If the supply of new U.S.Treasury
securities keeps falling, we might see U.S. ten-year notes
next to the Faberg eggs on display in the Forbes Galleries
on New York's Fifth Avenue. I exaggerate, of course, but the
dwindling supply of Treasury securities has become one of
the biggest headaches in U.S. capital markets. Values are
relative, and it's hard to price risky bonds if you don't
have a stable benchmark against which to price them. A wobbly
benchmark increases risk, reduces market efficiency and hurts
growth. That's a harmful, if unintended, consequence of America's
misguided obsession about reducing public debt. Be careful
what you wish for.
Newly issued "on-the-run" long bonds, which banks
and securities dealers use to adjust interest-rate exposure
on a daily basis, are so scarce that the market will pay more
for them than for older Treasury issues of the same maturity.
"On-the-run" ten-year notes cost an extra one to
two points. That is, they yield about 20 basis points less
than older issues. Newly issued 30-year bonds yield 40 to
50 basis points less than a slightly older long bond.
Now 20 basis points may not sound like a lot. But it's a huge
chunk of the 100-basis-point spread between a AA-rated ten-year
corporate and ten-year Treasurys. Under ordinary circumstances,
managing a corporate bond portfolio is like juggling a half-dozen
oranges. Now it's like juggling the oranges on a ship's deck
in a rolling ocean. Corporate bond issuers and investors jump
around the yield curve depending on the vagaries of Treasury
supply, rather than on fundamental economic considerations.
Swap rates are replacing Treasury yields as the benchmark
for credit markets, as I reported in a recent column (see
"Euro swaps and the Nile perch," Nov. 1). Trouble
is, swap rates blow out whenever a systemic tremor passes
through the capital markets. Last summer's Y2K scare sent
the price of top-rated corporate bonds tumbling--not because
credit conditions turned bad but because the swap market went
into overload. It can't be good news for the economy when
credit markets go haywire for reasons that have nothing to
do with credit quality.
Three decades ago Robert Mundell, who just won the Nobel Prize
in economics, showed that an increase in public debt can improve
economic efficiency. Equity and credit markets have little
trouble turning the expected earnings of corporations into
capital, he explained, but it is difficult to capitalize the
future earnings of households. Public debt turns the future
taxes of individuals into capital and increases the efficiency
of markets. For that matter, if a tax cut improves growth
and reduces tax avoidance, the government bonds issued to
cover the ensuing shortfall in revenues represent an addition
to wealth.
This insight became the germ of what came to be known as "supply-side
economics." Mundell was a generation ahead of Keynesian
conventional wisdom. But he also was miles ahead of many of
his University of Chicago colleagues, who were writing panegyrics
to the "efficient market hypothesis" and "rational
expectations."
Markets are never perfectly efficient, Mundell taught, because
capital markets can't possibly capitalize all the economy's
future income streams. We don't issue IPOs on our kid's lemonade
stand. Even Internet startups go through several generations
of sweat equity and venture capital before hitting the capital
markets. In Mundell's framework, the point is to find ways
to make imperfect markets more efficient.
Pricing business risk is the job of private capital markets.
The job of government is to minimize systemic risks. It's
your tough luck if you lose money on the stock exchange, but
it's the government's job to make sure you aren't mugged on
the way there. By the same token, governments shouldn't mug
bond investors by inflating the currency, that is, by debasing
the unit of account in which future claims are paid.
Governments also promote certainty in capital markets by providing
a "well-funded public debt," as the U.S.' first
Treasury secretary, Alexander Hamilton, argued in his "Report
on the Public Debt." The optimal level of public debt
is the one which best enables private investors to take risks
on future business or household income.
Once again, policymakers--in America and other countries where
public accounts are moving into surplus--are bickering about
the wrong things. They still haven't caught up to the ideas
Bob Mundell published in 1960.
新闻链接:http://www.forbes.com/global/1999/1129/0224084a.html
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