(Note: Most of this article covers background material, for readers who are somewhat interested in monetary operations. The concluding section has the short version of what the Bank of Canada is doing. The briefest possible summary is that the Bank is just operating to keep the bond markets functional, so as to avoid a seizure of wholesale finance.)
Another set of notable developments are happening on the liability side of the balance sheet (above). If we looked at the pre-2008 Bank of Canada balance sheet (top panel), almost all of the liabilities were accounted for by currency notes in circulation (dollar bills in denominations of $5 and greater, currently composed of plastic). After the Financial Crisis, the Government of Canada has kept a large balance at the Bank of Canada for prudential[1] reasons. If we add those two liability items together, they still nearly represented almost the entire side of the balance sheet -- until 2020.
The bottom panel shows where the liability growth is: formally known as "Canadian dollar deposits, members of Payments Canada," but I have labelled this as "Banks" (under the argument that non-banks are not significant members of Payments Canada). Canada abolished bank reserve requirements in the 1990s, and instead banks were expected to have a $0 balance with respect to the Bank of Canada/payments system at the end of the working day. This was a key part of the job description for bank treasury departments: hit that zero balance at the end of day, given that there are massive gross flows in and out of the bank throughout the day. The Bank of Canada posts official deposit/lending rates on positive/negative bank balances, but the expectation was that if private banks missed the zero target on a sustained basis, inspectors would come around asking very awkward questions to bank management. That is, although those posted rates acted as a corridor for private sector inter-bank rates, the expectation was that there should be almost no transactions.
Since required reserves are zero, hitting that target at the aggregate level is very easy for the Bank of Canada: they just have to do the opposite of Government of Canada ("Treasury") transfers, as well as the flow of currency notes from private banks. After that, private banks with deficits just need to get their hands on the surpluses at other banks in the inter-bank market (by any means necessary).
What has happened in 2020 is that banks have parked deposits at the Bank of Canada (which happened to a smaller extent in the Financial Crisis, as seen in the chart).
Simplified Framework of Government Finance
In my book Understanding Government Finance (link to online bookstores), I discussed what I termed the "Simplified Framework of Government Finance" (Section 3.3). I used this framework to explain monetary operations, which feature prominently in Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). The Simplified Framework was based on how the Bank of Canada operated in practice, which deviated from how the American Federal Reserve operated.
Historically, the main difference between the Bank of Canada and the U.S. Federal Reserve was bank reserve requirements. Since American economics 101 textbook authors insisted on indoctrinating students with money multiplier stories[2], the Federal Reserve clung to these archaic rules, which requires banks to hit a particular level of settlement balances at the end of reserve periods. This makes monetary operations more complex, which in turn infected most MMT primers. (It is unclear whether the recent abolition of reserve requirements in the United States will show up in mainstream economics 101 textbooks.) I got rid of reserve requirements in my Simplified Framework, resulting in, umm, a simplified framework in which to study monetary operations.
Repo!
The next qualitative difference that used to exist was the use of repurchase agreements, commonly termed repos (since that sounds cooler). If one looks at the top panel of the first figure in this article, one sees that the size of the Bank of Canada's balance sheet used to rise slowly over time (with a small hiccup around the Financial Crisis). As the top panel of the next figure showed, that balance sheet size was almost exactly equal to the amount of currency in circulation (and then, the Government of Canada's balance in the Receiver General's fund).
Currency demand is relatively stable over time (with seasonal effects); supporting low denomination transctions by legitimate businesses, and larger denomination transactions in the underground economy (as in the "legitimate businessman's club"). (United States currency is used outside the United States as a store of value -- explaining why the $100 bill is issued in large amounts -- whereas the Canadian dollar has less cachet on that front.) This demand stability meant that the Bank of Canada's balance sheet size was stable, and there would be little need to shrink its balance sheet in response to cyclical developments. This allowed the Bank of Canada to steadily grow its balance sheet by the straightforward tactic of buying Government of Canada bonds outright.[3]
Conversely, since bank deposits follow lending activity, the Federal Reserve needed to have the capacity to shrink its balance sheet. This meant outright purchases of bonds is less attractive, since the central bank does not want to deal with the accounting headache of capital losses. Instead, part of the balance sheet growth is via asset purchases that can be easily reversed without a capital loss -- which is literally what a repurchase agreement is.[4] As such, a significant portion of the Fed's balance sheet always consisted of repos, whereas the Bank of Canada saw little need for those instruments.[5]
The newfound love of repos by the Bank of Canada gives a quantitative metric to the extent that the Bank views its balance sheet growth to be temporary.
Why Do This?
Having covered the explanation of what is happening, we can now turn to the more interesting question: why is the Bank of Canada doing this?
One could slog through Bank of Canada communications, and distill the official answer. However, the explanation seems rather obvious: the collapse in economic activity caused the financial system to be looking out over the abyss, and drastic measures were needed to put a net in place.
The risks to the private sector are straightforward. Although the CMHC has generously guaranteed the entire stock of high-risk residential mortgages, there are still debts issued by non-financial firms, as well as unsecured household debt. Cascading failures here are obviously dangerous.
However, the extent of the downturn in activity is raising even scarier risks -- provincial finance. The Canadian provinces are in the forefront of the Canadian welfare state -- but they do not have their own central banks. One may note that Euro area sovereigns are often compared to Canadian provinces. Much like the ECB, the Bank of Canada has no choice but to throw out the notion of moral hazard, and make sure that the provincial bond market remains liquid.
The mechanisms are both direct and indirect: the Bank of Canada appears to be buying everything that is not nailed down, and is extending easy credit to the Banks to allow them to finance positions in governmental bonds. Meanwhile, those banks are parking their cash at the Bank of Canada, keeping their risk measures nice and controlled.
This should not be thought of as "saving the economy," at least directly. Instead, it is preventing a mindless collapse of wholesale funding markets. This means that economic distress will reflect problems in the real economy, rather than the real economy being dragged down by the dimwitry of the financial sector (as was the case in 2008). Unfortunately, there are serious problems in the real economy, as there is a surplus of expensive hydrocarbon sources, and some industries are not going to be functional in the post-virus "normal." No amount of balance sheet wizardry by the Bank of Canada can address those issues; at best, fiscal policy can be used to counter-act the effects of the needed changes to activity.
Footnotes:
[1] The Government of Canada ("the Treasury" if we map to American parlance) issues long-dated debt as a counter-part of that balance at the Bank of Canada. The government launched a new programme to lend to banks on a short-term basis, since this cash balance is far in excess of actual needs. The net result is that the Government of Canada is borrowing at a high rate in long-term debt markets in order to be able to lend overnight to banks (and the banks themselves finance positions in long-term debt). This is considered "prudential financial management" in the neoliberal era, and economists employed by banks feel that this is very much in the national interest.
[2] "Practical men who believe themselves to be quite exempt from any intellectual influence, are usually the slaves of some defunct economist." J.M. Keynes.
[3] The Bank of Canada purchases Government of Canada bonds outright during auctions. If this were more well known, many Teutonic economists would need access to fainting couches.
[4] The central bank enters into an agreement with a counter-party -- presumably a primary dealer, which are mainly bank subsidiaries in 2020 -- to buy a bond at a certain price, with a matching obligation by the counter-party to buy it back at another price at a fixed date in the future. (If the next day, it is an overnight repo, otherwise it is a term repo.) This is economically equivalent to the central bank lending to the counter-party using a bond as collateral, and the pricing convention is based on the implied rate of interest -- the "repo rate."
[5] If one looks at the data table for the Bank of Canada balance sheet, repos are broken out as an item. Previously, repos were part of "Other Assets" (and are treated as such before 2007). I had to contact the Bank of Canada when writing Understanding Government Finance to verify that repos were part of "Other Assets," and I probably would need to update that portion of the text if I do a new edition.
(c) Brian Romanchuk 2020
How much the CAD$ will be devalued to USD as a result and imbalances ?
ReplyDeleteWhat is the impact on housing sector ?
None of this should have any effect on the Canadian dollar, if currency traders were sensible. Since they aren’t, anything could happen. Since the US is also undertaking QE in size, not sure what the net effect is.
DeleteThese operations are just preventing a financial system meltdown that takes out the housing market. Mortgages are largely guaranteed by the Federal Government (via CMHC), so spreads should not be too wild. I have no idea what’s happening in housing, but I think the real economy is more important than interest rates right now.
Gold to C$ just hit a record high. Central Banks are determined to keep the air in the bubble of 265 trillion $$ of unpayable debt by governments and corporations and propping up defacto banko pension funds by printing trillions in fake fiat currency.
DeleteFood inflation and housing rents have soared. As in Japan once the QEing starts it will never end until the whole systems implodes or explodes and societies rebel as their standard of living collapses.
Gold steadily lost value in nominal terms throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Did prices stop going up? Nope.
DeleteAs for food inflation, there's obviously some shortages still. However, prices are not really moving around here, other than maybe some meats. So, not exactly a whole lot of support for your assertions.
Meat inflating by 30% and other staples in doulbe digits in a only a few months. Rents and housing have been increasing at double digit rates. Soon there will be tax inflation with 10 tp 30% increases across the board. Middle class will be further gutted and savers, pensioners and those on fixed incomes will be destroyed and printing 100s of billions in fake fiat currency will only make things worse. Canadian standard of living on the downward slope.
DeleteNo effect. The C$ lost 10% in 2 days after QEing was announced. Traded down to .69.
DeleteDuring the cv-19 disruption, we can divide the economy into two sectors: essential and non-essential.
ReplyDeleteThe essential sector receives income pretty much unchanged from normal times. However, being unable to spend into the non-essential sector, surplus (forced) savings is building in the hands of essential sector members.
This surplus is parked in banks for storage.
Now consider the income and spending of the non-essential sector. The spending of this sector has essentially stopped, as has income. Without private 'non-essential' spending, many taxes fail to collect. This leaves government continuing to pay social benefits bereft of normally flowing tax dollars to counterbalance. A hole in the normal financial flow has been created.
The result: The essential sector has a monetary surplus parked in banks. Government, the creator of fiat money, has a monetary hole needing financial refill. The central bank is the source of refilling.
This course of events is following standard MMT banking theory... so it seems to me.
Well said, Mr. Sparks.
DeleteThe pity about MMT is that it is a perfectly functional pair of reading glasses that dare not utter its name.
Could someone more fully explain footnote #1?
ReplyDeleteWhat does "counter-part of that balance at the Bank of Canada" mean, and why does the govt need to lend to banks at all, can't the CB do it directly without treasury involvement?
The Department of Finance (equivalent of Treasury) is now keeping a big balance at the BoC. I’m away from my computer, and don’t have the number handy, but I think it was $30 billion. This implies the need to borrow an extra $30 billion in the market. Since the balance is the property of the Department of Finance, they are the ones who lend it out. In case my sarcasm was not clear enough, I don’t think this arrangement makes any sense in the first place, so there’s no point in asking whether it could be done differently (yes it could).
DeleteThanks for the reply. The sarcasm was indeed clear. It's the stuff leading up to the sarcasm I don't get... What I got out of all this was, the government lends to banks who then buy government bonds with it... still scratching my head.
DeleteThe banks don’t *have* to buy GCAN bonds, rather it is likely (and probably not 100% of tye extra debt). However, government debt has to be higher (otherwise the cash pile could have been used to pay down debt.)
DeleteGiven all the dramatic ex nihilo money creation by the BoC, we must remember that shortly after the GFC, constitutional lawyer Rocco Galati was retained by the Committee on Monetary and Economic Reform to implore the BoC to adhere to its mandate to provide virtually interest-free loans to federal/provincial and municipal govts for creation and maintenance of public infrastructure. The case was tossed by the SCC, which declared the matter needed to be settled by via political means. IOW, it's a legal hot potato. See Amanda Lang interview Galati here:
ReplyDeletehttps://www.cbc.ca/news/business/rocco-galati-challenges-bank-of-canada-to-offer-interest-free-loans-1.3065650
So the banks repos are around 200billion. They borrow at .025% from BoC and buy all sorts of fed and provincial debt instruments which pay a coupon higher than the .025% borrowed to finance their purchase. They then park their repo 200billion on the BoC balance sheet and receive .025%. Dose anyone know how many billions of taxpayer $$$ in coupon payments the banks will net from this guaranteed setup?
ReplyDeleteI read Blackrock, biggest ETF bond holder on the planet, is now inserted into the BoC as a consultant on what corporate bonds are bought. No moral hazard here. How much is this costing taxpayers? Once the fox is in the hen-house you'll never get rid of it and stocks and many ETFs will be next when the bubble starts leaking again.
ReplyDeleteAnyway of knowing how much and who is getting repo $$ for ABS, ABCP and CLO? Probably not as it would signal problem banks with their loan book. Thxs.
ReplyDeleteIs the repos for gvt debt instruments required to be left in BoC account to sterilize that $$, so not to cause even more inflation than the $$$ printing has already caused? Thxs.
1) They never announce counter-parties. 2) If they are forced to keep the money with the BoC, what exactly would the transaction represent? “Here’s a loan, but you can’t touch the money?”
DeleteThis will have no inflationary effect, so that’s not a worry.
The Fed Reserve, unlike the ecb, sterilized trillions by paying good interest on excess reserves, keeping the $$$ at the fed. 100s of billions were paid to banks for excess reserves.
DeleteDuh! The banks then keep the spread with the bonds they buy! What don't you understand? The $$$ is sterilized but the banks net the spread, free $$ to recapitalize the underwatr banks. This the recapitalization, on taxpayer $$$, that occurred in america thanks to fed and blackrock and that ripoff model has landed in canada. No oversight at BoC so free taxpayer $$$ for banks, blackrock, new political connected hires, consultants and unbid contracts all funded by the coupon payment from the billions in QEing flowing from taxpayers into BoC interest payments. SCAM! RIPPOFF! in the billions!
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