The Peter Zeihan Podcast Series - Why the Fed Is Shrinking the Balance Sheet
Episode Date: February 16, 2023Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell wants to shrink the balance sheet to zero over the next few years. And while this may be good for the economy and the US overall, not everyone will like the outc...ome...especially our vest-wearing friends down on Wall Street.Full Newsletter: https://mailchi.mp/zeihan/fed-shrinking-balance-sheet
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Good morning from Still Chilly, Colorado, Peter Zion, coming to you to talk about what's going on in the world of finance.
For those of you who have not been watching, the U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell has indicated that he plans to shrink the balance sheet down to zero over the course of the next couple of years.
So, you know, real quick, what's the balance sheet and why does it exist?
The Federal Reserve prefers to use interest rates and money operations in order to manipulate the financial system to regulate the flow of capital, the cost of capital,
and in general what happens in the wider world.
But from time to time, that is not enough.
You can only push interest rates so low.
I mean, once you hit zero, there's really no further to go.
And you can only shove so much money into the banking system to encourage lending.
If people aren't borrowing, people are not borrowing.
So, from time to time, certainly at the end of, or in the middle of the financial crisis and into COVID,
the Federal Reserve dipped into a series of relatively unorthodox tools that used the balance sheet.
And what they did is they would expand the money supply, print currency,
and then use that money to purchase bonds on the second market.
They could be car loans or college loans or credit card debt, mortgages, whatever it happened to be.
And from 2008 until the peak, which was about, probably about two years ago now,
they did $9 trillion that way.
So, you know, the U.S. federal budget deficit is about a trillion.
so you can get an idea of just how stimulatory that was.
And there were a lot of people who thought that this was irresponsible
and then it was inflationary and it was unorthodox,
and, you know, they have a point.
But from the Federal Reserve's point of view,
the alternative was to fall into a deeper session
or maybe even depression,
and they didn't feel they had much of a choice.
What's going on now is the economy is unsounder footing.
We are at record low unemployment levels,
and growth has been moderate to strong for three years in a row.
So the Federal Reserve feels it's time to kind of get out of that business and get back to normal.
And if from the point that they really started this process a year ago to two years being done,
three-year process, you know, that's like three, four times as fast as they built the thing up.
So really quick, actually, when you're thinking about the size of this $9 trillion, that's a lot.
Now, what will that mean?
It should, under normal circumstances, typically, means slower economic growth.
Because when you reduce the cost of capital, less stuff.
gets funded and the stuff that does get funded tends to be more viable. So more industrial plant,
more infrastructure, more education, less on things that are like emerging technologies that haven't
made it to the prototype stage yet, less on technologies that don't seem to be working out in
terms of cost-benefit analysis. Overall, from an economic efficiency point of view, this is a really
good step because shaking out some of the dead weight that has evolved in this environment we've had for
the last 15 years of nearly free capital. You know, we've seen a lot of crazy shit go down,
and we're finally going to see a lot of that get shaken out. Interest rates are getting back to a
more normal posture. The Fed is not done raising. He's got at least another full percentage
point to go. I would argue probably closer to three. And we're finally seeing all this surplus
liquidity go out of the system and return us to a more balanced system.
which means when we get to the next financial crisis or the next recession, the Fed will have a lot more tools, a lot more wiggle room, and the overall economy will be a lot healthier. These are all good things. But what is good for the system as a whole is not necessarily good for each individual piece. So think of all the things that we have seen bubble up over the last 15 years because of cheap capital. In part, this is the Green Revolution. Technologies that on a cost-benefit basis, once you include,
things like intermittency and geography, you know, are not really ready for prime time.
EVs, which are very materials intensive and tap supply chains that are not secure that we want
to produce at scale, even though their carbon footprint in a lot of the country is heavier than
ICE's internal combustion engines for at least several years. And then you've got your more
traditional crap, your subprime, your Beanie babies, your Bitcoin, things that probably should
have never existed in the first place.
of that is going to be in a much more difficult capital environment, and we should expect that to
adjust appropriately. But perhaps where we're going to see the most pain is in finance. When the
amount of money to be managed shrinks, the number of money managers that you need goes down. And it's
not like the Federal Reserve is the only player here. There are other things going on in the overall
economic system that are also pushing us in the direction of less capital. I'd say the single biggest one,
maybe even more significant than the Federal Reserve in the long term is what's happening with the
baby boomers. As you get older, you get better at your job, you earn more money. And after age 50 to
55, your kids have moved out and your house has been paid down. So from 55 to 65, that's the most
money you will ever have in your life. And then you retire. And when you retire, you take your money
out of more prospective investments with higher velocity of capital, things like stocks and bonds,
and you put them into T-bills and cash. Because the next time there's a market.
market crash, if you haven't done that, you lose your shirt and you're no longer working and you can't
buy a new one. So the baby boomers for the last 15 years have kind of been in that magical area
between 55 and 65 where they've been saving money and investing it and that has happened at the
same time that the Federal Reserve has maintained an ultra-loose monetary policy. Well, on average,
the baby boomers retired last year, which means that their money is rapidly draining away from
the system at the same time that the Federal Reserve is tightening policy.
policy. So over the course of the next two to three years, we're looking at a global reduction
in available capital of at least a third, and we will probably see the number of people
employed in the financial sector in the United States dropped by a similar number. Good luck, folks.
It's going to be all about quality moving forward. All right, until next time.
