Thursday, May 16, 2013

When central banks buy stocks


The investment story of the year to date is the central bank-led financial market recovery.  While everyone is aware of the impact the Fed’s $85 billion-a-month asset purchases is having on stocks, few investors realize that central banks are making direct purchases of stocks.  The implication of this new development is shocking. 

Bank of America stated that global central banks have cut rates an incredible 511 times since June 2007 in an effort at re-inflating the global economy.  “Most central banks in our coverage universe still have a bias to ease,” Morgan Stanley economists led by London-based Joachim Fels said in a recent report.  “Given this disposition, it doesn’t take much in terms of downside surprises in growth or inflation to tip the balance for more central banks to pull the trigger for more easing.”

Mohamed El-Erian, CEO of Pacific Investment Management, stated: “Central banks are our best friends not because they like markets, but because they can only get to their macro objectives by going through the markets.  The hope is that improving fundamentals will validate what central banks have done.”

As if to underscore the unified commitment of the world’s central bankers to fighting deflation, the Reserve Bank of Australia cut to a record 2.75 percent this week, while the European Central Bank and Reserve Bank of India acted to ease last week.  And while the Bank of Japan (BOJ) and the U.S. Federal Reserve refrained from changing policy at their last meetings, the BOJ doubled its monthly bond purchases in April and Fed policy makers last week raised the prospect of increasing their pace of bond buying above $85 billion a month.


The simple yet undeniable reality here can be summarized in two Wall Street bromides: “The trend is your friend” and “Don’t fight the Fed.”  Not only are central banks like the Fed paving the way for continued financial market recovery by purchasing bonds and mortgage debt, some are now directly buying equities according to a recent report.

In an April 25 Bloomberg article, Sarah Jones reported that some central banks are buying stocks in “record amounts” as falling bond yields entice investors to look toward equities.  In a survey of 60 central bankers last month by Central Banking Publication and Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc, 23 percent of respondents said they own shares or plan to buy them.  The Bank of Japan, holder of the second-biggest foreign-exchange reserves, said April 4 it would more than double investments in equity exchange-traded funds to 3.5 trillion yen ($35.2 billion) by 2014. 

The Bank of Israel bought stocks for the first time last year while the Swiss National Bank and the Czech National Bank have boosted their holdings to at least 10 percent of reserves, according to Bloomberg.  Germany’s Bundesbank appears to be open to the possibility of buying equities.  While neither the U.S. Federal Reserve nor the Bank of England are buying stocks directly, some analysts are already speculating that the Fed may soon step in to do so, using its mandate of “price stability and maximum employment” as an excuse.

“Managers of banks’ assets are looking for alternatives to holding government bonds after efforts to stimulate growth from the Federal Reserve, the Bank of Japan and the Bank of England helped send yields near to record lows,” Jones reported in the Bloomberg article.  The survey of 60 central bankers, overseeing a combined $6.7 trillion, found that low bond returns had prompted almost half to take on more risk. Fourteen said they had already invested in equities or would do so within five years. “Those conducting the annual poll had never before asked that question,” according to Bloomberg. 

As one institutional trader aptly put it, “Equities are the last asset class standing.”  Now that dividend yields on stocks exceed bond yields, it only makes sense that banks are chasing yields via the stock market.  It also puts into perspective the relentless stock market rally of the past six months.  Not only is it being fueled by the Fed’s $85 billion in asset purchases per month, but we now know that foreign central bank purchases of dividend-yielding stocks contributes additional strength to the rally.  This provides even greater context behind the relentless rally of the last six months as shown in the following graph of the S&P 500 Index (SPX).


Writing in the May 2013 issue of the Market Cycle Dynamics Letter (www.longwavedynamics.com), David Knox Barker asked some interesting questions of the central banks foray into equities: “There is a radical difference in a financial world where central banks served as commercial bank overnight lenders, to now being actively engaged in equity investment.  Will they eventually also go short?  Do they have a fiduciary responsibility to hedge their long positions?  Do they trade through major commercial banks?” 

These questions and others will eventually be answered.  For now suffice it to say that an equity market receiving the additional support of central bank buying will likely be further insulated against a major crash occurring anytime soon.  While the existence of the so-called “Plunge Protection Team,” or PPT, may have been debatable in the past it certainly isn’t debatable anymore.  

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