Eakinomics: Never
Take a Knife to a Gunfight
Yesterday at 8:00 am the Federal Reserve unloaded its arsenal, announcing an open-ended, unlimited
buying spree. As the Fed put it, “The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)
will purchase Treasury securities and agency mortgage-backed
securities in the
amounts needed to support smooth market functioning and
effective transmission of monetary policy to broader financial conditions
and the economy” (emphasis added).
But that is not all. As detailed in a new report by AAF’s Thomas Wade, the
Fed expanded the powers of two existing programs and created two new
facilities to extend credit to large employers via the purchase of
corporate debt. The Fed also revived an emergency lending vehicle last
used in the 2007-08 financial crisis to support small businesses and
consumers by encouraging investors to snap up securitized student debt,
auto debt, and credit-card debt. And efforts are only beginning, as the Fed
noted: “In addition to the steps above, the Federal Reserve expects to
announce soon the establishment of a Main Street Business Lending Program
to support lending to eligible small-and-medium sized businesses,
complementing efforts by the SBA.”
The upshot is summarized in the chart below, stolen from Wade’s piece.
Glossary and timeline
of Fed emergency lending facilities

Now for the bad news: It won’t work. In the immediate aftermath of the
announcement, the Dow Jones Industrial Average rallied by over 1,000
points. But within short order, equity markets were heading south again.
It’s not the Fed’s fault; it is simply dealing with the symptoms and not
the cause. When the customers disappeared, businesses had no revenue, a
phenomenon that has cascaded through the economy. In similar fashion, when
their jobs disappeared, workers had no income. In both cases, people
started selling everything they could lay their fingers on to raise cash
and hang on. The mass sell-off has buffeted financial markets, and the Fed
has done a sterling job of minimizing the turbulence, but the underlying
problem remains. If something is not done to address the underlying decline
in the Main Street economy, the financial markets will ultimately
fall apart.
The good news: Congress can do something about this, but as I write on
Monday afternoon it has thus far been unable to get out of its own way and
get the job done. The Fed was laying the groundwork for passage of some
form of emergency
loan program, both for small businesses (about $300 billion in
the latest Senate draft) and large business (about $500 billion). The Fed
is opening up facilities that can purchase these loans, thereby ensuring
that the cash positions of both the borrower and the lender are supported.
So, with Congress’s help, the Fed action can be both dramatic and
effective. In its absence, the Fed is simply outgunned.
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