Coronavirus The European Central Bank’s new programme is a break from past restraints and orthodoxies
What action is the ECB taking to support the euro area and will it be enough?
In recent weeks markets have been plunging, impeded by low volumes, lack of liquidity and huge uncertainties about the future outlook for the progress of the health crisis, the economy and the energy market.
Leaving aside the health crisis, which must be resolved as early as possible in order for markets to see light at the end of the tunnel, there are some key counter-measures that need to be taken by the fiscal and monetary authorities to stabilise the financial and economic system.
In contrast to 2008-09 global financial crisis, this downturn, triggered by the coronavirus, is now being deliberately engineered by governments in their efforts to suppress the virus.
Social distancing, self-isolation and the effective shutdown of a vast number of firms and sectors are having a devastating effect on economic activity.
But this is surely the right priority.
Until there are clear signs that the virus has been overcome or at least is on the way to being suppressed there can be little hope of a recovery.
When that happens, the recovery can be reasonably vigorous - provided the authorities take the right measures in the meantime.
At the level of general principle, the entire fiscal and monetary toolkit needs to be deployed.
On the fiscal front, two key measures are needed.
The collapse of economic activity and the need to implement these types of unprecedented interventions on a national and international basis means that governments will need to borrow massive amounts - whatever is necessary - to overcome first the pandemic, and second, enable economies, businesses and individuals to survive financially until a recovery begins.
Governments have done this before in wartime; now they need to do it in the war against the coronavirus.
In the meantime it is probably not very meaningful or helpful to try to make short-term economic forecasts.
On the financial and monetary front there had been clear signs last week that markets were not functioning efficiently, with wide spreads opening up, little trading volume and panic selling of securities at huge discounts to raise funds.
The purposes of these distress sales varied - for mutual funds to meet redemptions, for businesses to pay wages, for payment of rent, to pay interest on loans, to pay suppliers, and so on.
The only entity that could conceivably solve this problem in the short run is the US Federal Reserve (Fed).
It was endowed from the outset with substantial powers to operate in markets to normalise financial conditions.
When it was founded in 1913 one of the fundamental purposes was to provide “an elastic currency” - in other words, to be able to counter the monetary and credit squeeze that had occurred in 1907.
This is exactly the situation today - a flight from risk assets and a credit squeeze - so the Fed needs to deploy these powers in the classic way to the maximum extent needed.
Yet last week the Fed was finding that despite offering huge amounts of cash in the form of repos, take-up at its auctions was pitifully small.
For example, despite offering US$1.5 trillion in repos via three separate auctions on 20 March, take-up for the day was only US$55 billion.
The cash was not getting where it was needed.
In response the Fed decided to “go direct” - that is, instead of waiting for market participants to find appropriate collateral, register it with the New York Fed and then make the funds available, the Fed had decided to purchase securities directly, thereby injecting funds directly into the financial markets.
Consequently, in addition to the repos it purchased on 20 March, it also purchased US$72 billion of Treasuries and US$36 billion of mortgage-backed securities (MBS), for a combined total of US$163 billion.
But even this was not enough to stabilise the markets.
Over the 21-22 March weekend the Fed therefore decided to act on an even larger scale.
Before the US markets opened on 23 March it announced a breath-taking programme of new measures.
These are designed to ensure the effective transmission of credit to the markets where it is needed in response to the breakdown of market mechanisms and the lack of liquidity precipitated by the Covid-19 outbreak.
In effect, the Fed is becoming the “dealer of last resort”.
The following is a summary of recent announcements from the Fed outlining the new support for the flow of credit to the US economy:
Other actions that the Fed had either already taken in the previous two weeks (March 9-20) or extended are as follows:
Whether these programmes will be enough to stabilise financial markets is probably open to doubt in the short term.
Far more important will be the progress made in dealing with the virus.
Only once the virus is conquered will these programmes start to generate a recovery.
In the meantime, they will at least ensure that credit can flow and businesses need not fail on a massive scale.
Unprecedented times require unprecedented actions.
On 23 March, the Fed has launched such a plan of action.
We must all hope that the government and the Trump administration are equal to the task in solving first the health problem and simultaneously addressing the urgent fiscal requirements.
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