Apologies for a recondite post to start the week

I’m curious about the world of economics and finance and find myself occasionally reading the most recondite of articles. My interest was piqued by a comment in the FT Alphaville blog about an economics research report by Willem Buiter of Citi Bank, when they said that it was “enticingly aggressive and highly readable 17-page note”.

Sadly, that 17-page note is proprietary, to read the research note from the link in the blog you’ll need to subscribe to the FT Alphaville. Any way, here’s Willem Buiter’s introduction to his note on Forward Guidance.

There are two reasons for this post. First the word pleonasm is a new word to me, secondly I wanted to understand the latest tool of central bankers on setting interest rates. Here’s the punchy introduction,

‘Forward guidance’ had a poor start in life. It was born as a pleonasm – afflicted with a severe case of redundancy. ‘Guidance’ would have sufficed, as all guidance relates to the future and is therefore inevitably forward. Perhaps some idiosyncratic historians call their subject ‘backward guidance’, and maybe the odd tourist has signed up for instantaneous or simultaneous guidance around some ancient site, but we doubt it. Redundancy as a rhetorical device tends to be used when it is deemed desirable to inflate the importance of someone or something beyond what is fundamentally warranted. Our view is that this also is the case with forward guidance.”

Buiter’s conclusion is,

“The best approach to signaling longer-term policy intentions in an operational manner typically has three components.

First, commit to the regular publication and updating of longer-term forecasts of the target variables, of any additional nominal or real thresholds, knockouts or triggers that define the central bank’s reaction function for each of its instruments, and of the instruments themselves.

Second, reach an agreement that at most one member of the monetary policy making committee, presumably its chair, speaks or writes publicly about the likely future paths of the policy instruments – rates, QE, or whatever. The other members can of course still discourse in public about the principles of monetary policy and the history of central banking.

Third, give the central bank skin in the game by requiring it to issue or purchase material amounts of financial instruments on which it will lose money if interest rates depart from the forward guidance-consistent levels – financial hostage instruments. If possible, link the pay of the monetary policy makers at least in part to the performance of these instruments.”

As I say, recondite stuff.

Brown’s Big Bust worsens

Plunging tax receipts have increased our budget deficit. The ONS report on Public Sector Finances show that January 2010’s tax receipts are the lowest on record, causing the government to increase its borrowing, in a month that is normally a bumper month for tax receipts.

The chart, from the ONS report, shows we’re heading into big trouble. The market doesn’t like this news, see Bloomberg report, and the FT Alphaville report. Here are some quotes from these reports,

“The UK posted its first January budget deficit since records began in 1993; the numbers are horrendous.”

“This is potentially very worrying,”

“I don’t think the markets are going to like it too much in the build up to the election,”

The bond market gives us a stark warning

I suggest that you have a stiff drink at the ready after reading Bill Gross’s February investment outlook. For a shorter synopsis, you can read Paul Murphy on the FT’s Alphaville blog. 

Bill Gross’s investment outlook on the bond market begins amusingly, reflecting on his age and status as a leading bond investment analyst. Then he’s quickly into the ‘red meat’ of market analysis and investment strategy. Before reaching this conclusion, which he presents with a Ring of Fire chart:

“The most vulnerable countries in 2010 are shown in PIMCO’s chart “The Ring of Fire.” These red zone countries are ones with the potential for public debt to exceed 90% of GDP within a few years’ time, which would slow GDP by 1% or more. The yellow and green areas are considered to be the most conservative and potentially most solvent, with the potential for higher growth.”

 

Then looking at the major economy’s bond markets suggests the ‘interesting aspect to watch’ with the UK is:

“… the UK, with the highest debt levels and a finance-oriented economy – exposed like London to the cold dark winter nights of deleveraging.”

Finally observing that [note that it’s his underlining, not mine]:

“… the UK is a must to avoid. Its Gilts are resting on a bed of nitroglycerine. High debt with the potential to devalue its currency present high risks for bond investors. In addition, its interest rates are already artificially influenced by accounting standards that at one point last year produced long-term real interest rates of 1/2 % and lower.”

What does all this tell us politically? Simply that George Osborne and the Conservatives are correct in saying that the deficit should be tackled now. Otherwise, waiting will stifle future growth and risk a bond crisis. Labour are on the wrong side of this argument. Whomever it is, the incoming Chancellor’s job will be tough, tough, tough.

FT’s Alphaville end of year video

The observant among you will have noticed that the Financial Times’s Alphaville blog is in my blogroll. As a blog on the financial world, it sits uncomfortably among the rest that are essentially political blogs or websites. Hear’s what Alphaville says is its purpose:

Market insight: Instant market news and commentary, focusing on M&A activity, fund raising and the core financial sector

As an end of year treat for their readers they’ve produced an amusing review of 2009 video: