Pages

Thursday, November 25, 2010

Money, Credit and the Federal Reserve Banking System



Conquer the Crash, Chapter 10
By Robert Prechter
 
How the Federal Reserve Has Encouraged the Growth of Credit
 
Congress authorized the Fed not only to create money for the government but also to “smooth out” the economy by manipulating credit (which also happens to be a re-election tool for incumbents). Politics being what they are, this manipulation has been almost exclusively in the direction of making credit easy to obtain. The Fed used to make more credit available to the banking system by monetizing federal debt, that is, by creating money. Under the structure of our “fractional reserve” system, banks were authorized to employ that new money as “reserves” against which they could make new loans. Thus, new money meant new credit.
 
It meant a lot of new credit because banks were allowed by regulation to lend out 90 percent of their deposits, which meant that banks had to keep 10 percent of deposits on hand (“in reserve”) to cover withdrawals. When the Fed increased a bank’s reserves, that bank could lend 90 percent of those new dollars. Those dollars, in turn, would make their way to other banks as new deposits. Those other banks could lend 90 percent of those deposits, and so on. The expansion of reserves and deposits throughout the banking system this way is called the “multiplier effect.” This process expanded the supply of credit well beyond the supply of money.
 
Because of competition from money market funds, banks began using fancy financial manipulation to get around reserve requirements. In the early 1990s, the Federal Reserve Board under Chairman Alan Greenspan took a controversial step and removed banks’ reserve requirements almost entirely. To do so, it first lowered to zero the reserve requirement on all accounts other than checking accounts. Then it let banks pretend that they have almost no checking account balances by allowing them to “sweep” those deposits into various savings accounts and money market funds at the end of each business day. Magically, when monitors check the banks’ balances at night, they find the value of checking accounts artificially understated by hundreds of billions of dollars. The net result is that banks today conveniently meet their nominally required reserves (currently about $45b.) with the cash in their vaults that they need to hold for everyday transactions anyway. [1st edition of Prechter's Conquer the Crash was published in 2002 -- Ed.]
 
By this change in regulation, the Fed essentially removed itself from the businesses of requiring banks to hold reserves and of manipulating the level of those reserves. This move took place during a recession and while S&P earnings per share were undergoing their biggest drop since the 1940s. The temporary cure for that economic contraction was the ultimate in “easy money.”
 
We still have a fractional reserve system on the books, but we do not have one in actuality. Now banks can lend out virtually all of their deposits. In fact, they can lend out more than all of their deposits, because banks’ parent companies can issue stock, bonds, commercial paper or any financial instrument and lend the proceeds to their subsidiary banks, upon which assets the banks can make new loans. In other words, to a limited degree, banks can arrange to create their own new money for lending purposes.
 
Today, U.S. banks have extended 25 percent more total credit than they have in total deposits ($5.4 trillion vs. $4.3 trillion). Since all banks do not engage in this practice, others must be quite aggressive at it. For more on this theme, see Chapter 19 [of Conquer the Crash].
 
Recall that when banks lend money, it gets deposited in other banks, which can lend it out again. Without a reserve requirement, the multiplier effect is no longer restricted to ten times deposits; it is virtually unlimited. Every new dollar deposited can be lent over and over throughout the system: A deposit becomes a loan becomes a deposit becomes a loan, and so on.
 
As you can see, the fiat money system has encouraged inflation via both money creation and the expansion of credit. This dual growth has been the monetary engine of the historic uptrend of stock prices in wave (V) from 1932. The stupendous growth in bank credit since 1975 (see graphs in Chapter 11) has provided the monetary fuel for its final advance, wave V. The effective elimination of reserve requirements a decade ago extended that trend to one of historic proportion.
 
The Net Effect of Monetization
 
Although the Fed has almost wholly withdrawn from the role of holding book-entry reserves for banks, it has not retired its holdings of Treasury bonds. Because the Fed is legally bound to back its notes (greenback currency) with government securities, today almost all of the Fed’s Treasury bond assets are held as reserves against a nearly equal dollar value of Federal Reserve notes in circulation around the world. Thus, the net result of the Fed’s 89 years of money inflating is that the Fed has turned $600 billion worth of U.S. Treasury and foreign obligations into Federal Reserve notes.
 
Today the Fed’s production of currency is passive, in response to orders from domestic and foreign banks, which in turn respond to demand from the public. Under current policy, banks must pay for that currency with any remaining reserve balances. If they don’t have any, they borrow to cover the cost and pay back that loan as they collect interest on their own loans. Thus, as things stand, the Fed no longer considers itself in the business of “printing money” for the government. Rather, it facilitates the expansion of credit to satisfy the lending policies of government and banks.
 
If banks and the Treasury were to become strapped for cash in a monetary crisis, policies could change. The unencumbered production of banknotes could become deliberate Fed or government policy, as we have seen happen in other countries throughout history. At this point, there is no indication that the Fed has entertained any such policy. Nevertheless, Chapters 13 and 22 address this possibility.
 

5 comments:

  1. Reading this I dont understand how the Fed could knowingly undermine the foundations of our economy and conspire with the banking industry to game the system to such a destructive extent. By any other name its fraudulent and short sighted.

    ReplyDelete
  2. ok, i was wondering if you could see past the smoke and mirrors...this is what rp-bp is about...

    ...the fed controls the money supply, the fed is a semi-government agency, it is owned by the banks...

    when the fed lowers the interest rate, this enables the banks to "borrow low" and "lend high" - the spread...when money is borrowed into existence, this creates inflation - i.e. an increase in the supply of money and credit...

    the fed facilitated the dot com bubble by greenspan holding interest rates low for an exceptional period of time creating massive inflation - that greenspan claims he did not see - bubbles cannot be seen apparently by those who are inside the bubble...then, after the dot com bubble burst, in order to keep the economy going, greenspan blew another bubble by keeping interests rate low for an exceptionally long period of time thereby creating the housing bubble...which was facilitated by the unregulated securitization of mortgage loans by the big wall street banks....which resulted in a debt bubble collapse in 2007-8....

    now the fed is attempting to blow another bubble with easy credit by, again, holding interest rates low - except this time, no one is borrowing and no one in lending - the banks are trying to re-capitalize, they are taking the money from the fed at essentially zero interest rate and keeping is on their books, not lending - hence no inflation, and using it as collateral to cover all of their excessive debt created in the last (housing) bubble

    ...the credit collapse is maybe one-third of the way through, so this has a ways to go - kicking the can down the road, as they say...read Reinhart and Rogoff - "This Time is Different" to discover how credit bubble collapse, which have happened repeatedly in countries around the world (mostly in banana republics), take `8,10,12" years to flush the bad debts out of the system...

    The good ol' USA is a corporatocracy and TPTB are ringing every last penny out of the system while destroying the middle class in the process...

    time to swallow the Red Pill kemo sabi

    ReplyDelete
  3. I follow your line of cause and effect. I like the discription of not seeing a bubble from within. Interesting term TPTB (The powers that be (phrase) refers to any group that holds power over a certain entity.) In this last federal stimulus injection of cash to bailout TPTB you would hope that some conditional guidelines to encourage (not mandate) loans by the banks to small business to serve their purpose as facilitators, liquidating the markets and a economic recovery. You mention there are no takers but that is partly due to banks over-reacting and making qualifying for loans so difficult. I see this in the architecture development realm.The maddening thing is that the banks/ financial industry don't produce anything. They simply profit from statistical manipulation (exemplified by the image of a trading floor as a sea of computer screens) and the sweat of the producers (middle class, architects, engineers).Related to exploitation did you view the videos in my Metropolis post?
    This gets back to the fundamentals of a strong economy, educated work force, innovation (i.e.alternative energy technology industries), creating/manufacturing salable goods and products (job creation), GDP, desired/consumed (exported) internationally.

    ReplyDelete
  4. “No matter how cynical you get, it’s impossible to keep up.” - Lily Tomlin

    Interesting QOTD but going through life as a cynic is unacceptable.
    In the words of Kim Wilson/Thunderbirds:
    "..the whole worlds gone crazy, think I've seen enough, I'm gonna sleep forever, why get up?
    opposed to what studio A2 business cards say on the back
    "Our Choices define us."

    ReplyDelete
  5. ...indeed, Our Choices Define Us...

    i loved that motto from the first time i saw Studio A2...

    ...truer words were never written...

    ReplyDelete