speeches · November 6, 1985
Speech
Thomas C. Melzer · Governor
POLICY MAKING AND POSITION TAKING—A COMPARISON
Remarks by Thomas C. Melzer
to the Centerre Bank Financial Forum
St. Louis, Missouri
November 7, 1985
A question which I am often asked is, "What is it like at the
Fed? It must be a big change." My career began at Morgan Stanley where
I spent almost 17 years in a variety of activities. The last five years
from 1980-1984, I was the Managing Director in charge of U.S. Government
securities sales and trading. While I do not propose to talk about all
the similarities and differences I have observed between these private
and public sector endeavors, I thought one particular comparison might be
interesting. That is, the role of a Government securities position taker
versus that of a monetary policymaker and the interrelationship between
policy and the securities market.
A Government securities market participant must deal with a
variety of fundamental inputs when making position decisions. These
inputs include the pace of economic activity, inflation trends, money
supply growth, foreign exchange market conditions and developments
affecting our financial system. In addition, monetary policy and, to a
lesser extent, fiscal policy are taken into account.
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In addition to fundamental inputs, the technical condition of
the market must also be considered. That is, the relationship between
supply and demand for securities at any particular point in time and
price level. Some years ago, net dealer positions provided a reasonable
gauge of the marketfs technical condition; but as more and more investors
have become trading-oriented, this is a less reliable indicator. In
addition, sales of large Treasury new issues are constantly changing the
technicals and making them difficult to assess.
Recently, however, it would appear that the interruption of
normal patterns of Treasury supply by the debt ceiling created a very
good technical condition in the market. Because of anticipated bunching
of supply, dealers were reluctant to hold long positions and perhaps even
established net short positions. Whatever longs they did hold were
whittled down by ongoing investment by certain investors. Other investors
accumulated cash balances waiting for lower prices when the supply finally
did come. The result last week was a four-year which had more than
$34 billion of bids for a $6.75 billion auction, followed by seven and
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20-year auctions which also received good support. Prices increased and
yields fell, but from all indications the market movement was technically
rather than fundamentally-induced.
The role of the position taker, then, is to make judgments about
what positions to take in light of evolving fundamental and technical
factors. Often, how the market trades in reaction to a new input provides
additional insight into the positioning decision. For example, say the
market receives new information about a fundamental input—perhaps it is
the latest employment estimate—which is expected to result in lower
prices. This/ in fact, was the case a week ago when non-farm payrolls
were up 414,000 rather than an expected 150-200,000. Suppose, however,
that instead of trading down, bond prices actually rise. What does this
tell us about the market? A position taker might conclude that the market
is in better technical condition at that time than previously thought.
In other words, that the estimate had been more than fully discounted in
the price level. Or he might conclude that the focus of the market had
shifted to other fundamental factors, say inflation, as a guide to future
bond prices. Again, this might have been a consideration last Friday
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when there was also talk of lower oil prices. Although possible strength
in the economy was reflected in the employment estimate, this might not
present a problem for interest rates if inflation remains subdued, or so
the rationale would go.
Clearly, then, a market professional, if he is to survive, must
be very knowledgeable about the fundamental factors. He needs to have an
informed view on what's happening in a fundamental sense. But he must
also know how other market participants are evaluating these fundamental
factors, as well as the technicals. In other words, he must understand
the psychology of the market. As a result, he can often end up taking
short-term positions which are inconsistent with his fundamental view.
However, because of market psychology and technical factors, they seem to
represent good risk/reward opportunities.
Finally, one last comment on the market participant. A good
position taker never stays with a bad position—at least not too long.
He must have the humility to recognize that, despite a tremendous amount
of information and analysis, he simply did not properly understand what
was going on in the market at the time. Instead, others had different
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information or expectations than he assumed them to have. It is impor
tant to recognize and respect the ability of the market to discount
possible future events that may not be evident to every position taker
concurrently.
What about the policymaker? Are there any important similarities
between his role and that of a professional market participant? Certainly
a policymaker cannot reasonably take actions which are inconsistent with
his fundamental view as does the position taker. On the other hand, the
fundamental views and how they are reached are surprisingly similar. The
state of the economy, inflation, money, the dollar and financial market
conditions, together with the impact of fiscal policy, are the chief
ingredients that lie behind monetary policy decisions. This list is
almost identical to the fundamental inputs of a position taker.
Of course, there is one major difference between making policy
and taking positions in bond markets. Market participants look at
monetary policy—both current and expected—as a fundamental input into
their decisions. Consequently, they devote considerable time and effort—
and, I might add, ingenuity—to Fed-watching; they are trying to find
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apparent nuances in policy to update their fundamental views, hopefully
before their competitors have time to do the same. What I hav edis
covered, somewhat to the surprise of my former self, is that policy
actually changes far less frequently than market participants think it
does, and certainly far less frequently than their expectations about
policy change.
Frequently, we see bond prices jump around due to trading based
on fear of Fed tightening or hope of Fed easing; these trades usually
follow changing news or expectations about some fundamental factors that
shape monetary policy-making. What should be realized, however, is that
monetary policy decisions, while certainly influenced by these fundamental
factors, cannot possibly jump around as quickly and as often as market
expectations seem to do. Policy decisions must be geared to a long-term
perspective on what is going on in the economy; they must aim at a
horizon somewhat farther out than next month's inflation figure or next
quarter's merchandise trade balance.
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Responding to ever shifting expectations, which is characteristic
of position taking, is generally not appropriate for policymakers. Of
course, policymakers must be sensitive to what markets are saying about
future events; policymakers do not have a monopoly on all the information
that is relevant to future economic conditions. Accordingly, just as
market participants watch the Fed for insight into the fundamentals, so
too does the Fed watch—and try to interpret—market activity.
What we end up with, then, in comparing position-taking and
policy-making, is a somewhat curious result. The fundamentals are key,
and both the Fed and market participants watch them very carefully. Then,
to provide additional insight into the main event, market participants
attentively watch the Fed. And, of course, the Fed, in turn, attentively
watches the market.
What do the fundamentals say? The news from the inflation front
remains amazingly good. Both consumer and producer prices have risen at
annual rates of about 2.5 percent since April. At the present time, price
developments show no departure from the low inflation pattern that took
hold back in 1981. This seems to be confirmed by anecdotal information
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as well. At various meetings with businessmen held at our Bank recently,
no one saw any evidence of increasing inflation in their cost or price
structures. To the extent that there is upward pressure on wages, pro
ductivity gains were expected to offset the higher cost.
Data on payroll employment for October and retail sales, indus
trial production, and housing for August and September show moderate to
sharp increases, indicating that perhaps the hoped-for acceleration of
real growth has begun. While some analysts have argued that these gains
are only temporary, other fundamental factors point toward continued
resurgence of the economy. For example, the Department of Commerce's
Index of Leading Indicators, although not necessarily the most reliable
guide by itself, confirms the underlying strength of the U.S. economy; it
has risen for four successive months and for seven out of the past eight
months.
Another factor influencing real economic growth in the short-run
is the growth in Ml, the money stock measure consisting of currency and
checkable deposits in the hands of the public. When Ml growth accelerates
sharply, real growth and employment historically have risen about six to
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nine months later. And while certain special factors may have affected
normal patterns of money velocity in recent months, Ml has grown very
sharply. Since October of last year, Ml has grown at about a 13 percent
annual rate. This rapid expansion in Ml, supported by strong reserve
growth, should provide a continuing push to the economy for the remainder
of this year and into the early part of 1986. Of course, rapid money
growth could present some threat to our ability to maintain low inflation
rates in the years ahead.
And what is the market telling us? While the funds rate has
been trading slightly higher than 8 percent in the last couple of weeks,
there is no expectation of Fed tightening in present price levels. In
fact, one might argue that six-month bill and two-year note yields are
anticipating some easing at spreads of 25 basis points below and 75 basis
points over funds, respectively. On the other hand, this might be
attributed to the supply distortions mentioned earlier and longer-term
investment funds temporarily being parked in shorter-term instruments.
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A market relationship which gives some insight into inflationary
expectations, the two-year/ten-year note spread, is presently at about
130 basis points. For a long period of time this relationship had been
in the 140-160 basis point range, indicating that inflationary expecta
tions have perhaps decreased despite the rapid money growth since October
of last year. If the market perceived that Fed policy had become too
accommodative, short-term yields would stay low because they are tied
to the funds rate, but long-term yields would rise as a result of higher
expected inflation. Again, the flattening in the yield curve might be
attributed to the lack -of longer-term supply.
Finally, what about policy? There have been, and continue to
be, a number of fundamental cross-currents which currently affect policy
and hence create uncertainty. While the economy finally seems to be
improving, questions remain as to the extent and sustainability of this
improvement. Money supply has been growing rapidly, as a good deal of
stimulus has been provided in recent months. And yet there are questions
about the behavior of velocity and just what effect this monetary stimulus
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will have on real growth and employment. Right now, the combination of
some apparent improvement in the economy, together with rapid money
growth, seem to argue for no further easing.
Inflation measures remain extremely favorable for now, although
could be vulnerable to a sharp downward adjustment in the value of the
dollar. In addition, historically increases in money growth are asso
ciated with higher inflation rates in the years ahead. Nevertheless, in
the short-run inflation might be considered a neutral factor in relation
to policy—neither a reason to ease nor a reason to tighten.
The dollar has declined significantly since early in the year,
which is welcome news for those sectors of the economy dependent on
exports. On the other hand, should foreigners' willingness to hold
dollar assets diminish significantly as the result of a continually
eroding dollar, this could have important ramifications in the capital
markets, particularly in light of our large budget deficits. Recently,
of course, the dollar has stopped declining and has actually recouped
some of its earlier losses. Were a downward adjustment to continue, the
dollar could become a factor arguing in favor of at least maintaining or
possibly firming policy.
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Finally, there continue to be strains in the financial system as
the result of international, energy and agricultural loans. Because
continued economic growth provides a more favorable climate in which to
deal with these problems, they certainly argue against any tightening of
policy. On the other hand, there is a question as to whether further
stimulus could actually help solve these problems, particularly given the
already high level of activity in the interest-sensitive sectors of the
economy.
To the extent I thought that policy-making would be any easier
than position-taking, I sure was wrong. While I may have more and better
information now, when the fundamentals are uncertain, the right answer is
no easier to find whether you are a policy-maker or a position-taker. Of
course, the stakes are much higher now, so the pursuit of that right
answer is all the more important.
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Cite this document
APA
Thomas C. Melzer (1985, November 6). Speech. Speeches, Federal Reserve. https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19851107_melzer
BibTeX
@misc{wtfs_speech_19851107_melzer,
author = {Thomas C. Melzer},
title = {Speech},
year = {1985},
month = {Nov},
howpublished = {Speeches, Federal Reserve},
url = {https://whenthefedspeaks.com/doc/speech_19851107_melzer},
note = {Retrieved via When the Fed Speaks corpus}
}