Monday, April 27, 2009

The Tentatively Bullish Case for Treasuries

Overview

I'm writing this post to communicate some reasons why I think treasuries may not be the giant bubble that many people claim. My thoughts here should not be taken as investment advice — you should use your own judgment and decide where I might be wrong.

There are four different reasons most commonly given as to why treasuries might perform badly in coming years (note my focus is on years, not month to month fluctuations):
  1. Rising inflation or hyperinflation, i.e., the prospect of inflation-adjusted returns on current bonds being negative.
  2. Threat of default as government debt grows substantially and investors question whether it can be repaid.
  3. Ongoing new treasury supply from budget deficits and bailouts swamping the bond markets and forcing up interest rates.
  4. China deciding to stop buying our treasuries.
I'll provide some thoughts on each, though my perspective on #3 I have not seen detailed anywhere else, which suggests it is novel, wrong, or simply something that no source I read has bothered to explain in detail because they thought it obvious. On the prospect of wrong — with so many other ideas in economics proving utterly fallacious, I'm not going to rule out it being correct until I see good evidence, especially since the conclusions are in line with historical experience.

The Nature of this Crisis

Please see the related post that explains my perspective on this crisis. It is key context to the arguments here as it presumes no quick "return to normal" is feasible given the magnitude of the asset bubbles that are unwinding. It assumes a long "balance sheet recession", contracting aggregate private debt, and that this is at the core a crisis of solvency not liquidity. If you disagree with this outlook even after reading the explanatory sources I reference, you will likely disagree with much of this post.

The Historical Record

Both in the US during the Great Depression and in Japan since 1990, government bond yields were a strong investment and yields actually declined over each time span. Here are some graphs of yields from Richard Koo's March 2009 presentation:


It's not clear to me why so many commentators (even those who believe this crisis shares the same underlying dynamics as these historical precedents and will not end quickly) ignore the historical record by asserting treasury issuance will force yields and interest rates up. I have yet to see an explanation of which specific differences this crisis has that would lead to a completely different result for longer term interest rates. Yes, the magnitude of the unsustainable debt load is far larger this time, but does that necessarily imply a tipping point in what happens to interest rates? I have not seen such a tipping point described, other than prospect for default (to be discussed).

Amazingly Japan's government bonds even rallied (i.e., yields declined) during its crisis in the context of a declining household savings rate [graph] (the rate dropped from around 15% in 1990 to around 3% in 2008), though Koo's graph above suggests that when corporate debt repayment is added, private sector savings increased on aggregate. The US household savings rate is expected by many [e.g., see CR] to increase from recently being negative to roughly the historical 5-10% range, which may be a relative benefit for the US compared to Japan in terms of finding buyers of treasuries, depending on the size of changes on the US corporate debt side.

Inflation?

Steve Keen explains his inflation outlook (which I agree with) in detail in his Roving Cavaliers of Credit post. An excerpt:
To make a serious dent in debt levels, and thus enable the increase in base money to affect the aggregate money stock and hence cause inflation, Bernanke would need to not merely double M0, but to increase it by a factor of, say, 25 from pre-intervention levels. That US$20 trillion truckload of greenbacks might enable Americans to repay, say, one quarter of outstanding debt with one half—thus reducing the debt to GDP ratio about 200% (roughly what it was during the DotCom bubble and, coincidentally, 1931)—and get back to some serious inflationary spending with the other (of course, in the context of a seriously depreciating currency). But with anything less than that, his attempts to reflate the American economy will sink in the ocean of debt created by America’s modern-day “Roving Cavaliers of Credit”.
According to this view, inflation will take years to return, and when it does, it most likely will return slowly as individuals and companies start to gradually borrow more again, expanding aggregate private debt. [UPDATE 7/14/2009: In Japan, private borrowing has yet to begin expanding again since it peaked — see the blue line in the graph below. Note, I removed Steve Keen's chart that was included here previously as his Japanese private debt data may be incomplete, and replaced it with the chart below.] A key point is, when the private sector is deleveraging, printing money is actually deflationary as it is used to accelerate repayment of debts, unless you print truly huge amounts and effectively target those with the highest propensity to spend. But those are usually the same people with existing debts and even if you give them all mall gift cards, money is fungible so they can still use the cards to buy food and then pay down debt with the money they saved.

Now I'll admit that 30 years is a long time and a lot can happen in that timeframe, so long term treasuries are the riskiest duration with respect to possible negative inflation-adjusted return. However, it's not a clear cut case given the historical precedents of Japan and the Great Depression. Plus, markets have proven over and over that they do not always properly foresee and price in long term outcomes! So hunger for "safe" yield could cause them to rally for years before eventually declining many years from now.

Another relevant quote that summaries the inflation outlook well is from David Rosenberg:
Too much slack in the economy to worry about inflation: The fact that the Fed can state this view, knowing full well that it has dramatically expanded its balance sheet and the money supply, is a testament to the view that the central bank has been leaning against the winds of deflation rather than creating inflation. In our view, the latter will be practically impossible to do in an environment where the underlying unemployment rate is approaching 16% and capacity utilization rates are at all-time lows of 66%. There is simply too much slack in the economy, in our view, for us to be worried over the prospect of inflation or a sustained bear market in bonds.

[UPDATE 5/12/09: Here is a good post from Pension Pulse via NC that also argues that deflation will persist and be supportive of treasuries.]

[UPDATE 5/18/09: Two very useful posts from ZeroHedge that provide a marketplace liquidity/velocity/leverage perspective, including David Roche's liquidity pyramid: The Exuberance Glut and Chasing the Shadow of Money. One relevant quote:
"...the securitization of debt, and creation of derivatives amounted to a huge virtual printing press, primarily fueled by a massive increase in risk appetite which allowed for a huge expansion in the value of claims on financial assets and goods and services. It is worth pointing out, that the Fed has little to no control over this "printing press" at this point, which at last count was responsible for over 90% of the liquidity in the system."
]

Potential for Default

Looking at the historical record, Japan started its crisis around 1990 with a government debt-to-GDP ratio of around 55%. That has since tripled to around 180% (I'm not sure why Richard Koo's graph above shows 140% as I always read elsewhere 170-180%), yet yields are much lower now than in 1990, and the credit default swap market has been pricing the risk of Japanese sovereign default as very low, generally around the lowest of G7 nations. In the Great Depression, US government debt-to-GDP rose to around 130%, again concurrent with interest rates declining. Britain ended World War II with a ratio of 250%! (See the graph below). Yet it managed to pay down this debt. (Note that I read somewhere, though haven't confirmed, that some UK bond coupon rates were forcibly repriced lower, which some have called a form of default, though as far as I know the full principle was returned, plus partial interest).

The US started this crisis with a 60% government debt-to-GDP ratio (or 40% debt-to-GDP actually held by the public). If it rose to Japan's level of 180%, that could reflect an additional $17 trillion of treasury issuance ($14 trillion GDP * 120% additional debt). The US private debt-to-GDP ratio is around 300%, so there is certainly no way that the government can or should swap all private debt for public debt. The biggest threat to treasuries in my opinion would be for the government to truly take on too much, of the order of $20-$30 trillion or more. But that seems very unlikely given how difficult it was to pass the stimulus bill and the TARP. Congress and the public have a very limited appetite for bailouts, so far. PPIP (Public-Private Investment Program) is an attempt to bypass Congress (in part by using the FDIC to lend, since the public won't want to see the FDIC fail therefore it will get any extra funding it needs) but it remains to be seen whether PPIP works and how big it can get.

To put a little caution to my own historical examples — I think a 250% public debt-to-GDP would be much harder to grow out of in the 21st century given how much demographic growth has slowed since mid 20th century, but the point is that 250% is still much bigger than 40-60%. One more related caution — it seems likely that Japan's high government debt is a drag on their growth at this point, whether or not adding to it in response to their crisis was the right thing to do, as simply servicing it (let alone paying it off) must eat up a lot of tax revenue. Yet the markets certainly aren't pricing in Japanese government bond defaults.

This bailout tracker shows the following expenditures versus total commitments:
  • Federal Reserve: $1.6 trillion out of $6.2 trillion
  • Treasury and miscellaneous: $1.1 trillion out of $4.3 trillion
  • TOTAL: $2.7 trillion out of $10.5 trillion
Not all of the commitments so far will be used as some reflect guarantees and not all guaranteed assets should lose 100% of their value. Note how much smaller these actual expenditure numbers are so far than Japan's eventual expenditure as a percentage of GDP. Of course, much more will inevitably be committed in coming months and years.

Also, many of the Federal Reserve programs (loans, etc) lead to an increase in the banks' reserve accounts with the Fed, on which they are now paid interest. Paying interest on reserves (see some details on this in the context of the Fed's balance sheet at econbrowser) is an effective sterilization alternative to issuing additional treasuries via the Treasury Supplemental Financing Program, and means not all Fed programs (perhaps only a few?) lead to an increase in treasury debt issuance.

Overall though, this seems to me to be the factor that could end up being most bearish for treasuries, if political limitations are overcome and the government goes overboard with bailouts. However, I think many treasury bears may not realize just how much smaller our current public debt to GDP is than many historical precedents, and what a historically small fraction of GDP (relatively speaking) the bailouts so far amount to. (Just to be clear, I am not taking a position for or against bailouts here.)

[UPDATE: One other factor may be relevant to whether treasury markets could feasibly price in the expectation of government default: if investors abandon treasuries for fear of default, they need to put those dollars in some other US dollar denominated investment (and even if the investors exchange the dollars for foreign currency, those who bought the dollars face the same choice). If investors choose cash, what is to stop much of that being backed by short term t-bills, effectively still funding the government (even if forcing the government to shift more debt issuance to the short end of the curve to keep yields steady)? If all the money tries to move to other asset classes, what is going to look like a better investment for $5+ trillion dollars? In the context of an economy bad enough that the treasury looks likely to default, is corporate debt going to look healthier? Perhaps not impossible, but has a government's debt ever yielded more than private debt (denominated in the same currency) before in history? (I don't know the answer.) As to the gold option, from what I understand the gold market is not big enough to support this large a shift, and it is a purely speculative investment that offers no yield, but I know there is no shortage of people out there who will claim gold is the answer. I am skeptical.]

[UPDATE 5/21/2009: Felix Salmon discusses "Can America's debt get too big to pay?" and concludes that the answer is no. He also notes that "there really isn’t much of a correlation between the level of a country’s debt and the probability that it’s going to default — especially not when that debt is wholly denominated in domestic currency."]

Too Much Treasury Supply?

[UPDATE: Since this section is especially long, here's an up front summary of the ways that when added together suggest that treasury demand is likely to keep pace with supply:
  • Shrinking aggregate private debt allows public debt to fill the "gap" without crowding out.
  • Increased domestic savings increases demand for treasuries.
  • Bailout money does not disappear into a void — it persists on balance sheets (despite write-downs) and since it most likely replaces fixed income assets it will have a high propensity to generate demand for new fixed income assets.
  • Money markets (cash) buy a lot of Treasury bills.
  • Quantitative easing generates treasury demand and reduces treasury supply.
  • Increased flight to safety as the Great Deleveraging progresses.
  • Arbitrageurs maintaining "logical" spreads between various fixed income types (corporate, government, etc), though in the real world in which the efficient market hypothesis is deeply flawed, this factor probably doesn't contribute much.
]

The idea that the growing treasury bond issuance will compete with and starve other asset markets and/or force up interest rates seems to assume two things that I question. First, it seems to assume that all this money raised by government debt issuance disappears into the void and no longer participates in asset markets. Second, it seems to depend upon the notion of us returning to a "normal" environment in the near future in which qualified private demand for loans continues expanding like it has during the last several decades, leading to aggregate expansion in bond issuance that will compete with treasury debt issuance. But if instead private debt on aggregate is shrinking as Steve Keen and Richard Koo and others expect, the increase in government debt is likely to simply replace the disappearing private debt, and not have a large effect on asset prices or interest rates. In other words, with the same aggregate supply of debt assets (private debt plus government debt) and the same broad money supply (it may shrink but quantitative easing may offset that), then the price of assets relative to debt wouldn't necessarily change over the medium term unless other factors cause a repricing. Yes, prices are set on the margin, and I'll discuss below why marginal demand may keep up with marginal supply, but I think the aggregate supply of assets relative to money supply also matters, especially when measured over years rather than months (a lot can fluctuate short term). Among the separate factors that can of course change are expectations on what prices should be and hence relative supply and demand for the assets at each given price point. But that factor is somewhat independent.

I'll go through some scenarios as a thought exercise to illustrate how new treasury supply may have a high propensity to increase treasury demand. These are generalized examples not exactly matched to the specific programs in place now, but I believe the principles carry over from a balance sheet perspective.

Calculated Risk recently provided a couple good graphical primers on how balance sheets work here and here. Mine will not be so pretty so his may be worth a look first. Also here is a guide to how write-downs work from CreditWritedowns.

--- FISCAL STIMULUS SPENDING: ---

An increase in the US savings rate is contributing to a shortfall in aggregate demand and a corresponding shortfall in tax receipts. While I won't get into the controversial topic of what should be done from a policy perspective, it is feasible for the treasury to increase spending to fill that gap and issue treasuries to fund the spending. The treasuries are likely to be bought by Americans via the increased savings rate. Part of the reason is that there will not be a net increase in private assets looking for buyers in the context of the private sector paying down debt faster than new loans are made. Richard Koo directly addresses (in the video more so than the slides) how increased savings will fund sovereign deficit spending in his October 2008 talk.

Note that the treasury debt is funded not just by bonds and notes with the duration counted in years, but also short term treasury bills that are bought by many money market funds — so as far as I know even cash savings added to money market funds help fund treasury debt issuance. The public debt breakdown on wikipedia shows as of December that $1.9 trillion out of $6 trillion in issuance is treasury bills.

--- TOXIC ASSET PURCHASES: ---

Sample balance sheet of a company before purchase of toxic assets by government:

ASSETS
Cash: $10
Toxic assets: $50
Good assets: $50
TOTAL: $110

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $100
Shareholder equity: $10
TOTAL: $110

Sample balance sheet after purchase of toxic assets by the government (for which government issued $50 in treasuries to raise the cash):

ASSETS
Cash: $60
Toxic assets: $0
Good assets: $50
TOTAL: $110

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $100
Shareholder equity: $10
TOTAL: $110

Now, the question is what happens to that extra $50 in cash on the asset side. My expectation is that it could lead to an almost corresponding increase in demand for treasuries of some duration. This would give the $50 in cash back to the broader market (from which it originally came before the treasury issuance) and put the new treasuries on the balance sheet of the bailed out company. The net effect is essentially the same as if the government directly traded treasuries for toxic assets. I'm not suggesting any of this is fair or commenting on what the "right" solution is — on the face of things there is little good to be said for the taxpayer having to send a stream of future income to companies that made big profits acting irresponsibly during the asset bubble years.

Here are some possibilities for what happens to that money from the government.

If the company keeps it in cash, whatever funding vehicle holds that cash will need to purchase $50 more of whatever underlying instruments the vehicle holds. I don't know what all the typical options are here but at least some could be expected to go to purchasing short duration treasury bills.

If the company wants to earn more than the yield from cash, it will likely look for some other fixed income investment to replace the toxic assets it held. There will continue to be little trust as to the valuation of other private securities on offer in the market, and treasuries are the largest and most liquid market in the world, so that alone provides some support for $50 of treasuries to be purchased. But more importantly, there won't be new private loan assets on aggregate competing for buyers because private debt will still be contracting as people pay back loans faster than taking out new ones. So the $50 increase in treasury supply from when the government raised the cash may temporarily force up treasury yields relative to other assets, which will immediately make them more attractive relative to other assets, and cause an increased propensity for them to be purchased as part of an arbitrage trade by the bailed out company or other market participants. (I acknowledge that arbitrage is unlikely to fully rebalance things as markets aren't completely omniscient/rational, but I would think arbitrage should do better at maintaining spreads within one asset class than prices between different asset classes.) Now it is true that the credit worthiness of the government goes down marginally each time it issues new debt, but I suspect the difference in total government debt relatively speaking at each increment will be so small that the market won't care much in terms of setting relative spread between bond types.

It is possible that the company could choose to purchase other assets (stocks, gold, etc), but it seems that it would have a high propensity to replace one fixed income asset with another fixed income asset. Even if some buyers chose gold, for example, ongoing economic stagnation and a need for income could drive them back to dividend paying fixed income assets. Having assets that provide cash flow is likely especially important for companies such as banks and insurers that will need ongoing income to help keep their balance sheets solvent amid other asset write-downs.

Now a different possibility is that the company would deleverage by paying down liabilities. The balance sheet could then look like:

ASSETS
Cash: $10
Toxic assets: $0
Good assets: $50
TOTAL: $60

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $50
Shareholder equity: $10
TOTAL: $60

Unless they are bank loans (credit created through fractional reserve lending), these paid down liabilities (most likely bonds) will lead to a corresponding increase of the assets of another company or individual that had provided the money.

Sample funding company/individual before bailed out company deleveraged:

ASSETS
Cash: $20
Loan assets: $50
TOTAL: $70

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $10
Shareholder equity: $60
TOTAL: $70

Sample funding company/individual after bailed out company deleveraged and paid off the $50 bond:

ASSETS
Cash: $70
Loan assets: $0
TOTAL: $70

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $10
Shareholder equity: $60
TOTAL: $70

This company/individual then faces the same choices as the one bailed out: invest the cash, buy higher yielding assets, or pay down debt. But even if multiple companies deleverage down a connected chain, eventually the process will stop at companies or individuals with no need to pay down debt, leaving them holding cash or buying other assets.

The point is that the government's $50 treasury issuance led to a corresponding $50 increase in demand for assets of some sort, and in the context of aggregate deleveraging, there seems to be a high propensity for these to be treasuries of some duration. From what I understand, Japan's banks hold a huge amount of Japan's government debt, so I suspect this dynamic probably occurred there. [UPDATE: I have also seen a reference to banks acquiring a large number of government bonds during the Great Depression.]

So there are two places in this process that lead to a "loss" in the amount that marginal treasury demand is increased as a result of the increase in marginal supply:
  • Decrease in bank credit (fractional reserve lending) — however in the US this is the minority of debt (Alea reports 63% of GDP in bank credit and 168% of GDP in direct debt securities. This doesn't quite add up to the 300% of private debt-to-GDP so something is missing).
  • Propensity to put increases in asset side of balance sheet in non-treasury assets. I suspect this will turn out to be low when deleveraging fully takes hold.
The question is what might plug this potential gap in the amount of treasury demand generated as a result of each increase in treasury supply. One answer might be additional flight to safety as the crisis worsens along with an ongoing repricing of risk. Another answer may be found by taking a closer look at the implications of contracting private debt:
  1. Let's assume a situation to start in which the amount of both public debt (treasuries) and private debt are not changing over time. Absent any other external factors, the marginal supply and marginal demand for all debt assets on aggregate will stay roughly balanced with each other, and contribute to setting a price that will be somewhat stable.
  2. Now let's assume the Treasury is issuing more public debt over time. This step will increase marginal supply and push down prices. Then let's say the mechanics explained above come into play (the high propensity for the cash to find its way to treasury purchases) and half (but not 100%, to be realistic) of the bailout cash generates increased marginal demand for treasuries. That will push up prices again but not all the way to the original price level, so they are still lower absent other external factors.
  3. Now let's assume the aggregate supply of private assets is decreasing over time. For example, as homeowners pay down their mortgages, loan assets will convert to cash on the balance sheet of the holders of MBS (mortgage backed securities). With homeowners on aggregate paying down debt faster than adding new debt, the marketplace won't offer a lot of new MBS or other loans opportunities as a replacement. So let's say half of this cash stream is then used to buy treasuries for the same types of reasons discussed previously. This will again push up treasury prices, potentially taking them back to around the original price level.
  4. Perhaps the additive effect of both these factors by which marginal demand for treasuries might increase, combined with flight to safety, is enough to explain why yields declined (i.e., prices rose) during past balance sheet recessions.
The above scenario isn't meant to be mathematically rigorous, it is just a rough sketch of how contracting private debt may play a role in filling the previously mentioned gap.

--- CAPITAL INJECTIONS: ---

Here is a scenario for how a company being recapitalized by the government should similarly lead to an increased demand for treasuries.

Balance sheet before capital injection:

ASSETS
Cash: $10
Toxic assets: $50
Good assets: $50
TOTAL: $110

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $100
Shareholder equity: $10
TOTAL: $110

Balance sheet after capital injection of $50 (for which government issued $50 in treasuries to raise the cash):

ASSETS
Cash: $60
Toxic assets: $50
Good assets: $50
TOTAL: $160

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $100
Shareholder equity: $60
TOTAL: $160

Balance sheet after company writes down $20 of the $50 in toxic assets:

ASSETS
Cash: $60
Toxic assets: $30
Good assets: $50
TOTAL: $140

LIABILITIES:
Various liabilities: $100
Shareholder equity: $40
TOTAL: $140

Note that the writedown shrunk the toxic assets on the left side of the balance sheet and the equity on the right side, but didn't touch the newly injected capital on the left side. So that capital is free to participate in purchases of new assets or in deleveraging by paying off debt, just as in the previous example that covered toxic asset purchases by the government.

Will China Stop Buying?

If China buys less treasuries because the trade deficit shrinks (and thus so does their increase in reserves), then it doesn't really matter to treasuries, as those same dollars are then in the form of American savings rather than Chinese reserves. This is only bearish for treasuries if you believe treasuries are a completely irrational investment that only a foreign central bank should consider. One of the key points of this post is that they may not be an irrational investment. Brad Setser (considered by many an expert on international capital flows) seems to follow a lot of the conventional wisdom but has in recent months been covering this topic a little in his observations. An excerpt from a recent post:
There is a very widespread sense that the US “needs” China more now because it is issuing more Treasuries to finance its fiscal deficit. That isn’t quite true. As a result of the crisis, the US consumer has started to save and American businesses have reduced their investment, so the US “needs” to borrow a lot less from the rest of the world. The US needs to borrow from the world when private Americans do not want to save and the US running a large trade deficit, not when private Americans want to save and the trade deficit is down.

Quantitative Easing

The US Federal Reserve has already embarked on quantitative easing, and it is expected by many to continue for a long time and increase in magnitude. Japan tried this several times as well. The expected effects are controversial. One view holds that the ongoing increase in marginal treasury demand from the Fed can help match the marginal supply increase due to new treasuries being issued, and keep yields lower than they would otherwise be. In addition, this operation results in a lower supply of treasuries held by the market, potentially having a lasting effect on prices (i.e., keeping prices higher as those treasuries stay out of trading supply).

A potential piece of evidence that QE may work to help keep yields down (at least relative to no QE, they can still shift for other reasons) is the recent relative out-performance of agencies compared to treasuries, if I understand this ZeroHedge post correctly. This seems to align with the Fed having started upon the planned buying of $1.45 trillion of agencies but only $0.3 trillion of treasuries. [UPDATE: Additional evidence in these graphs from Calculated Risk.]

Some raise concerns that eventually those treasuries need to be sold back to the market and the market will price in this expectation, but if we might be in a lower leverage higher regulation environment for decades to come, it's not certain that the Fed will ever need to do this -- the increase in base money supply might not be inflationary even in the medium term if systemic leverage (i.e., broader money supply and credit) does not returns to previous levels.

Also while the Fed holds the treasuries, all interest payments on the debt are effectively returned to the government, so this lowers the servicing burden of the aggregate government debt and lowers the probability of default being necessary.

Sentiment

Many people believe that sentiment for an asset class is an important indicator. The theory is that if everyone is bullish than there is no one left to buy, and conversely if everyone is bearish than there is no one left to sell. Barrons Spring 2009 Big Money Poll (found via some valuable commentary from David Rosenberg) shows money managers are 3% bullish, 13% neutral, and 84% bearish on US treasuries! If you believe in sentiment indicators, that indicates extraordinary room for a large "flight to safety" as this crisis worsens. But does the fact that this group of "experts" believes treasuries are a bubble suggest they most likely are? Look at what the same group expected in the Spring 2008 Big Money Poll with respect to stocks! (Only 12% were bearish for their outlook through December 2008, and the bears expected the S&P 500 to end the year at 1230...)

Reasons This Tentative Bullishness Could Prove Wrong

  • Though right now it seems politically unlikely, the government could end up trying to swap more private debt for public debt than can ever hope to be serviced by taxpayers. One of Steve Keen's conclusions in comparing the US to Japan was: "On this empirical record [comparisons of the scale of the respective credit bubbles and the fact that Japan's public debt grew faster since 1990 than its private debt shrank], the portents to the USA to be able to get out of this crisis by debt-financed government spending and direct financial sector bailouts–which effectively swap private debt for government debt–are not good." If the government really were to try too broad a rescue, partial or full default might not be out of the question. [UPDATE 7/14/2009: It appears Keen's private debt data for Japan may have been incomplete, so this conclusion may be worth revisiting.]
  • The potential for significant political instability as a result of the crisis could lead to very unpredictable consequences (intentional default on government debt even if it is serviceable, printing such truly massive amounts of money targeted to those who would spend it that it would cause high inflation, etc).
  • A huge supply shock (energy, other natural resources, labor, etc) could potentially ignite meaningful inflation, though for it to be more than a one time jump in price levels, wage inflation would have to take hold as well, which is unlikely in today's globalized labor market (but that could change).
  • [UPDATE 5/25/2009: The portion of past government tax revenue that came from capital gains will not be funded by Treasury bond buying via the increased savings rate — that tax income is likely gone along with the asset bubbles that drove it. This may be one reason current budget deficits seem to be higher than increased savings, and it is a negative pressure on treasuries. It remains to be seen how big a factor it ultimately is compared with the bullish elements discussed previously. But according to the Congressional Budget Office report from 2002, capital gains are usually between 2 percent and 3 percent of total receipts, which suggests this isn't a big factor.]
  • I'm not sure just how large current underfunded obligations like social security really are, and what impact this will ultimately have.
  • Perhaps my logic in this post is just plain wrong.
[UPDATE 6/9/2009: Since I wrote this post, treasury yields have kept rising. This post did not even attempt to make predictions about the short term — it was about the medium term. There are a number of explanations out there for this short term rise that aren't necessarily bearish for treasuries in the medium term. Here is one partial summary. My quick summary of the factors I've seen: (1) inflation expectations, (2) economic recovery expectations, (3) volatility premium, and (4) convexity hedging. Note that the recent rise in sovereign debt yields has been a global phenomenon, not just US.]

10 comments:

  1. Well, consensus investing is always a disaster. Treasuries is the most reviled asset class; just go to Seeking Alpha.

    Well, I was starting to become bullish on treasuries. One reason that inspired me because I expect the returns on capital (in developed markets) to be very low because of globalization of labor that would reduce purchasing power. Also, innovation and overcapacity would cause low margins. Regarding innovation, I am thinking, for example, that netbooks would reduce Microsoft's margin from Windows, and Vista might reduce the margin from anti-virus software. Thus, the opportunity cost of buying Treasuries would be lower.

    I think your argument would be strengthened if you compare the prices of global equities. High returns might not be possible in the developed world (maybe Australia though), and that is one reason why investors would accept low yields in Treasuries. Do you have any information about the growth priced-in in emerging market equities and their risk premium? Also, I am interested in macro-economic factors that might increase returns. Since emerging markets are "hot" in 2005-08, maybe there's overcapacity there and competition between firms there. Also, global labor overcapacity might decrease wages and consumer spending power so the firm's cash flow would be lower in emerging markets. Capital can race to the bottom and go to Bangladesh or Pakistan if labor gets too expensive in emerging markets.

    Most analysts are bullish on emerging markets and I want to know why. Analysts are either bullish on asset prices and/or cash flow. It is one thing to say that emerging markets will experience economic growth, but it is another to state that they are undervalued relative to their expected (discounted) earnings for the asset. Well, regarding China, I remember that the controversial Richard Lynn suggested that their high IQs (relative to the rest of the world) would make them the world economic leader and allow them to prosper. (He is a psychologist, not a securities analyst though)

    I also loved this part of the essay: in the spirit of Karl Popper, you provided scenarios in which your hypothesis (treasuries yields will fall) will be falsified.

    Please post more articles though.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks for the feedback! I agree that there are other arguments that could favor treasuries, and I also agree that a comparison to equities (ultimately the outlook for earnings and dividends) would be a good one. I haven't been able to find data on Japan's earnings and dividends before and after 1990, but it would be a useful basis for comparison with today's situation. Perhaps I'll do a second version of this post in the future if I have more to add, but I initially wanted to tackle some of the ideas that I see most commonly from treasury bears.

    I don't have much insight on emerging markets, sorry.

    I'm working on a couple more posts (one of overall outlook, one on outlook for stocks, and one reviewing blogs I read) but overall this blog is just a scratch space for very occasional posts -- I'm just an amateur :)

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  3. My own remark on emerging markets was a counterargument against my argument that investors will buy Treasuries because they do not expect a high return on investment with a good risk/reward elseware. They might put it in emerging markets as that was the hot market of the 2000s. I assume most retail investors do not know what "discounted cash flow" is, so they would rely on agents to buy securities for them. These agents are most likely motivated by short-term gains and status so they could look relatively good in the short-run.

    I am also bearish on gold now, since everyone is already positioned (long) for it, and I am currently accepting the thesis that the bear market rally will last for some time. (Maybe it has about 7% more to go). This would reduce demands for safe havens. Bullish on silver in the long term because I expect the large "bling-bling" premium for gold and silver to decline (~70:1), and it has more industrial applications so it would rise if there is more emerging market demand for it. Also, a growing distrust of central bankers would also cause that metal to rise. And the best part, not many people are positioned in silver; everyone is a gold bug.

    Basically, if I had money to speculate on: I'll use this my investment thesis: US (and possibly post-Thatcher Britain) = Japan; except with more immigration and globalized labor competition now.

    Any comments on this entry I made:
    http://hellkaiser.blogspot.com/2009/03/arguments-against-equities.html

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  4. I think we're roughly on the same page as to overall outlook. As to your post, it seems reasonable and overlaps somewhat with my thoughts, though you also comment on areas I know less about. One of the key factors really does seem to be what happens to earnings and dividends -- I don't have any better guesses than your projections but as I mentioned before would love to compare more historical scenarios in detail, especially for Japan, if I can find data. I did some digging on Japan post-1990 P/E ratios and it seems like they were sustained at pretty high levels, and I'm not yet sure why.

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  5. I think that we should not separate politics and economy.

    I think that your post is invaluable as it explains one of the greatest mysteries - why despite the crisis the US government still obsessively tries to expand its influence across the world - in Georgia or Ukraine for example - which are as close to Russia proper as Montreal to the US. Why they are trying to meddle everywhere and step on toes on every other country in the world if they think it may even marginally benefit them.

    I was born 100 km away from the planned US interceptor missile site in Redzikowo in Poland so I may have a bit biased view on this insane idea of building it there as the nuclear dust may kill my family still living in the area. And there is another city of 100.000 just 5 km away where the idea is not popular either... Never mind the Polish government doesn't have any doubts that being the nuclear target increases the safety of the nation.

    So a perpetual motion has been discovered in the name of US treasury bonds and this will power the empire for very long until nuclear fusion is harnessed. I am not an economist so I don't believe in Fibonacci numbers and can commit a crime in not believing that the stock/financial market reality is the only true reality.

    Why do people invest in financial products? Because they expect return on their investment or because they expect the price to rise. The second mechanism powers all the bubbles. Looking at the US economy I cannot see the way they can generate healthy return and pay back the debt by exporting more overseas than they have to spend on commodities (mainly oil) and all the consumer goods from China. But for now US treasury bonds have been branded as the most safe investment because US is the country least likely to default and "the only remaining superpower". So they can be easily rolled over and their volume increased. Since the bond-selling (I would say bonk-selling) mechanism worked well so far it will also work in the future. This reasoning uses the same principle as mathematical induction - prove that something is true for n=1 and then prove that the fact that it is true for n implies that it's true for n+1. As long as there is enough "confidence" the perpetual motion device moves forward powered by the power of human thought. Everyone will keep buying - you and me. Since everyone must have confidence in the Last Remaining Empire the 21th century will belong to America. Well one can question that. Another stable state can be considered - that the US cannot pay the debt by exporting goods, they have permanent fiscal deficit and the economy which cannot compete with Asia. The US dollar must be devalued for example 3 times to make the economy competitive. Therefore US bonds and US dollar (the global currency) are potentially dead however they are the strongest at the same time. This contradiction gives the potential for a crash at any time but there are well-known arguments that for example the Chinese won't dump the bonds as it would hurt them more than the Americans. The tipping point is unknown but I think it exists.
    What if the US has some enemies? What if they are one of the most hated countries across the world because of all the meddling, exporting "democracy", screwing up allays and exploitation? The possibility of a cold financial war has already been explored by Pentagon (guess who won).
    The ultimate tipping point will be the inevitable increase of commodity prices due to the rise and rise and rise of China. And running out of cheap oil.
    However I think that you are right - for now the system is stable, the empire is expanding, Russians are buying bonds. Let's build this missile interceptor and see how it goes... This will not be the tipping point for sure.

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  6. Anon- My guess is that the dynamics I described would probably apply not just to the US but to any country (UK, Australia, etc) with a large domestically denominated private debt (and therefore deleveraging) and a small foreign-currency denominated debt.

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  7. I do not know if it is a good idea to long Treasuries now. The bond market seems to be betting against a recovery or inflation (despite what the inflationists on Seeking Alpha are saying). Do you think a 210 bp for 5 years is pricing in a recovery or inflation. 2.10% yield is not enough to protect against inflation? 210 bp for 5 years is a very high opportunity cost if one expects the returns on capital to be higher.

    It would be more tempting to put on a long position when perceptions significanly diverge from reality. (Which doesn't seem to be the case.) Initiating equity shorts now seems to be a better risk/reward than going long (with leverage) on Treasuries now.

    Do you have any commentary on what the Treasury market is pricing in?

    4/06/09 US Treasury yields
    3 mon: 18 bp
    2: 96
    5: 205
    10: 316
    30: 410

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  8. Not really... I'm not a trader, just someone interested in macroeconomic theory and trying to share what I've learned with some folks who have asked me. My focus with respect to sovereign debt is on the medium term, not the month to month fluctuations. The point of my post is that I'd be surprised if treasury yields weren't roughly flat or lower over the next several years (whether or not they spike short term). But I'm also happy to see evidence of why my reasoning might be wrong. As for whether 5 year inflation levels are priced in -- I don't know, but if deflation comes anywhere close to historical experience, it seems likely.

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  9. Regarding my short-term perspective on Treasury yields, I think they would go up this month, and then down in the next month. If I had speculative capital, I wouldn't short Treasuries because the risk/reward isn't attractive for the short-term.

    This is not a criticism on your thesis, but just a remark. If you are a speculator, you cannot simply say Treasuries prices are going up and then buy. The risk/reward for the trade has to be justifed. The best trades come when there is a significant divergence from perception and reality. Of course, the perception, from what I read from Seeking Alpha, is that there would be significant inflation, not deflation because of that smart guy with a 1590 who has a helicopter. No one seems to be betting on a recovery though although Jim Cramer seems to talk about it (for what it is worth). Despite the universal bearishness on Treasuries on Seeking Alpha, it doesn't seem that the bond market shares those perceptions (of inflation) because of the low yield on the 5 year Note. Everyone (most Austrian school-oriented people on Seeking Alpha and money managers) seems to be talking about inflation, but the actual bond market is not reflecting these expections. Perhaps, Bernanke already bid-up the prices. For those bullish on Treasuries, it seems that the bond market still agrees with you on deflation, and that diminishes the reward for going long.

    Well, at least Japan was able to keep its GDP up by spending (I loved that talk by Richard Koo), I do not know if stimulus would work in the US though. The US has service economy, and it seems that the job market is a zero-sum game. However, Japan could be sustained by foreign demand of its exports. At least Japan's debt to GDP ratio didn't rise because GDP dropped too.

    I do not know if the deficits could be financed by savings. Many people are saying that the savings rate in the US would rise, but I do not think it would rise significantly. For example, the savings rate in Japan has fallen, and households didn't delever:

    http://www.safehaven.com/showarticle.cfm?id=12810&pv=1 (see the graphs)

    I think the reason Japan didn't have a rising savings rate is because of the pressure of wage arbitrage (I expect this to be exacerbated by the balance sheet recession, and this would depress earnings as corporates attempt to delever in a harsh global competitive environment). Remember the Asian crisis made many countries fearful, and they sought to protect themselves from a devaluation by having large current account surpluses. (Look at the graph after 1998)

    Competition from developing countries cut into Japan's market share for its exports though, although the effects on wages would be somewhat mitigated as they have a stakeholder perspective, not a shareholder perspective. Eventually wages are cost that have to be cut in order to remain "competitive."

    Another argument is that other governments might crowd out the US since everyone is issue bonds.

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  10. Now is the time buy Treasuries...

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