Confessions of a Quantitative Easer
By Andrew
Huszar, WSJ, Nov. 11, 2013
I can only say:
I’m sorry, America. As a former Federal Reserve official, I was responsible for
executing the centerpiece program of the Fed’s first plunge into the
bond-buying experiment known as quantitative easing. The central bank continues
to spin QE as a tool for helping Main Street. But I’ve come to recognize the
program for what it really is: the greatest backdoor Wall Street bailout of all
time.
Five years ago
this month, on Black Friday, the Fed launched an unprecedented shopping spree.
By that point in the financial crisis, Congress had already passed legislation,
the Troubled Asset Relief Program, to halt the U.S. banking system’s free fall.
Beyond Wall Street, though, the economic pain was still soaring. In the last
three months of 2008 alone, almost two million Americans would lose their jobs.
The Fed said it
wanted to help—through a new program of massive bond purchases. There were
secondary goals, but Chairman Ben Bernanke made clear that the Fed’s central
motivation was to “affect credit conditions for households and businesses”: to
drive down the cost of credit so that more Americans hurting from the tanking
economy could use it to weather the downturn. For this reason, he originally
called the initiative “credit easing.”
My part of the
story began a few months later. Having been at the Fed for seven years, until
early 2008, I was working on Wall Street in spring 2009 when I got an
unexpected phone call. Would I come back to work on the Fed’s trading floor?
The job: managing what was at the heart of QE’s bond-buying spree—a wild
attempt to buy $1.25 trillion in mortgage bonds in 12 months. Incredibly, the
Fed was calling to ask if I wanted to quarterback the largest economic stimulus
in U.S. history.
This was a
dream job, but I hesitated. And it wasn’t just nervousness about taking on such
responsibility. I had left the Fed out of frustration, having witnessed the
institution deferring more and more to Wall Street. Independence is at the
heart of any central bank’s credibility, and I had come to believe that the
Fed’s independence was eroding. Senior Fed officials, though, were publicly
acknowledging mistakes and several of those officials emphasized to me how
committed they were to a major Wall Street revamp. I could also see that they
desperately needed reinforcements. I took a leap of faith.
In its almost
100-year history, the Fed had never bought one mortgage bond. Now my program
was buying so many each day through active, unscripted trading that we
constantly risked driving bond prices too high and crashing global confidence
in key financial markets. We were working feverishly to preserve the impression
that the Fed knew what it was doing.
It wasn’t long
before my old doubts resurfaced. Despite the Fed’s rhetoric, my program wasn’t
helping to make credit any more accessible for the average American. The banks
were only issuing fewer and fewer loans. More insidiously, whatever credit they
were extending wasn’t getting much cheaper. QE may have been driving down the
wholesale cost for banks to make loans, but Wall Street was pocketing most of
the extra cash.
From the
trenches, several other Fed managers also began voicing the concern that QE
wasn’t working as planned. Our warnings fell on deaf ears. In the past, Fed
leaders—even if they ultimately erred—would have worried obsessively about the
costs versus the benefits of any major initiative. Now the only obsession
seemed to be with the newest survey of financial-market expectations or the
latest in-person feedback from Wall Street’s leading bankers and hedge-fund
managers. Sorry, U.S. taxpayer.
Trading for the
first round of QE ended on March 31, 2010. The final results confirmed that,
while there had been only trivial relief for Main Street, the U.S. central
bank’s bond purchases had been an absolute coup for Wall Street. The banks
hadn’t just benefited from the lower cost of making loans. They’d also enjoyed
huge capital gains on the rising values of their securities holdings and fat
commissions from brokering most of the Fed’s QE transactions. Wall Street had
experienced its most profitable year ever in 2009, and 2010 was starting off in
much the same way.
You’d think the
Fed would have finally stopped to question the wisdom of QE. Think again. Only
a few months later—after a 14% drop in the U.S. stock market and renewed
weakening in the banking sector—the Fed announced a new round of bond buying:
QE2. Germany’s finance minister, Wolfgang Schäuble, immediately called the
decision “clueless.”
That was when I
realized the Fed had lost any remaining ability to think independently from
Wall Street. Demoralized, I returned to the private sector.
Where are we
today? The Fed keeps buying roughly $85 billion in bonds a month, chronically
delaying so much as a minor QE taper. Over five years, its bond purchases have
come to more than $4 trillion. Amazingly, in a supposedly free-market nation,
QE has become the largest financial-markets intervention by any government in
world history.
And the impact?
Even by the Fed’s sunniest calculations, aggressive QE over five years has
generated only a few percentage points of U.S. growth. By contrast, experts
outside the Fed, such as Mohammed El Erian at the Pimco investment firm,
suggest that the Fed may have created and spent over $4 trillion for a total
return of as little as 0.25% of GDP (i.e., a mere $40 billion bump in U.S.
economic output). Both of those estimates indicate that QE isn’t really
working.
Unless you’re
Wall Street. Having racked up hundreds of billions of dollars in opaque Fed
subsidies, U.S. banks have seen their collective stock price triple since March
2009. The biggest ones have only become more of a cartel: 0.2% of them now
control more than 70% of the U.S. bank assets.
As for the rest
of America, good luck. Because QE was relentlessly pumping money into the
financial markets during the past five years, it killed the urgency for
Washington to confront a real crisis: that of a structurally unsound U.S.
economy. Yes, those financial markets have rallied spectacularly, breathing
much-needed life back into 401(k)s, but for how long? Experts like Larry Fink
at the BlackRock investment firm are suggesting that conditions are again
“bubble-like.” Meanwhile, the country remains overly dependent on Wall Street
to drive economic growth.
Even when
acknowledging QE’s shortcomings, Chairman Bernanke argues that some action by
the Fed is better than none (a position that his likely successor, Fed Vice
Chairwoman Janet Yellen, also embraces). The implication is that the Fed is
dutifully compensating for the rest of Washington’s dysfunction. But the Fed is
at the center of that dysfunction. Case in point: It has allowed QE to become
Wall Street’s new “too big to fail” policy.
Mr. Huszar, a
senior fellow at Rutgers Business School, is a former Morgan Stanley managing
director. In 2009-10, he managed the Federal Reserve’s $1.25 trillion agency
mortgage-backed security purchase program.
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