After almost six months of credit difficulties, central banks are no closer to stabilizing financial markets. If proof were needed, today's FT Alphaville was full of half-baked and shocking rumours about banks.
Here is just a selection of what was on offer to the credulous reader:
"No foreign travel for Bank of England senior staff over Easter, supposedly because a major UK clearing bank is in trouble".
"Swiss government is preparing a bailout of UBS".
"BNP has no interest in a merger with SocGen-BNP merger because of further as-yet uncovered problems".
On the face of it, none of these rumours appear to be true. Nevertheless, these days financial markets are willing to consider any crazy story. This tells us how bad things have become. With Bear Stearns going under in just four short days, and the Fed bringing rates down to just 2.25 percent, there is a growing sense that anything could be true. This only weakens the financial sector further, since banks are now vulnerable to any unsubstantiated rumour - a dangerous situation for any leveraged institution.
Why have things become so unstable? How did things get so bad? A large part of the blame must rest with the Fed. These sudden interest rate reductions seem disproportionate and only serve to increase the sense of distress and panic. If the banks are illiquid, the Fed could have injected liquidity while accepting good quality collateral, without turning real interest rates negative.
Contrast the erratic behaviour of the Fed with that of the ECB. The European banks are also deeply implicated in the sub prime mess. However, the ECB kept its nerve. It injected liquidity to Spanish and Irish banks, who are in housing market related trouble, yet at the same time, left rates consistent with keeping inflation under control.
Instead, the Fed cut rates dramatically, weakened the dollar, destabilized commodity markets, and provoked a rapid run up in oil prices. Understandably, inflation expectations are rising, while the risk of a recession has not diminished. As a consequence, their counter-inflationary credibility is rapidly dissipating.
Our own Bank of England seems to be in between these two poles. It has cut rates, but it has not followed the Fed's mad dash to zero. However, UK inflation remains stubbornly high and inflationary expectations are rising. Based on today's MPC minutes, the Bank's resolve does appear to be weak and it would surprise no one if they also succumbed to the Fed's moon-madness.
Above all, central banks need to be credible. That means that people need to believe that they have inflation under control and that they are ready to provide liquidity to cash-strapped but essentially solvent banks. Currently, the ECB comes closest to meeting this test. The Bank of England looks to be very shaky, while the Fed seem to have lost the plot altogether.
LONDON (Reuters) - The Financial Services Authority is investigating trading in UK financial stocks after rumours of banking trouble battered shares and led mortgage bank HBOS on Wednesday to a record low.
ReplyDeleteMarket jitters over the past months have been exacerbated since the near-collapse of Northern Rock by persistent rumours of liquidity and funding trouble elsewhere in the UK banking system, hitting other lenders despite repeated denials.
"There has been a series of completely unfounded rumours about UK financial institutions in the London market over the last few days, sometimes accompanied by short-selling," Sally Dewar, the FSA's head of wholesale and institutional markets, said in a statement.
"We will not tolerate market participants taking advantage of the current market conditions to commit abuse by spreading false rumours and dealing on the back of them."
An implied hint at HBOS problems with this post, perhaps.....
ReplyDeleteIs HBOS failing or not. It is all so confusing. I don't any lines yet....
ReplyDeleteWith so much really bad news around at the moment its hard not to become rather fatigued and weary with the whole situation. Three years ago these sorts of rumours would have been incredible now however the incredible is rapidly becoming mundane.
ReplyDeleteChefdave.
just look at the long-term chart of HBOS...clearly something is not right there.
ReplyDeleteIf it's this bad while unemployment is low and rates only just going up, I can't imagine what it'll be like when the recession hits and mortgage defaults REALLY start increasing...
I'm no expert on graphs but working on the assumption that down=bad HBOS look like they're in for a rough ride.
ReplyDeleteChefdave
HBOS is not going down, that is it wont be until the govt tell us "it has a solid loan book" or similar...then you need to worry.
ReplyDeleteNo HBOS rumours today.
ReplyDelete