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    Rising Yields: A Good Sign

    Thu, 11/18/2010 - 05:26 EDT - Seeking Alpha
    • David Beckworth

    David Beckworth submits: A key objective of QE2 is to raise nominal spending. Given sticky prices and excess economic capacity, this increase in nominal spending would boost the real economy. Now the way QE2 can raise nominal spending is by raising inflation expectations. Higher inflation expectations creates the incentive for banks, firms, and households sitting on money to start spending it. In fact, the key problem facing the U.S. economy right now is an excess money demand problem. While it is true that rising inflation expectations may temporarily lower real interest rates too and thus stimulate interest sensitive spending, this effect is of second-order importance and is only temporary. The real and lasting reason rising inflation expectations are important is that they address the excess money demand problem. Many observers miss this important point and its implications for interest rates. Imagine QE2 is successful in breaking the excess money demand problem and aggregate spending increases. The real economy starts recovering too. These developments would imply the following: (1) expected inflation must have picked up at some point and (2) real interest rates would start rising in response to the recovery of the real economy. In other words, one would expect to start seeing nominal interest rates--the sum of the real interest rate and expected inflation--to start increasing if QE2 is successful. QE2, then, would not only be a boon to the real economy, but also to savers and folks living on fixed income given the rise in real interest rates. Now I think QE2 should have been implemented differently--the Fed should have announced an explicit rules-based nominal target and forcefully committed to maintaining it--and I am concerned that political pressure may prevent it from being effective. Still, if it does work in its current form then rising yields would be one sign of success. Though it is probably too soon judge its effectiveness based on this criteria, here is a look at the expected inflation and the real yield on 10-treasury securities. The figure covers the last month and half, the time period when Fed officials first started talking up QE2 up through the present. (Click on figure to enlarge.) Source: FRED Data The blue line in the figure reveals that inflation expectations started increasing in October with the onset of the Fed's full court PR press on QE2. Inflation expectations had been downward trending all year until this point. QE2 reversed that trend. So on this point, QE2 appears to be working. (Inflation expectations, however, have not continued climbing since QE2 was made official and that is a little troubling.) The red line indicates that the real interest rate has seen a sudden spike in the past week. So on this point, QE2 appears to be working too. Again, I reach these conclusions with some trepidation since it is so early into the QE2 program. I raise these points because some observers like the Wall Street Journal and Barrons are looking at the same data and making statements like the "Bond Market Defies the Fed" and "Bond Vigilantes Rise Again." They claim that the bond market is pushing back against the Fed and beating it. I say not so fast guys, the bond market may actually be following the QE2 according to plan. Let's wait and see how this plays out, but along the way don't forget that rising yields is actually a good sign.Complete Story »

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    Related

    • Rising Yields is a Good Sign

      A key objective of QE2 is to raise nominal spending. Given sticky prices and excess economic capacity, this increase in nominal spending would boost the real economy. Now the way QE2 can raise nominal spending is by raising inflation expectations.

    • QE2 Doing Some Good: Rising Yields as Sign of Recovery

      David Beckworth submits: More folks are now considering the possibility that the rise in long-term interest rates may be a sign of economic recovery.

    • Bernanke Acknowledges Risings Yields a Sign of Success

      David Beckworth submits: For some time now, I have been making the case that a sign of QE2 success would be rising yields rather than falling yields. Yes, interest rates may initially fall, but if QE2 is successful in raising expectations of real growth, then interest rates should start to increase.

    • Target, too

      MARK CARNEY, named late last year as Mervyn King's successor as governor of the Bank of England, wasted no time in setting high expectations (so to speak). In a December speech Mr Carney reckoned that a central bank facing a demand shortfall while stuck at the zero lower bound might do well to adopt a new target: a level of nominal GDP. He noted:

    • QE2 and Rising Yields, Again

      David Beckworth submits: Late last year I was making arguments like this one about how QE2 would work:[T]he recovery view begins with notion that a successful QE2 will first raise inflation expectations. The increase in inflation expectations, however, also implies higher expected nominal spending (i.e.

    • If QE2 Inspires Foreign Investment That, Too, Will Help Boost US GDP

      (cc photo by LateNightTaskForce)

    • Not so great expectations

      THOSE who criticise central banks for having acted with insufficient vigour generally argue that they have failed to talk a good game. Paul Krugman and Michael Woodford are among the best-known advocates of this view.

    • The Fed's Balance Sheet: Problem or Opportunity?

      David Beckworth submits: (Click on figure to enlarge. Source: Cleveland Fed)

    • QE2 Turns Out Not to Be Great Inflation-Creating Machine

      David Beckworth submits: I am having a hard time finding it when I look to inflation expectations. Here is the average annual expected inflation rate over the next five years, with the implied spread between nominal and real yields on treasury securities:(Click on figure to enlarge)

    • Fed Can Act By Shaping Expectations

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