With the Federal
Reserve’s first rate-hike cycle in nearly
a decade looming, traders are working overtime trying to
divine its timing and impact on the markets. They are closely
monitoring the same employment and inflation data the Fed will use
to start tightening. But there’s another little-discussed concern
for the Fed, the solvency of the US government. The Fed’s
zero-interest-rate policy has spawned a grave US debt bomb.
Back in late 2008,
the US stock markets suffered their first true stock panic since
1907. This once-in-a-century fear superstorm proved catastrophic.
In a single month leading into October 2008, the flagship S&P
500 stock index plummeted 30.0%. Over 6/7ths of these losses
happened in 2 weeks, a massive 25.9% cratering! That exceeded the
threshold for a stock panic, which is a 20%+ plunge in a couple
weeks.
Such extreme
selling catapulted fear so high that the S&P 500 had fallen
another 11.4% less than a month later! The American central
bankers certainly weren’t immune to this epic fear, so they joined
the traders in panicking. The Fed feared that the stock panic’s
wealth effect, the tendency for weaker stocks to retard consumer
spending, would cast the entire US economy over a cliff right into
a new great depression.
So the central
bankers acted quickly to try and restore confidence through shoring
up the devastated stock markets. The Fed slashed its key
federal-funds rate two separate times in October 2008 for 50 basis
points each. This certainly didn’t stop the extreme stock selling,
so the Fed desperately made an enormous 100bp cut in December! That
blasted the federal-funds rate to zero, beginning the ZIRP
era.
Running a
zero-interest-rate policy is an extreme measure that central banks
rarely use. It is reserved for dire economic emergencies, and then
promptly reversed soon after. Indeed upon panicking into ZIRP, Fed
officials promised that highly-distorting condition would be
temporary. Yet here we are, 6.9 years
later, and ZIRP is still in place! The Fed has lacked the
courage to normalize its extreme stock-panic policies.
ZIRP is
super-problematic on all kinds of fronts. It greatly distorts
financial markets, unleashing a torrent of easy money that bids up
prices. The Fed’s ZIRP and quantitative-easing money-printing
campaigns fueled recent years’
extraordinary
stock-market levitation. American corporations borrowed way
over a trillion dollars at the Fed’s record-low rates, using
cheap money to manipulate their stock prices higher via buybacks.
Companies
certainly weren’t the only large borrowers taking advantage of the
ZIRP extremes. The stock panic and its aftermath also had an
enormous impact on the United States federal government. 2008’s
critical presidential elections were held in early November just a
week after the US stock markets had lost nearly a third of their
value in a single month. Scared Americans
desperately wanted something to change.
Provocatively,
stock-market performance leading into US presidential elections
happens to be one of
the best
predictors of their outcomes. Since 1900, the fate of the US
stock markets in the Septembers and Octobers before early-November
elections has predicted the winner 26 out of 29 times. This
is a 90% success rate! In 10 of the 12 times the stock markets fell
in those final 2 months, the incumbent party lost.
And with the S&P
500 plummeting 24.5% in September and October 2008, the incumbent
Republicans didn’t have a prayer of winning that election. The
Democrats’ Barack Obama won 52.9% of the popular vote, and then
assumed office in January 2009. He represents the American
political party that has always been known for its fanatical
devotion to excessive government spending. ZIRP greatly
facilitated that.
The Fed’s extreme
artificially-low interest rates were implemented right between
Obama’s election win and his inauguration. The Democrats also won
decisive majorities in the US Senate and House of Representatives in
that stock-panic election. So the party that fervently believes
bigger government is the solution to all problems controlled all the
levers of power, and it rushed to expand government spending.
But not
surprisingly the already-heavily-indebted US government wasn’t
running a surplus, so the only way it could spend more was by first
borrowing that money in the markets. Normally interest rates act as
a critical constraint on that government borrowing. Excessive bond
issuance (demand for money) leads to higher interest rates, which
make the debt-servicing costs more expensive to naturally limit debt
growth.
But first with
ZIRP and later with quantitative easing, the Federal Reserve
systematically removed all the free-market restraints on
government spending. ZIRP forced short-term interest rates down
near zero, and the federal government eagerly rushed to borrow for
next to nothing. Then later the Fed started to actively conjure up
new money out of thin air to buy US government bonds, classic debt
monetization.
This gross Fed
manipulation naturally led to extreme record government spending and
deficits, both absolutely and as a percentage of the US economy.
This first chart looks at the latter over the past 65 years or so.
Note that the US government runs fiscal years that end on September
30th, so 2015 is already in the books. The damage the Fed and
Democrats wreaked on US finances is just staggering.
For a half-century
ending in 2007 before that extreme stock-panic year in 2008, US
federal government spending averaged 20.3% of US gross domestic
product. The Obama years saw this soar to a record 25.2% in 2010,
and an average of 23.6%. This is about 1/6th higher than the
long-term norm, trillions of dollars of new government
spending beyond precedent. The Democrats didn’t scrimp on
government largesse!
They financed
their record spending with record borrowing, as evidenced by
the massive red federal-deficit bars. For 50 years prior to that
once-in-a-century stock panic, federal deficits averaged 2.0% of
GDP. And in all fairness to the Democrats, the big-spending Ronald
Reagan years in the 1980s saw some of the worst deficits before the
panic. But Obama and his Democratic Congress shattered those
records.
Deficits under
Obama skyrocketed to a crazy record 9.8% of GDP in 2009 per the
latest data from the US Treasury and Federal Reserve! Their average
level during the Obama years was 6.1% of GDP, which is more than
triple the half-century precedent! The government spending
since the stock panic under the Democrats has been vast beyond
belief. This couldn’t have happened without the Fed’s
zero-rate manipulation.
Thankfully those
extreme deficits have normalized in recent years, which Obama loves
to point out in his political speeches. The record government
spending retreated to merely super-high levels, and taxes as a
percentage of GDP surged with the Fed-levitated US stock markets.
But higher federal receipts are fleeting, as stock bear markets
hammer them as was evident in the early-2000s and late-2000s
cyclical bears.
But a far-larger
problem than unsustainable levels of federal-government tax receipts
are those record deficits’ contribution to the federal government’s
debt. While deficits are how much spending exceeds income in
any year, debt is the cumulative total of all years’
excessive spending. Just slowing the rate of overspending doesn’t
even start to address the debt already accumulated. And that is
the Fed’s debt bomb.
Imagine if you had
a $100k income but also $100k in credit-card debt after many years
of spending more than you earned. Even when you stop living beyond
your means and borrowing, that massive debt load remains. And if
the interest rates charged on those credit cards rise high enough,
merely servicing that existing debt could easily threaten to
bankrupt you. The US government now faces this dire situation.
This next chart
looks at the total federal debt over the past 35 years or so.
Superimposed on top of that are some average annual interest rates.
They include yields on 1-year and 10-year US Treasuries that
represent short and long rates. And the blue line is the
effective US interest rate, the actual money the US government
pays in interest each year divided by the federal debt. This keeps
Fed officials awake at night.
Between 1983 and
2007, the quarter-century span before the stock panic, the US
federal debt grew at an average of 8.7% annually. Washington was
spending almost 9% more than it took in through taxes. And the
Obama years since 2009 surprisingly didn’t greatly exceed this
precedent, with average debt growth of 9.5% per year. That’s only
about 1/11th higher. But the raw-dollar size of that borrowing was
incredible.
In the Obama
years, the federal debt skyrocketed $8.7t or 87% higher!
That was as much absolute debt growth in 7 years as had previously
taken 25 years. The acceleration of raw debt since the stock panic
is readily evident in this chart. It mirrors a parabolic ascent,
which is very dangerous when we’re talking about federal-debt levels
now exceeding the size of the entire US economy! The Fed’s
ZIRP enabled all this.
For the
quarter-century prior to the stock panic, 1-year US Treasuries and
10-year US Treasuries had average yields of 5.6% and 6.9%. These
fair-market interest rates were what it cost the US government to
borrow money in the bond markets. They worked to constrain debt
growth, because it was expensive to pay the interest on existing
debt. Those 25 years saw an average effective US government
interest rate of 6.4%.
But the Fed’s
gross manipulations following the stock panic radically changed
prevailing interest rates on both ends of the yield curve. The
Fed’s supposedly-temporary zero-interest-rate-policy crisis measure
aggressively dragged down all short-term rates. And the US
government rushed to take advantage of this cheap money by rolling
over maturing Treasuries into new Treasuries with shorter average
maturities.
And soon after
ZIRP, the Fed formally launched
quantitative
easing in early 2009. QE is just a fancy euphemism for
monetizing debt, creating new money out of thin air to buy
bonds. QE1 was expanded to include direct Fed buying of US
Treasuries, which QE2 and QE3 continued at ever-higher levels. The
Fed was very transparent in brazenly admitting it was buying
Treasuries to manipulate long interest rates lower.
When the Fed
creates money to buy bonds, this additional demand bids up bond
prices. And the higher the price of any bond, the lower its yield.
QE enabled the Obama Administration to borrow vastly more money at
far lower rates than it ever could’ve hoped to in normal market
conditions. But the interest the US government was paying to
service this debt was artificially low, like a temporary teaser rate
on credit cards.
As the national
debt was skyrocketing higher since the stock panic thanks to the
Democrats’ extreme overspending facilitated by the Fed, the interest
paid on each dollar borrowed was plunging. The preliminary data for
fiscal 2015 just ended suggests an effective interest rate of
less than 2.2% on the US government’s incredible $18.7t in
debt! That is a ticking time bomb for the Fed, a critical rate-hike
consideration.
As the Fed hikes
rates, the entire interest-rate complex including the yields on US
Treasuries will rise to reflect this. And that’s a colossal problem
for a US government up to its eyeballs in debt. In fiscal 2015 the
US government had to pay $402b in interest expenses on its enormous
debt, less than 2.2%. That’s only about a third of the
quarter-century average effective interest rate before the Fed’s
ZIRP and QE arrived.
If the Fed
fully normalizes
interest rates, which the global bond markets will probably
eventually force whether the Fed wants to or not, the very
solvency of the US government comes into question. At the
pre-ZIRP average effective interest rate of 6.4%, the interest
expenses on $18.7t in government debt would rocket to $1200b per
year! That would likely prove to be an insurmountable hurdle for
the US government.
There are two
kinds of spending the US government does, mandatory and
discretionary. The former accounts for over 60% of all spending and
happens automatically. It includes giant welfare programs on
autopilot like Medicare and Social Security. These transfer
payments can’t be lowered without a huge backlash from the voters
who rely on them, and the Democrats wouldn’t cut government payments
for anything.
The minority
remainder of overall spending is discretionary, and includes
everything else done by the federal government including the
military. In 2015, this discretionary spending totaled about $1.1t
out of $3.4t or so. If Fed rate hikes return interest rates to
normal levels, it would cost the US government another $800b just
to service its existing debt. That would devour nearly
3/4ths of all discretionary government spending!
This is a
nightmare scenario for the US government, which includes the Federal
Reserve. Such a giant jump in interest expenses would force
catastrophic cuts in government services including the military (54%
of discretionary). The only other alternative would be to “finance”
these soaring interest payments by issuing more debt. But that’s
like borrowing on a credit card to pay interest, it accelerates the
debt spiral.
Even if the Fed’s
coming rate-hike cycle is exceedingly gradual and prolonged, if the
global markets refrain from forcing the Fed’s hand, the consequences
for the US government are still dire. If the new effective interest
rate the US is forced to pay is merely halfway between current
extreme levels and the quarter-century pre-ZIRP average, or 4.3%,
it would still double the government’s annual interest payments!
A $400b jump in
debt-servicing costs would be almost as catastrophic against a
$1100b discretionary budget as an $800b jump. There would either
have to be draconian cuts in government spending on salaries and
services or else a massive jump in deficits. And running bigger
deficits is super-risky since that greatly increases the odds the
world markets will force interest rates higher far faster than the
Fed wants.
Today’s
Fed-conjured fantasyland of record-low interest rates combined with
record-high federal debt levels is exceedingly dangerous. It is
literally a ticking time bomb that truly threatens to
bankrupt the US government! I strongly suspect this dire situation
is far more pressing on the minds of Fed officials when it comes to
rate-hike decisions than the usual considerations of employment,
inflation, and market impact.
Thanks to the
astoundingly-reckless excessive government spending under Obama
enabled by the Fed’s ZIRP and QE, there’s a good chance the Fed
can’t even attempt another meaningful rate-hike cycle. It may try
to manipulate rates lower forever or risk its very
existence. And politics will really come into play leading into
next year’s critical presidential election as well. Remember Janet
Yellen is a hardcore Democrat.
Fed rate-hike
cycles are very damaging to stock markets. The end of easy
money hammers stocks from multiple fronts. Higher rates slow
overall national spending which weighs on corporate sales and
profits, leading to higher valuations. Interest expenses rise too,
further eroding earnings. On top of all that, rising bond yields
make stocks relatively less attractive. So stock markets don’t fare
well in rate-hike cycles.
And with the fate
of the stock markets late next year having a 90% chance of
predicting the outcome of the next presidential election, it’s hard
to imagine Yellen taking the risk of all but guaranteeing a loss for
her party. And since rate hikes will initially lead to rapid
federal-deficit growth since spending cuts will be aggressively
resisted, the Yellen Fed will be unlikely to hike rates materially
in a presidential-election year.
So with the grave
implications for the Fed’s government master if interest rates even
start to normalize, it is hard to imagine a big new rate-hike
cycle. The Democratic-run hyper-dovish Fed is exceedingly unlikely
to risk tanking the Democratic-run epically-profligate US
government. Through its wildly-irresponsible ZIRP and QE policies,
the Fed has created a US debt bomb that appears impossibly
intractable to defuse.
And if the Fed
can’t materially hike rates any more due to the catastrophic impact
that will have on the US government, the primary beneficiary will be
gold. Along with the Fed’s ZIRP-and-QE-spawned stock-market
levitation, the main reason gold has been so weak in recent years is
futures speculators’ fear that Fed rate hikes will crush this
zero-yielding asset. That’s ironic because
history proves
just the opposite!
But if traders
come to realize the Fed has painted itself so deep into a corner
that any meaningful normalization of rates is impossible without
bankrupting the US government, investors are going to flock back to
gold. It thrives in
low-real-rate
environments, the natural consequence of central-bank
interest-rate manipulation. And as gold enjoys an
investment
renaissance, the
dirt-cheap gold
stocks are going to soar.
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The bottom line is
the Fed’s radically-unprecedented easy-money policies since the
stock panic have created a dangerous US government debt bomb. ZIRP
and QE artificially forced interest rates down to record lows,
enabling epic overspending by the Democratic government under
Obama. The resulting debt load has grown so massive that merely
normal interest rates will literally bankrupt the US government.
This
Democratic-led Fed isn’t going to embark on a meaningful rate-hike
cycle if it forces its government master into serious jeopardy. The
dire realty of this situation likely means lower rates for longer.
While the Fed may make isolated token rate hikes here and there, a
full normalization isn’t going to happen with the US government in
mortal peril. The asset most likely to thrive in a
lower-rates-forever scenario is gold.
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