Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Pushing on a String

Trough? Or cliff-drop?


Still believe this is a typical recession?
John Mauldin, in his weekly newsletter Thoughts from the Frontline, would like to draw your attention to the graph above. He has this to say:

The money multiplier, as measured by the ratio of M0 to M1 growth, is at its lowest level ever...the normal, accustomed relationships about money supply and inflation are proving to be wrong. We live in extraordinary times. We are coming to the End Game of the debt supercycle that has lasted for 70 years. Everything is changing in front of our eyes.

Here is what he is talking about. M0 (M-zero) is a measure of the monetary base, consisting of all currency plus central-bank credit. This is the supply controlled by the Federal Reserve Bank. M1 refers to the money available to all us poor folks for our day-to-day transactions. It is the sum of currency outside the vaults of depository institutions plus demand and other checkable deposits issued by such financial institutions as your friendly neighborhood bank (or your predatory Wall Street bankster).

In our system of fractional-reserve banking, M1 is some multiple of M0, as commercial banks extending lines of credit to their customers are required to retain in reserve only a fraction of the total dollar amount of their loans. In this way, money created by the Fed gets multiplied by the institutions doing business with the public. If the Fed wants to rev up business activity, it expands M0, intending thereby to lever up M1.

This is what the Fed is (frantically) trying to do now. Problem is, a dollar of M0 does not go as far as it used to. Twenty-five years ago it grew three dollars of M1; now it buys a measly 81 cents. This begs the Morning After question, what happened? Simply put, banks are reluctant to lend, and consumers and businesses are reluctant to borrow. As Mauldin explains:

Bank lending has fallen percentage-wise the most in 67 years. The actual amount of bank loans is falling each and every quarter, with no signs of a bottom. Consumers are reducing their debt and leverage. Bank loans are being written off at staggering rates. Over 700 banks are officially on watch by the FDIC, with more banks being closed each week.

There is at least $300-400 billion in losses on commercial real estate waiting to be written down. Housing foreclosures are rising and hundreds of billions have yet to be written off. As more families fall into unemployment or underemployment, there will be more writedowns. Is it any wonder that banks are having to shore up their balance sheets and make fewer loans?


Essentially the multiplier graphed above measures confidence. The low level of confidence permeating our economy makes the Fed helpless. Getting out of this mess is up to you and me.

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