Wednesday, June 22, 2022

The ECB Has a Huge Dilemma: Price stability or Bail Out Nations

 SOURCE:

The ECB Has a Huge Dilemma: Price stability or Bail Out Nations - Mish Talk - Global Economic Trend Analysis

The spreads between German government bonds and those of the PIGS (Portugal, Italy, Greece, and Spain) have skyrocketed in recent weeks. 

This comes while Eurozone inflation is at a record high 8.1 percent. 


On June 16, Bloomberg reported Lagarde Tells Ministers ECB Plans for Limit on Bond Spreads

European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde told euro-area finance ministers that the ECB’s new anti-crisis tool will kick in if the borrowing costs for weaker nations rise too far or too fast, according to people briefed on their discussions.

At a meeting in Luxembourg Thursday, Lagarde explained to ministers that the new mechanism that central bank officials are devising is intended to prevent irrational market movements from putting pressure on individual euro nations as ECB embarks on its first interest-rate hikes in more than a decade, the people said, asking not to be identified discussing private conversations. 

The ECB Governing Council on Wednesday instructed officials to accelerate work on a “new anti-fragmentation instrument” after the yield on Italian bonds surged amid signs that global inflation is becoming more entrenched. 

New Tool, What New Tool?

There is no new tool and there won't be a new tool. The ECB can use an existing QE tool to buy unlimited amount of sovereign bonds or not. It's a choice, not a new tool.

Spreads collapsed in the wake of ECB QE (and bond buying of peripheral Europe. 

Now the ECB faces 8.1 percent inflation, the most in history and it needs to hike rates and shrink it's balance sheet. 

What's it gonna do? Shrink the balance sheet of Germany and expand that of Italy and Greece? 

Mario Draghi Moment

On July 26, 2012, with similar spiking underway, then ECB President Mario Draghi (now Italy's president and symbolic leader, the Prime Minister is leader) issued this statement.

"We will do whatever it takes to save the Euro, and believe me it will be enough."

Q: What did Draghi do?
A: Nothing!

Bond spreads collapsed on the announcement.

No New Tool, Just a Bluff

Hoot of the Day: The ECB said "Investors should not doubt the commitment of policy makers to deliver on their mandate to maintain price stability."

There is no new tool here. It's either a bluff or selective implementation of a previous QE tool.

Price Stability? At 8.1%? With spreads like these?

10-Year Sovereign Bond Spread Over Germany 

How to Resist Fiscal Dominance

Eurointelligence has an interesting column today on How to Resist Fiscal Dominance.

I have been observing this slow moving train wreck for a year now. Financial markets were absolutely certain that the European Central Bank would follow up with a new programme of asset purchases after the existing programmes expire. But when I talked to central bankers, I was regularly assured that this would not happen.

Over the last week, that conflict came to a head. The ECB announced the end of the asset purchases and did not put anything else in place. All the ECB said was that it would work on an emergency instrument. The bond markets panicked.

What is happening between the markets and the central bank is not just a form of mutual miscommunication. This is a power struggle. The ECB is resisting what is known as fiscal dominance, which is when a central bank can’t follow its target because it is under pressure to bail out governments

There are no easy answers. The central bank knows it cannot ignore sovereign debt spreads, because they do affect monetary policy transmission mechanisms. The only instrument that would fix this problem is a mutualised eurobond.

In other words, fiscal dominance is not so much a matter of choice, but one of a lack of alternatives. The ECB may well be stuck in this situation. Support the bond markets, and risk a permanent overshoot of the inflation target. Or don't support the bond market, and risk a sovereign-debt crisis, a financial meltdown. 

Fundamental Flaw

A fundamental flaw of the Eurozone (and also of the EU) is that it take unanimous agreement to do nearly anything, especially male treaty changes. 

Bluff vs Bluff 

Mario Draghi got away with a bluff because the pressures of globalization were disinflationary.

Lagarde will not get away with the same bluff, stated very wimpishly, because the forces of de-globalization and the war in Ukraine are very inflationary. 

The problem the ECB faces is far more complex that the Fed's problem. The Fed is on a mission to fight inflation and there is only one country to worry about. 

Neutral Complexities 

There is no single interest rate that makes any sense for Germany, Greece, Spain, Italy, and Portugal. 

The Fed is struggling to find the neutral rate, and I believe will overshoot, but at least there is a neutral rate. 

Lagarde is on Mission Impossible with 19 countries in the Eurozone, all with a different neutral. 

In theory, the sovereign bonds of Germany and Greece are the same. Default risks are the same.

In practice this is total nonsense, and for the third time the idea is being tested. 

The Fed Searches For the Neutral Interest Rate, Where the Heck Is It?

For discussion, please see The Fed Searches For the Neutral Interest Rate, Where the Heck Is It?

Ok, Christine what will it be? Illegally shrink the balance sheet of Germany and expand that of Italy and Greece?

For how long? 

Leave interest rates in negative territory? Expand the balance sheet? What then? 

The world awaits a new tool, and one that cannot possibly work.

Meanwhile, the EU is being torn apart over energy. For discussion, please see Germany's Climate Protection Minister Mandates More Coal to Produce Electricity

Lagarde Won't Reveal Tool

What a hoot. I was not aware of Lagarde's statement when I wrote this post or the preceding Tweet.

Correction: This article stated 2015 as the year Mario Draghi made his "whatever it takes" speech. The date was July 26, 2012.

Eurozone bond yields from ECB, current month from Investing.com, chart by Mish


Eurozone Inflation courtesy of Trading Economics 

Eurozone Inflation courtesy of Trading Economics 

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