high volatility in the $20 trillion US Treasury bond market. Economists are now wondering what the Fed will do to straighten things out.

The Fed is short of liquidity - who will be sacrificed?

The last five months of quantitative tightening (QT) for the Fed is designed to drain the stimulus that was pumped into the economy during the COVID-19 pandemic. Nevertheless, the Fed's balance sheet is still large, reaching $8.7 trillion, which, admittedly, is not much lower than the peak value of almost $9 trillion.

This image is no longer relevant

To correct this situation, the Fed planned to release about $95 billion from the balance sheet in September, which would signal to markets that the central bank would no longer reinvest the principal and interest payments received from maturing US Treasuries and mortgage-backed securities.

However, amid the Fed's aggressive rate hike cycle, there are now liquidity and volatility concerns for US Treasuries. And although they can also be attributed to long-standing structural problems arising from US banking rules created after the global financial crisis of 2008, and more precisely, after the Clinton confluence of investment and credit banks in 1999, now the scale of the problem has attracted the attention of all macroanalysts.

Yes, we see the obvious: the Fed is determined to cut its balance sheet. But at the same time, some analysts still believe that if the problems facing investors get out of control, the Fed will simply stop the process... without achieving the final goals.

With this approach, experts have doubts whether the Fed will be able to keep a firm hand in principle and not succumb to criticism from the Senate and large industrialists, who are already ready to cry out about a drowning economy.

Of course, if bond volatility continues to rise, we could very well see a repeat of the events of March 2020, with the Fed eventually being forced to end QT and buy large amounts of Treasuries. And this opinion is becoming more and more popular, overturning the bearish sentiment.

So, UBS economists confirmed this version last month, saying that the Fed's balance sheet will face a number of complications until 2023, which will prompt the Fed to sharply slow or completely stop the balance sheet reduction as early as the middle of next year.

Bonds are not in demand

Let me remind you that a key indicator that is monitored by investors and even traders who are not directly involved in the bond market is the liquidity premium of outstanding treasury bonds or new issues compared to retired treasury bills. The latter are older treasury bills that include most of the total debt outstanding, but represent only about 25% of the total debt outstanding.

Current treasury bonds typically carry a higher premium than over-the-counter bonds during periods of market stress. For example, 10-year premiums on current deals compared to their out-of-turn counterparts are the highest since at least 2015.

So, it seems that high premiums, combined with the standard reliability of government bonds as an instrument, are no longer of interest to savers.

Thus, Morgan Stanley notes in a research note that liquidity outside circulation suffered the most in the sector of 10-year US bonds, followed by 20-year and 30-year bonds, as well as five-year bonds.

It is also difficult for fund managers to explain this phenomenon: "There is some indirect function that QT exacerbates the lack of liquidity... There is a derivative effect when you have such a large buyer - we are talking about 40% of the market - it not only leaves, but becomes a net seller.

Of course, this is partly a direct consequence of the inverted yield curve, which makes two-year bonds more desirable than longer positions. The direct reason for this situation is the firm belief of the markets that inflation will last no longer than 2023. But I also think that this is the influence of the bulls.

After all, bonds were not a popular tool during the maximum lockdown. And now, while the market is still hot (and it is hot), investors are still trying to make the most of the stock, cryptocurrency and other markets, leaving bonds as a last resort. Simply put, no one needs long bonds now, because the market offers many other interesting instruments.

Wide bid and ask spreads

We are now seeing how low liquidity has increased volatility in the Treasury market and widened bid-ask spreads, meaning that participants are paying slightly more to buy and get less to sell a security than before, which is also not conducive to turnover.

Thus, the ICE BofAML MOVE index, an indicator of the expected volatility of US Treasuries, was 128.44 last Friday. This level is already close to allowing Treasuries to move up an average of eight basis points over the next month. Now compare that to the usual: Over the past decade, Treasuries have averaged two to three basis points in movement.

This is not today's problem.

Those who follow the bond market, if only as an indicator, know that liquidity problems in the Treasury securities market have been popping up here and there for years, which was due to financial sector rules created after 2008. Dealers typically maintain market liquidity by intermediating customer transactions, for example by moving customer sales orders into inventory when customers are not available.

And while the Treasury market has risen sharply since 2008, briefly burying all these problems under the backwaters, the level of dealer intermediation has remained low. And now it is obvious that the new rules have made trading in the Treasury market less attractive for dealers.

Now I even wonder if the surge in such speculative instruments as cryptocurrencies, memes or SPACs was not just an attempt to quickly and easily put into circulation super-large sums of cash? Maybe the problem of liquidity of bonds already then made itself felt?

However, the Fed has so far been unable to do anything to address the issue of mediation. And there's a growing feeling that it can't.

The central bank is only able to enter the market and buy bonds when the market breaks away from fundamentals, as happened during the pandemic, which could mean the end of quantitative easing, analysts said.

At the moment, very few market participants are willing to bet that the Fed will end or suspend QT – yet a significant component of inflation is tied to liquidity gained from quantitative easing (QE) during the pandemic era.

We must understand that part of the $5 trillion of all kinds of aid put into circulation during the pandemic period stimulates the current inflation. It becomes obvious that the solution to the problem of inflation must include a reduction in the balance sheet... But it seems that the Fed has a problem with the latter.

This seems like nonsense: the regulator, which injected trillions of dollars of state support into the economy, now cannot find a use for them. Because in fact, these amounts can be safely neutralized by immobilizing them in long-term investments (or bonds, yes). But this is not happening: free funds continue to walk around the speculative markets, as traders wanted to spit on the promise of "heavenly car" and crises combined.

And now the Fed is in a dilemma: if it cuts the SOMA (System Open Market Account) portfolio too much, the market will collapse. And first of all it will be the bond market. It simply will not have time to absorb the excess liquidity of other sectors. And since bonds are an indicator for the entire market as a whole, this threatens a strange collapse: there will be money, but due to technical indicators, the markets will be empty.

If the Fed does not keep the evil mask on its face, we will be stuck in inflation for a long time. And here it is also difficult to draw a picture of the future: either free money will still exhaust itself due to rising prices, or the rich will be forced to pay huge taxes on investment transactions ... and this, by the way, is also quite an option. It really could turn a system error into a huge plus for the economy: more taxes, fewer transactions - isn't that ideal? Of course, the rich [also crying] will be dissatisfied, but someone needs to be sacrificed. Either it will be an army of retail traders, or it will be [workers and countrymen] employed in the real sector. And something tells me that this time they will drown the second. Bet?

Egor Danilov,
Analytical expert of InstaForex
© 2007-2025
选择时间框架
5
分钟
15
分钟
30
分钟
1
小时
4
小时
1
1
通过InstaForex赚取加密货币汇率变动的收益。
下载MetaTrader 4并开启您的第一笔交易。
  • Grand Choice
    Contest by
    InstaForex
    InstaForex always strives to help you
    fulfill your biggest dreams.
    JOIN CONTEST

推荐文章

3月21日需關注什麼?初學者的基本事件拆解

週五沒有預定的宏觀經濟事件。歐元和英鎊最終兌美元下跌。

Paolo Greco 06:06 2025-03-21 UTC+2

英鎊/美元配對概況-3月21日:英國央行對當前情勢毫無影響

英鎊/美元 (GBP/USD) 貨幣對在週四的波動非常平穩,就像週三晚上。如下圖所示,近期波動性已經降到明顯低的水平。

Paolo Greco 04:16 2025-03-21 UTC+2

歐元/美元對概述-3月21日:市場恐慌徒勞無功,無助於美元

歐元/美元貨幣對在週三和週四之間開始顯示出一定程度的下行修正。價格在四小時圖上的移動平均線下方盤整,但值得注意的是,這種盤整目前意義不大——上升趨勢依然強勁而穩定,而回調則相對較淺。

Paolo Greco 04:16 2025-03-21 UTC+2

日圓前景持續看漲

日本銀行(BoJ)在週三維持利率不變,市場反應平淡,因該結果早已在預期之內。BoJ 總裁植田和男表示,由於工資增長和食品價格持高,核心通脹上升的風險依然存在。

Kuvat Raharjo 23:46 2025-03-20 UTC+2

美元收復失地

市場總是先開槍後問問題。在聽到Jerome Powell保證聯邦儲備系統掌控一切且不會發生經濟衰退的消息後,美國股市指數上升。

Marek Petkovich 23:45 2025-03-20 UTC+2

XAU/USD 分析與預測

黃金在創下歷史新高後略有回落,保持著防禦立場。 目前,看漲的交易者顯得謹慎,這可從日線圖上超買狀況以及市場整體的正面情緒看出,這通常會減少對黃金這種避險資產的需求。

Irina Yanina 10:29 2025-03-20 UTC+2

美聯儲的訊息對股市多頭來說如樂音入耳

美聯儲並未向標普500投以救生索,但它真的需要救援嗎?救生索是留給溺水者的,而市場僅僅是因短暫的經濟衰退恐慌而受到驚嚇。在FOMC會議後的記者會上,鮑威爾的語氣不僅是安撫性的——更是令人平靜的。

Marek Petkovich 09:05 2025-03-20 UTC+2

市場陷入惡性循環,尚未見出路(比特幣和黃金價格可能下跌)

目前,由於籠罩市場的負面情緒如同一個難以抒解的重擔,市場正在經歷重大衝擊,尚未看到解決的跡象。在這種情況下,市場的未來動態仍然不確定,並引發一些重要的問題。

Pati Gani 08:23 2025-03-20 UTC+2

3月20日應注意什麼?初學者的基本事件分析

本週四有若干宏觀經濟事件即將發生,主要集中在英國。關鍵報告將包括失業率、失業人數的變動以及平均工資。

Paolo Greco 07:15 2025-03-20 UTC+2

GBP/USD 匯率概況 – 3月20日:英國央行投票可能冷卻看漲情緒

考慮到晚間波動,週三英鎊兌美元貨幣對的交易非常平穩。提醒一下,我們尚未分析聯邦儲備會議的結果,因為時間過於短暫。

Paolo Greco 02:18 2025-03-20 UTC+2
现在无法通话?
提出您的问题,用 在线帮助.
Widget callback
 

Dear visitor,

Your IP address shows that you are currently located in the USA. If you are a resident of the United States, you are prohibited from using the services of InstaFintech Group including online trading, online transfers, deposit/withdrawal of funds, etc.

If you think you are seeing this message by mistake and your location is not the US, kindly proceed to the website. Otherwise, you must leave the website in order to comply with government restrictions.

Why does your IP address show your location as the USA?

  • - you are using a VPN provided by a hosting company based in the United States;
  • - your IP does not have proper WHOIS records;
  • - an error occurred in the WHOIS geolocation database.

Please confirm whether you are a US resident or not by clicking the relevant button below. If you choose the wrong option, being a US resident, you will not be able to open an account with InstaForex anyway.

We are sorry for any inconvenience caused by this message.