Monday, January 27, 2014

The Fed and a Bubble: Flashback to 1927-1930

In recent discussions around effects and consequences of the Fed's monetary policy, a bubble in stock market has attracted attention. Even though the Fed's conventional and unconventional easy monetary policy, along with fiscal policies, has been keeping the U.S. economy from slipping into another Great Depression, unintended consequences of the Fed's recent policy, specially QE3, could be a big problem on its own as the policy sustains the recovery. The full effect of QE on the economy and the financial system isn't still fully known. Victoria McGrane quotes San Francisco Fed President John Williams from his recent paper on the zero lower bound:
Added to this uncertainty, the programs also raise “nagging concerns that large-scale asset purchases carry with them particular risks to the economy or the health of the financial system that we still don’t understand well,” he said.
Warning of a stock bubble has already been voiced by some of the Fed's policy makers. They argue that today's historically low federal funds rate has been fueling the stock prices. Therefore, they argue the Fed should pull back its bond-buying program to stop the potential stock bubble. However, the Fed shouldn't, in my opinion, tighten its monetary policy  so quick to just stop any potential bubble.
Here, Economist's 1998 article, "America's Bubble Economy", says:
In the late 1920s the Fed was also reluctant to raise interest rates in response to surging share prices, leaving rampant bank lending to push prices higher still. When the Fed did belatedly act, the bubble burst with a vengeance. The longer that asset prices continue to be pumped up by easy money, the more inflated the bubble will become and the more painful the economic after-effects when it bursts.
Now, let's try to see what was the Fed's action in the years prior to the Great Depression. In 1927, the Fed decreased its federal funds rate in the face of a mild recession in the U.S. and Britain's balance of payments crisis. Following this policy, the stock market prices gained 39% and the price-dividend ratio rose by 27% in 1928 (FYI: IN 2013, the Dow and S&P500 stock prices gained 26.5% and 29.6% respectively.) Worrying about a potential stock market bubble, the Fed raised the discount rate from 3.5% to 5% in the first half of 1928. The contractionary policy seemed to be working as the price-dividend ratio continuously fell until July 1929, when it started to increase again. Acting against this increase in the stock price, the Fed further increased the discount rate to 6% in August 1929. We know what happened next: the stock market crashed in late October of 1929. Here, we can see the Dow Jones Industrial Average price and price-dividend ratio in late 1920s.
stock-market-crash-1929-DJIAprice-dividend_1920s

As we briefly discussed the actions that the Fed took to cool down the stock market in the late 1920's, we should study further what this Fed's actions led to.
Today, the Fed faces the same problem even though Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke doesn't see an evidence of a bubble. Therefore, today's one of the biggest problems is whether the Fed can manage its bond-buying program in a way such that it's action doesn't burst or sustain any dangerous bubble.

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