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Eakinomics: The
Data Have Spoken
On Tuesday, Federal Reserve (Fed) Chairman Jerome Powell and Treasury
Secretary Steven Mnuchin made a joint appearance before the Senate Banking
Committee (with an encore yesterday at the House Financial Services
Committee). Predictably, a point of contention was Mnuchin’s November 19 announcement
that the temporary lending facilities that the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and
Economic Security (CARES) Act created at the Fed would lapse as scheduled
on December 31.
Ranking Member Sherrod Brown was pointed in his criticism, saying that the
president and Secretary Mnuchin “appear to be trying to sabotage our
economy on the way out the door.”
When Eakinomics went over this territory, I argued, “As the Mnuchin letter
makes clear, market conditions are much better now. Volumes have returned
to pre-COVID levels and spreads are nearly back to their previous levels.
It is far from obvious that markets need even the promise of the existence
of these facilities. Of course, if spreads widen on the announcement that
the facilities will lapse, Mnuchin has time to reverse course. The data can
decide this one.”
The data have decided. There is no need for the facilities. The graph below
shows the spread between BBB corporate securities and Treasuries from
January 1, 2019, to December 1, 2020. The sharp spike, peaking on March 23,
2020, is a clear indicator of the market distress as the pandemic exploded.
The Fed argues that the mere announcement of the facilities existence served
to generate confidence and the spreads quickly dropped.

If the liquidity facilities were still needed, then the announcement
of their cessation should have had the opposite effect and caused spreads
to rise. Instead, spreads remain on a mildly downward trajectory. The data
have decided the issue.
This is exactly the position articulated by Senator Pat Toomey in the
hearing: One argument “was that the viability of the credit markets depends
on these backstop facilities. Well, that's clearly been disproven by the
fact that the announcement of their end brought absolutely no disruption to
any financial markets that I can tell at all.”
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