QNB Group: Tapering of Quantitative Easing May Hurt Global Growth


(MENAFN- Qatar News Agency)  A tapering of Quantitative Easing (QE) by the U.S. Federal Reserve (the Fed) may hurt global growth, QNB Group concluded in its weekly analysis. While the evidence is mixed on how much support QE provides to the U.S. economy, the Fed's announcement on June 19 of its intention to start tapering QE later this year has produced a strong negative reaction in global financial markets with 10-years U.S. bond yields jumping 40 Basis Point (bps) following the announcement. On June 26, U.S. real GDP growth for the first quarter of 2013 was revised down from 2.4 percent to 1.8 percent. QNB Group forecasts the remainder of 2013 to be even weaker, with overall U.S. real GDP growth to be in the range of 1-1.5 percent. Under these conditions, QE tapering would inevitably result in an additional drag on economic growth through higher interest rates and lower investment. This may hurt global growth prospects as long-term interest rates rise globally over the coming months to adjust to this new post-QE world. The Fed's purchase of long-term assets started soon after the onset of the great recession brought about by the collapse of Lehman Brothers in September 2008. The goal of this unconventional monetary policy has been to reduce long-term interest rates in order to stimulate economic growth. More recently, the Fed has become even more specific in its QE by purchasing each month $45 billion of long-term US government bonds and $40 billion of mortgaged-backed securities. According to Fed statements, this policy will continue until unemployment falls below 6.5 percent and provided inflation remains below the Fed target rate of 2 percent. It was therefore surprising that the Fed hinted at a tapering of the purchase of long-term securities later this year, based on its own rather optimistic projections for the U.S. economy. The evidence on the QE impact on the U.S. economy is mixed. While QE has undoubtedly contributed to the U.S. recovery and a reduction of the unemployment rate from its peak of 10 percent in October 2009, it has also resulted in a rapid surge in share prices that many commentators believe are not justified by underlying fundamentals. Part of the problem with QE is that it injects liquidity indiscriminately into financial markets. Whether that liquidity is then used to finance higher economic activity or purchase financial assets crucially depends on financial intermediaries, including commercial banks. So far, it seems financial intermediaries have favored financial assets (divorcing them from their fundamentals) at the expense of increased lending to the private sector. QE tapering could bring this behavior to an abrupt end, according to QNB Group. There is, however, a more worrisome aspect of QE tapering that could negatively impact U.S. economic growth going forward. The exceptionally-low interest rate environment brought about by QE has unleashed a recovery in the economy mainly driven by the wealth effect of higher asset prices (both shares and home prices). If QE tapering results in a significant rise in long-term interest rates as it has been the case in the last few weeks, this wealth effect could be reversed, leading to lower consumer confidence and a reversal of the U.S. recovery seen so far. This may explain why a number of Fed officials rushed in recent days to backtrack on the Fed's announcement on June 19 and to reassure markets that QE tapering would only start once there is additional evidence of a strong recovery. The downward revision in the first quarter real GDP growth reduced expectations of a strong US recovery and thus partly calmed market fears about QE tapering. What happens in the U.S. has, of course, immediate spillover effects on the rest of the global economy. Not surprisingly, the jump in US long-term interest rates was mirrored throughout global bond markets. As a result, concerns about the negative impact of higher interest rates on global economic growth also led to further capital flight from emerging markets, an appreciation of the U.S. dollar, and lower commodity prices. What was surprising was the fact that worse-than-expected news on the US real GDP growth ended up calming financial markets as it implied a delay in the Fed's QE tapering. According to QNB Group, these developments may hurt global growth going forward and bring about additional volatility in global financial markets.


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