March’s monetary development statistics from the ECB provide early insights from the money sector into the impact of the COVID-19 on the EA economy. Broad money (M3) growth jumped to 7.5%, the fastest YoY growth rate since December 2008. The key messages for the real economy here are threefold: (1) households and corporates are maintaining a high preference for holding liquid assets (€9.3tr) in the face of higher uncertainty and the low opportunity cost of holding money; (2) corporate demand for ST emergency liquidity has jumped sharply with government support playing an important role in ensuring future credit supply; (3) the contrasting slowdown in household credit demand so far reflects weaknesses in consumer credit rather than in mortgage demand. The EA Bank Lending Survey results (also published this week) suggest that these trends are likely to continue/accelerate throughout 2Q20.
Messages from the money sector
The ECB’s “Monetary developments in the euro area” statistics for March 2020 released this morning, provide early insights from the monetary sector regarding the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the EA economy.
Growth in broad money supply (M3) jumped to 7.5% YoY in March 2020 from 5.6% in February. This represents the fastest rate of growth in broad money since December 2008. This growth was driven by the rapid growth in narrow money (M1) which grew 10.3% in March and contributed 7.0ppt of the total 7.5% growth in M3. Narrow money growth, in turn, was driven by demand for overnight deposits which grew 10.9% and represented 6.3ppt of the total growth in M3.
At a time of great uncertainty and with the opportunity cost of holding money very low, households (HHs) and corporates (NFCs) have a strong preference for liquidity – €9.3trillion is currently sitting in (cash) and overnight deposits with March seeing the highest monthly inflows YTD. In December 2008, overnight deposits accounted for 35% of total broad money. Today, they account for 60%. This is despite the fact that overnight rates are only 0.2% for HHs and 0.0% for NFCs compared with inflation of 0.7% (March 2020). As described in “Brutally exposed” and “Are we there yet?”, persistent HH net financial savings at a time of low/negative rates is a clear symptom of the enduring debt overhang on the EA.
From a counterparts perspective, credit to the private sector contributed 4.5ppt of the total 7.5% in broad money albeit with different dynamics between the HH and NFC sectors. On an adjusted basis, credit to the private sector grew 5.0% in March versus 3.7% in February. This is the fastest rate of growth since February 2009 (albeit, still lagging the supply of money, see “Are we there yet?” for why this matters).
NFC lending, which had been slowing since April 2019, rebounded to 5.4% YoY in March 2020 from the recent low of 3.0% in February 2020. The monthly flow of adjusted loans to NFC rose to €118bn compared with monthly flows of only €6bn and €11bn in February and January respectively.
Of this €118bn, the largest segment was ST loans with a maturity of up to 1 year which grew €46bn having fallen in the previous two months. This data is consistent with the results of the EA Bank Lending Survey (April 2020) which noted the “clear upward impact of Covid-19 pandemic on firms’ loan demand, largely driven by emergency liquidity needs.” These trends are expected to continue through 2Q20. Banks indicated that they expect credit standards from NFC lending to ease considerably on “account of the support measures introduced by governments.”
In contrast, HH credit growth slowed to 3.4% from 3.7% in January and February 2020. Mortgages, which account for over three-quarters of EA household lending, grew 4.0% from 4.3% in February and 4.1% in January. However, there was a more noticeable slowdown in consumer credit. This slowed to 3.9% in March from 6.2% in February and is now growing at the slowest rate since November 2016. The bank lending survey noted that, “A continued net tightening of credit standards and a strongly negative net balance for household loan demand are expected by banks in the second quarter of 2020”.
Conclusion
While today’s monetary data contains few surprises, it does provide valuable insights into the impact of COVID-19 on the real economy. Uncertainty remains elevated in both the HH and corporate sectors and liquidity preferences support my earlier hypothesis that the EA is still dealing with an enduring debt overhang – a topic that I will be returning to in an update of sector balances in the EA.
There is a positive sign from the NFC sector. The increase demand for ST emergency funding is obvious, and indications from banks that government support will facilitate an easing of credit standards in 2Q20 is welcome. The signs from the HH sector are less encouraging. The negative impact on consumption can already be seen and, in contrast to the NFC sector, banks expect credit standards to tighten in the near future. Expect further divergence in NFC and HH credit growth over the next quarters.
Please note that the summary comments above are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately.
History often rhymes and occassionally repeats itself
In his 1992 analysis “Maastricht and All That”, the late economist Wynne Godley argued that, “the present situation is screaming aloud for co-ordinated reflation, but there exists neither the institutions nor an agreed framework of thought which will bring about this obviously desirable result.” Yesterday, and almost thirty years later, Fabio Panetta, a member of the ECB’s Executive Board, called for a “strong and symmetric fiscal response that offsets the economic damage from the pandemic.” Echoing Godley, Panetta stressed the risks of the current, asymmetric fiscal responses, argued why a new framework was required and made the threat to the future of the single market very clear.
From a corporate, rather than an investment perspective, one of his most interesting observations was that, “uneven fiscal support implies that a firm’s location, rather than its business model, will be the decisive factor in determining whether it survives the crisis.” A new angle?
What links Godley and Panetta’s observations is the fact that by design, the nation states of the euro area (EA) have given up sovereignty of their national currencies – they have become users rather than issuers of currency – and have, in effect, limited policy options to controlling money supply and balancing budgets. Why does this matter? In previous posts, I have argued that: (1) monetary policy has been only partially successful, at best, but also carries hidden risks; (2) asymmetric rules that are tough on deficits but weak on surpluses are inappropriate in the current situation; and (3) this is the time for co-ordinated, counter-cyclical fiscal policy across the EA.
One of Godley’s criticisms of the Maastricht Treaty was that it created no new institutions other than the ECB and yet, somewhat ironically, it is the ECB that is now leading the arguments for a new and more appropriate policy framework (see also “Fiscal, first and foremost“). Panetta concluded that, “Acting now to create the conditions for a symmetric fiscal response will help all member countries to shorten the duration of the crisis period, protect the economic base on which their future production structures and exports rely, and – perhaps most importantly – uphold the premise of a shared and indivisible European destiny.”
I would concur up until the final point – most importantly acting now will minimise the appalling human costs not only of the pandemic itself but also of the subsequent economic downturn. This should be the top priority for all. EU leaders meet tomorrow (23 April 2020) to debate their response and to consider possible funding models. Their responsibilty is immense.
Please note that summary comments above are extracts from more detailed analysis (including extended links to Modern Monetary Theory and Balance Sheet Theory) that is available separately.
In previous posts, I have highlighted how the basic macro building blocks that are required for a sustained recovery in European bank sector profitability are missing. In this post, I use recently published ECB supervisory bank statistics, to illustrate why the sector also remains poorly positioned to absord the impacts of the Covid-19 pandemic at the micro level.
On the bright side, the capital ratios of “significant institutions” (ie, banks supervised by the ECB) rose to 18.4% at the end of 4Q18, the highest level since the ECB began publishing their supervisory bank statistics in 2Q15. The CET 1 ratio was 14.8% (ranging from 12.2% in Spain to 18.8% in Belgium). Non-performing loans also hit a new low of 3.2% at the end of 4Q19 compared with 7.5% at the end of 2Q15 (but remain relatively high in Italy, Portugal, Cyprus and Greece).
However, profitability remains very weak. The aggregate ROE fell to only 5.2% in 4Q19 compared with 6.2% a year earlier. Banks in Slovenia were the only banks in the ECB sample that delivered aggregate ROEs in excess of 10%. Elsewhere ROEs ranged from lows of 0.1% and 0.9% in Germany and Portugal respectively to 7.6% and 8.6% in the Netherlands and Austria respectively. Above average ROEs in Austria, Spain and Belgium reflect higher underlying profitability and lower leverage whereas ROEs in the Netherlands and France also reflect higher levels of leverage.
In a week, when large US banks have announced weaker profits driven to a large extent by higher provisioning levels, the low “pre-provision” profit cover of only 2.4x in the EA is concerning. Pre-provision profits were less than 2x provision charges in 4Q19 in Portugal (1.5x), Germany (1.8x), Italy (1.8x) and Spain (1.9x).
As the old joke goes, “If you want to go there, I wouldn’t be starting here.” Sadly, in this case, there is no humour, as weak profitability threatens the supply of credit at a time when it is needed most.
Please note that these brief summary comments are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately
At the time of writing (3 April 2020), more than one million people have been infected and more than 53 thousand have lost their lives in the Covid-19 pandemic. The euro area (EA) is one of the epicentres of this global crisis and faces huge human and economic costs.
Introduction
CMMP analysis can add little value to the debate over the human costs and the appropriate medical and social responses to the pandemic. It can add value to the economic and political debate, however, by applying its three core analytical frameworks – global debt dynamics; money credit and business cycles; and financial sector balances.
I begin by challenging three myths from the past two decades that: (1) painful structural reforms post-2000 were the main driver of Germany’s recovery and resurgent competitiveness; (2) existing fiscal frameworks (including the Stability and Growth Pact) are still relevant in 2020; and (3) “this crisis is primarily the hour of national economic policy” (Issing 2020).
Instead, I argue that: (1) the main reason why Germany’s fiscal deficits did not widen substantially after the collapse of the 2000 IT bubble was that ECB policy led to other countries experiencing asset bubbles, lost competitiveness (and a build-up of unsustainable debt); (2) asymmetric fiscal rules that are tough on deficits but weak on surpluses are inappropriate in the current situation; and (3) this is the time to re-establish coordinated, counter-cyclical fiscal policy across the EA.
EA governments have the opportunity to show that it’s not just the ECB that “will do whatever is needed”. More importantly, failure to acknowledge and debunk the myths of the past and to respond to this opportunity appropriately, risks immeasurable harm to the future of the European project.
Myth #1: The role of structural reforms
Twenty years ago, the euro area (EA) experienced a sharp economic slowdown following the collapse of the IT bubble. The Germany economy was hit hard in the process, experiencing three consecutive quarters of negative growth (3Q01-1Q02). The domestic fiscal response was insufficient to counter the massive increase in savings by both the NFC and HH sectors.
In short, Germany had become the second developed economy (after Japan) to experience a balance sheet recession in the post-war period (Koo, 2015). In response, important “Agenda 2010” structural reforms (pensions, labour market) were introduced between 1999 and 2005. This (painful) experience has shaped the enduring narrative about the requirement for similar reforms across Southern Europe.
Unfortunately this narrative is incomplete and underplays the role of ECB policy at the time. In the face of German economic weakness, the ECB cut ST interest rates to 2% in 2003 – lower that they had ever been under the Bundesbank.
This had little impact on Germany where money supply, prices and wages continued to stagnate, as balance sheet recessions theorists predict.
The story was very different elsewhere in Europe. Other countries in the EA lost competitiveness against Germany, experienced unsustainable asset bubbles, and built up unsustainable levels of debt.
This brief historical summary is important because it falsifies the idea that recessions and the lack of competitiveness in Europe’s periphery are the results of “national idleness”. Instead, they occurred because Germany was unable to use fiscal stimulus to address its own severe balance sheet recession and ECB monetary policy was forced to pick up the slack, leading to asset bubbles across the EA and, when these bubbles burst in 2007, balance sheet recessions in periphery countries and ultimately the euro crisis.
Myth #2: Fiscal frameworks are still relevant
In February, before the full impact of the pandemic was becoming understood, I was arguing that the EA was still dealing with the legacy of these debt overhangs. Private sector debt levels were still high too high, money, credit and business cycles were significantly weaker than in past cycles and inflation remained well below target.
In spite of this, the nations of the EA were collectively running a fiscal policy that was about as tight as at any period in the past twenty years. They were doing this at a time when the private sector was running persistent net financial surpluses. This policy mix failed a basic “common sense test” even before the wider impacts of the pandemic were emerging.
A key lesson from the German (and Japanese) experience is that the deflationary gap in economies facing debt overhangs is equal to the amount of private unborrowed savings. Balance sheet recession theorists argue that these “unborrowed savings (at a time of zero interest rates) are responsible for the weakness in the economy, and it is because the economy is so weak that fiscal stimulus is necessary” (Koo, 2015).
Relating the same argument to inflation targets, when inflation and inflation expectations are below target and rates are zero or negative, fiscal policy should lead with an expansionary stance and monetary policy should cooperate by focusing on guaranteeing low interest rates for as long as needed.
Since, I wrote these comments, EA governments have responded with a series of emergency fiscal measures including immediate stimulus via spending and foregone revenues, deferrals of some revenue sources, and other liquidity provisions and guarantees. However, the scale of the responses varies widely and, most importantly, there has been a lack of common fiscal responses, even in the EA.
Before, turning to this issue in myth #3, I will highlight an important argument from my preferred sector balances approach and Wynne Godley’s core identity that states:
Domestic private balance + domestic government balance + foreign balance = zero
Governments in low-debt countries often overlook that they have benefitted massively from membership of the single market and the ability to run large current account surpluses. Germany was able to emerge from its earlier recession by boosting exports to the rest of the EA where economies were responding (too quickly) to ECB rate cuts. Today, Dutch private and public sector deficits are offset by financial deficits run by the RoW.
Put simply, “asymmetric fiscal rules – tough on deficits, weak on surpluses – are quite inappropriate to the [current] macroeconomic situation” (Gentiloni, 2020).
Myth #3: This is the hour of national economic policy
The EA is one of the epicentres of the Covid-19 pandemic and faces huge human and economic costs. Non-essential services in major economies that account for one third of total output have been closed and the IMF estimates that each month’s closure equates to a 3% drop in annual GDP. The IMF concludes that, “a deep European recession this year is a foregone conclusion” and today’s PMI releases support that conclusion.
Policy makers have responded quickly with large monetary and fiscal expansions (including suspensions of previous fiscal rules and limits). Through its Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme (PEPP) the ECB plans to buy €750 billion in addition bonds (on top of the previously announced €120bn purchases) and has removed country limits.
Debate now centres on whether a further common and significant response is needed. Options under consideration include ESM credit lines (combined with OMT); so-called “corona bonds”, a EA Treasury, and one-off joint expenditures.
Once again, this debate has exposed divisions between “defensive hawks” and more “ambitious integrators”. The French, Italian and six other EA governments are proposing combining using the ESM with the issuance of corona bonds. The German government has a preference for exhausting other options first, while the Dutch government has not only stated that use of the ESM should be considered only as a last resort, it has also ruled out the option of issuing corona bonds.
The IMF argues that, “the determination of EA leaders to do what it takes to stabilise the Euro should not be understated.” The EU’s economic chief, Paolo Gentiloni, believes that “consensus is growing day by day that we need to face an extraordinary crisis with extraordinary tools.” Nonetheless the corona bond debate threatens to deepen the rift between EA capitals over how far and how fast the EA should harness common fiscal solutions to tackle the pending economic damage.
The future of the European project may rest on how this debate is resolved.
Please note that the summary comments above are extracts from more detailed analysis that is available separately.