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Fed Will Eventually Break Something: But What, When and Where?

Published 10/16/2023, 03:30 AM

After years of zero interest rates, such an abrupt tightening is bound to break something.

The main questions are: what, when, and where does something break?

When rates are low credit is cheap and so financial actors tend to lever up more aggressively. Debt levels increase and so does the coverage of government debt.

Yet the reality is that governments are the issuers of fiat money and therefore they can always nominally meet their obligations by issuing more debt.

That obviously has limits too: over time they depreciate the real value of the currency and relentless fiscal deficits might lead to inflation overshoots.

But my point is that governments can kick the can down the road for a long time, but you know who can't?

You, I, and in general the private sector.

If our mortgage costs as a share of disposable income move higher we can't print money to service our debt.

If corporate borrowing costs soar and earnings growth doesn’t dramatically improve, companies will be quickly forced to deleverage or cut costs.

So in general it’s a good practice to keep an eye on both government and private sector debt levels (as the chart below shows the higher the total economic debt, the lower the rates must be to keep the system afloat).US Private and Public Debt vs 30-Year Rates

Countries With High Private Debts Are More Vulnerable to Economic Shocks

During macro shocks countries with high and rising private debt levels are more vulnerable than countries with high public debt levels.

History shows that’s indeed the case: look at this great chart from Dario Perkins.

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Private Sector Credit vs % of GDP

Japan's real estate crisis 1990s

Asian tiger's crisis late 1990s

Spain's housing crisis early 2010s

China now?

All these episodes had one thing in common: private sector debt was too high and it was rising too rapidly.

Funnily enough, the obsession with government debt levels skews the vulnerability assessment toward the ''wrong'' countries.

Countries that keep deficits super contained starve the private sector of fresh resources and so households and corporations go and lever up privately.Low Government Debt Implications

Take China: their official government debt levels are very contained but behind the curtain, they have been aggressively leveraging up their private sector.

And if you do that too fast in an unproductive way, problems tend to occur.

Balance Sheets

Or take Canada which has made a large use of real estate debt to spur a domestic wealth effect.

Today Canada is running a higher private sector debt/GDP than Japan did just before the implosion of their own real estate market in the 90s.Canada Private Sector Debt

Instead, if you have a look at the US you'll find that their private sector non-financial debt as % of GDP today is 20 percentage points lower than in 2007.

While mainstream media commentators obsess about US government debt despite the United States enjoying the privilege of issuing the reserve currency of the world, private sector leverage trends in the US show a relatively benign picture if compared to other countries around the world.

US Private Sector Non-Financial Debt

What countries score the worst by this metric, you ask?

This table can help you quickly assess in which countries private sector debt is too high and it's been rising too fast over the last 10 years.

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Private Sector Debt as GDP

Now, obviously, levels and rate of change in private sector debt are not the only variables to consider when assessing when/where/what will break in macro.

We also need to consider other fundamentals, the nature of the private sector debt market (floating or fixed rate, short-term or long-term), refinancing cliffs, and many other variables.

Hence this was just the appetizer of my investigation into ‘‘what will break in macro’’.

The good news though is that I will be serving you the entire menu soon.

***

This article was originally published on The Macro Compass. Come join this vibrant community of macro investors, asset allocators and hedge funds - check out which subscription tier suits you the most using this link.

Latest comments

Given the Coronavirus, which hopefully only happens once a century or so, have not most countries distorted the macro trends through stimulus? In the US, we just shifted the debt burden to the government while temporarily alleviating the debt on the private sector. Seems like that would distort any logical macro views as we don’t have an analog for that. Each country could be different depending on how much stimulus they injected during Covid.
It breaks when the debtors break. When you increase interest rates you don't actually increase the value of the dollar or fight inflation... it's just robbing the money to prop it up from debtors. If you allow inflation to happen naturally, the debtors will benefit, but if you squeeze them it might as well just be a tax on being in debt. But that's a finite source of wealth for the government to pillage. Once the people who owe money go bankrupt, that's it, there is no more for them to steal. Raise interest rates to the moon, and it won't stifle inflation, it will cause it, because the only people left will be people with money in the bank and if you make their money grow exponentially, especially if the debtor is the US govt, that increases the amount of money in existence and is inflation! The democrats really love robbing the middle class to give it to the destitute, even more than the republicans love robbing the middle class and giving it to the rich.
The Fed has already broken a number of data points but it invents a tool for each one so its a win win. The Treasury and Fed trading desks work together and in harmony to patch up and fix the financial system thats on life support.Easing and expansion surgical tools also work magic.
When is my TLT going to moon?
Am also waiting, hopefully by January.. Problem is the millennials are producing 1.3 trillion in spending overcoming the current high interest rates.. But when enough be government debt gets issued at these levels, eventually the driving costs will become too high and rates will need to come down because GDP will not be enough to pay interest costs at high rates.
commercial real estate ist a candidadate number one
so, whats the solution? everybody seems to know what all the FED and government do wrong, but nobody seems to have a solution. Just saying its wrong want change anything but creat panik. Oh, i forgot, thats what everybody wanted.
#1...END THE FED#2....End Congressional spending aka austerity.
Shadow bank system gets rekt
The Fed is in the process of breaking the rest of the world. Long DXY, oil and related equities, MBS (buying more on 10Y panic days), GSE debentures (thanks for that historic call premium!), T bills (cash proxy). Short small caps.
They will break their rate hikes.
They will raise it again and they will keep it high for years, until there is another debtor defaulting crisis like in 2006-9. But this will probably happen after the 2024 election.
The sword of damocles is already in place. If it falls during an election year look out. Government action will borrow more from the future shrinking middle class
They already broke something and it looks like the hiking is over to me
Sadly, I think they will go for another rate hike before years end, unless we get sucked into this Middle East war. Then, all bets are off.
Very interesting analysis!! Many thanks!
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