|

M3b,
REPOS & FED WATCHING
by Bart
April 25, 2006
Is
M31 really gone?
After
reading this
little known press release a few weeks ago, I started to wonder…
and the surprising result is that (except for the Eurodollars element of
M3), the data is still available with which to reconstruct M3.
-
The
formula used has over five nines (.9999946 – 1.0 being perfect)
correlation to the original data back going back to 1980, and is
taken directly from the Federal Reserve’s definition of M3.
-
There
is only one missing element that is apparently no longer available
(Eurodollars) and I've applied an adjustment to generate it. Its
only about 3% of total M3 so should not have a material effect on
the total.
-
The
data sources are M2,
Institutional
Money Market and two weekly reports from the Fed – H.8
and H.4.1
-
Not
surprisingly, the growth rate has continued up since the last
official report in early March
-
I’ll
leave it up to the reader on why M3 was discontinued but wish to
point out this quote: "The last duty of a central banker is to
tell the public the truth."
-- Alan Blinder, Vice Chairman of the Federal Reserve, on
PBS’s Nightly Business Report in 1994.

Repos2,
correlation and Fed intentions and hopes
So
that's what repos are (see abbreviated definition below) - simply a loan
that the Fed makes to banks. The interest rate varies and has been as
low as 1% and never higher than the Fed Funds3 rate. The term
of the loan varies too - from one day all the way out to what the Fed
calls permanent, which means it’s of infinite length (it never comes
due or has to be paid back per our current understanding).
What
do the banks do with those cheap loans of literally billions of dollars?
Well
- they either lend them out or invest them or both... and since
inflation in its simplest form is creating too much money - it usually
is inflationary. Repos are literally money created out of thin air.
The
loans the banks make multiply the money via the magic of
"fractional reserve banking"4, and the investments
the banks make very frequently go into the stock market - and that's why
there's a strong relationship between repos and the stock market.
Total
repos are around $775 billion now, and M3 is about $10.3 trillion, so
you can see that repos are a non trivial portion of the amount of
"money" in the US. They are also directly and 100%
controllable by the Fed, unlike other elements of M3 like CDs over $100k
in value... so its very much one of the top five tools in the Fed
arsenal in our opinion. Repos are only one of many tools to use in
judging where the stock or other markets are headed, but it is a key
one.
Here
are two charts showing two views of repos since 2000.
Notice
the correlation between what started to happen in mid-2005 and the gold
price, for example:

Notice
how the Fed turned up repo creation speed (the black line got even
steeper) in about July '02 as the Dow was dropping fast, and also what
they may be trying and hoping to do with the Dow now:

Securities
lending5, bonds and Fed intentions and hopes
Another
little known tool of the Fed used in managing interest rates is
Securities lending5, and it can be helpful to see what the
Fed wants to have happen on the shorter term with bonds and interest
rates. It’s also quite illustrative of the strong effect that the Fed
has and can have on those markets.
Currently,
it appears to us that Fed believes they’ve gone up too far and too
fast and are trying to pull them back down some.

Not
the holy grail
Do
note that like almost anything, not only are the above charts less than
perfect but also eventually the current relationships will cease to work
well due to definition, focus and other data changes at the Fed and
other data sources. M3/M3b may also become less useful too. Then it’s
back to the drawing board. But they sure beat a coin flip, and have done
well as an aid and as additional tools to help make investing decisions.
Web
site: http://www.nowandfutures.com
Definitions
-
M3
– A very broad measure of total money in the economy issued by the
Fed. It includes checking & savings accounts, cash, time
deposits, money market funds, etc. The actual full technical
definition from the Fed
is “M3 consists of M2 plus (1) balances in institutional money
market mutual funds; (2)
large-denomination time deposits (time deposits in amounts of
$100,000 or more); (3)
repurchase agreement (RP) liabilities of depository institutions, in
denominations of
$100,000 or more, on U.S. government and federal agency securities;
and (4) Eurodollars held
by U.S. addressees at foreign branches of U.S. banks worldwide and
at all banking offices in the United Kingdom and Canada.
Large-denomination time deposits, RPs, and Eurodollars exclude those
amounts held by depository institutions, the U.S. government,
foreign banks and official institutions, and money market mutual
funds”
-
Repos
– Short for repurchase agreement and in its simplest form, a loan
of varying duration but usually short term. Repos are one of the
primary tools of the Fed in managing money supply, etc.
-
Fed
Funds rate - The interest rate
at which banks can do temporary borrowing to meet their legal
requirements to maintain a level or reserves.
-
Fractional
Reserve banking - The practice of banks of retaining only a
fraction of their deposits to satisfy demands for withdrawals, and
then potentially loaning out the remainder.
This practice allows the banking system to actually
"create" money, since if they only have to retain 10% of a
deposit the other 90% can be loaned out, and then 90% of that 90%
(81% of the original) can be loaned out when it is deposited in
another bank account by the borrower. And then 90% of that 81% can
be loaned out, creating more money... and so on as deposits are made
in other banks of the borrowed amount. In effect, one dollar
deposited can allow a bank to create at least eight dollars of money
(.90 + .81 + .73 + .66 + .59... adds up to over eight).
-
Securities
lending - A very specialized
portion of what the Federal Reserve banks do (warning: this is an
extremely specialized area with many technical terms - be sure to
look up any unfamiliar words). Here is the Fed definition: "The
Bank provides a secondary and temporary source of securities to the
Treasury financing market through a Securities Lending program to
promote smooth clearing of Treasury securities. The program offers
securities for loan from the System Open Market Account (SOMA)
portfolio in accordance with program terms and conditions.
Securities loans are awarded to primary
dealers based on competitive bidding in an auction held each
business day at noon eastern standard time."
In plain English, the Fed loans Treasury bonds, bills and notes to
major banks or securities firms and collects interest on those
loans. Its primary function though, per the Fed itself is "a
secondary and temporary source of securities in the Treasury
market" - it helped a great deal in the markets after 9/11/2001
to keep them functioning. (Source,
about 9/10 of the way through).

© 2006 Bart
Editorial
Archive
Note:
Excel Spreadsheet available upon request.
CONTACT
INFORMATION
Bart
Los Angeles, CA USA
Website
l Email
The
opinions of FSU contributors do not necessarily reflect those of
Financial Sense.
|