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There’s a liquidity crunch developing

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Published : November 14th, 2013
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Category : Gold and Silver

This week an article in Euromoney points out that liquidity in bond markets is drying up. The blame is laid at the door of regulations designed to increase banks' capital relative to their balance sheets. Furthermore, the article informs us, new regulations restricting the gearing on repo transactions are likely to make things worse, not only reducing bond market liquidity further, but also affecting credit markets. The reason this will be so is that in a repurchase agreement a bank supplies credit to non-banks for the period of the repo.

One could take another equally valid point of view: the reason for deteriorating liquidity in bond markets is due in part to yields being unnaturally low. If you price bonds too highly, which amounts to the same thing, few investors want to buy them without the unconditional support of the central bank as a ready buyer. This, after all, is why just the hint of tapering recently was enough to derail the markets. So here again we come up against the same choice: if the Fed insists on mispricing the market with its interventions and zero interest rate policy it must fully support the market with both QE and also twist applied to the yield curve to maintain market liquidity.

For the investment analysts and commentators that still expect tapering this must come as something of a surprise. The underlying point they have missed is that once a central bank embarks on a policy of printing money as a cure-all, it is impossible to stop, or even to just taper without risking a liquidity crisis. Increasingly illiquid markets are now telling us that QE should be increased.

The point was rammed home this week by the ECB's decision to lower interest rates. The move was sold to the financial press as designed to stimulate inflation and reduce the risk of deflation. However, central to the deflation argument is the need to stimulate liquidity in the secondary markets, which according to the Euromoney article "are now close to breakdown".

At least the ECB rate cut should defuse tapering expectations in US markets, making it easier for the Fed to back down from its failed experiment. The Fed now needs to plant the suggestion that QE will have to be increased, or a similar mechanism designed to boost liquidity introduced.

This will not be difficult in the prevailing economic conditions. Even though GDP remains a positive figure, concerns over deflation abound and are preoccupying more and more analysts. These are concerns which analysts can readily accept as an immediate and greater risk than inflation.

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Lack of solvency in both national and commercial banks was one
of the causes of the 'crash.' At some point there had to be some
kind of regulation to de-leverage the banks.

The Euro-Zone member countries witnessed a massive re-nationalization of their balance
sheets, i.e. foreign debts and credits, and a subsequent 'balkanization' of their Euro quotas.
This was viewed by some as a first step in the death of the Euro, and the re-printing of
national currencies.

That also dried up liquidity in Europe, and put enormous pressure on non-bank secondary markets
as borrowers could not readily find national lenders within their own borders.

Europe is far from recovering from their ongoing solvency crisis. - late edit Tx
Europe is far from recovering from their ongoing liquidity crisis.

So now we have a balance of terror between solvency and liquidity.

Governments on all continents are hooked on bond buying and twisting,
like giant institutional addicts. This isn't going to end well.

Much more pain to come.
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