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SocGen Explains That Since The ECB's QE Will Fail, It Will Need To Be Increased To €3 Trillion, Include Stocks

Tyler Durden's picture




 

There are a bunch of things in the ECB post-mortem note just released by SocGen's Michel Martinez, reproduced below, but here are the punchlines.

First, on the impact of ECB QE on the economy: "we argue ECB QE could be five times less efficient than in the US. In December, press reports suggested that the ECB had run studies suggesting that a €1000bn QE programme would only boost price levels by 0.2-0.8 after two years, five to nine times less efficient than the studies for the US or the UK. The impact on GDP is not provided, but it would be reasonable to assume the same impact as on inflation on a cumulated basis."

In other words, it will be an outright failure as it "triest" to boost inflation expectations and the European economy in its current format. That, as a reminder, is its stated purpose.

So what does SocGen suggest? Simple: the same thing every Keynesian says when justifying why a piece of occult economic voodoo fails to work: it wasn't big enough. To wit:

"The potential amount of QE needed is €2-3 trillion! Hence for inflation to reach close to a 2.0% threshold medium term, the potential amount of asset purchases needed is €2-3tn, not a mere €1tn."

Or as Charles Dickens would put it:

And since there is nowhere near enough bond supply in Europe, the ECB will have to proceed with monetizing, drumroll, stocks.

Should the ECB target such an expansion of its balance sheet, it would have to ease some conditions on its bond purchases (liquidity rule, quality...) or contemplate other asset classes- equity stocks, Real Estate Investment Trust-(REIT), Exchange-traded fund (ETF)...- as the BoJ, previously.

Because what tens of millions of unemployed Europeans really need to help their lot in life, and to boost their confidence, is for the central bank to buy the stocks sold by the richest 0.001%.

* * *

Full note from SocGen:

Large QE with symbolic risk sharing

The ECB announcement today was well in line with our call that the sovereign QE programme could be large scale but not pari passu. The share of mutualisation is symbolic (1/11%). Yet, they point to higher volume than expected overall (€1140n in total) and reinforces the probability that the ECB would reach (or go over) its stated intention of 1trn increase in balance sheet.

A) The size of QE programme is €60bn per month, €1140bn in total

The main measure is an expandable asset purchase programme that includes European agencies and sovereign and complement the current programmes (Covered bond and ABS purchase programmes). Those new programmes will start in March 2015 and run until end September-16 or until the inflation outlook converges to 2.0% medium-term, which means that it could be bigger. The combined purchases will amount to €60bn per month. Apparently, the expanded programme will not include corporate bonds.

There was a large majority to today’s announcement while the Governing Council was unanimous on the idea that QE is a legal monetary policy tool.

Hence, the ECB will purchase €1140bn (60*19) from March 15 to September 2016. Today, the pace of covered bond and ABS purchases is close to €13bn per month, so additional purchases represent €47bn per month. The ECB stated that “purchases of securities of European institutions will be 12% of the additional asset purchases”. A quick rule of thumb suggests €230bn in ABS and covered bonds, €110bn in European agencies and €800bn of sovereign bonds.

The ECB also decided to cut the spread on the TLTRO rate, that would now be equal to the refinancing rate (0.05% instead of 0.15%)

B) Criteria to be specified in March

We know that the new programmes are running until September-2016 at least and that purchased bonds will be hold up to maturity. Obviously, purchases will be made on the secondary market for European issues and government bonds.

In terms of rating, it is likely that the conditions will be the same as for the ABSPP and CBPP3. First, the ECB will purchase investment grade bonds.

Secondly, for Greece and Cyprus (which are not investment grade), the condition would be that those countries “have an ongoing programme with the EU/IMF”. This would suggest that any failure to extend the current Greek programme that expires at the end of February would exclude Greece from any asset purchase programme.

Can the ECB buy at negative yield? Yes, said Draghi during the press conference

Which maturity? Details will have to be specified in March but Draghi suggested that maturities could be of 2-30 years.

Interestingly, Draghi said that it will have two limits on its purchases: 30% of the issuer outstanding and 25% of the issue. This latter limit will prevent the ECB of having a blocking minority in CACs, with the aim “to ensure that the ECB is pari passu”. As we argue below, this is not convincing, given the low degree of risk sharing.

C) Minimum symbolic risk sharing (8% risk sharing only on government bonds

As we expected, purchases of government bonds will be done according to capital key. The point is the degree of mutualisation is minimum(1/11). For most purchases, the National Central Banks (NCB) will purchase their national government bonds and bear the credit risk. The silver lining is that the less the credit risk is mutualised, the larger a QE program could become in volume terms.

The main piece of information in the ECB communiqué is here: “With regard to the sharing of hypothetical losses, the Governing Council decided that purchases of securities of European institutions (which will be 12% of the additional asset purchases, and which will be purchased by NCBs) will be subject to loss sharing. The rest of the NCBs’ additional asset purchases will not be subject to loss sharing. The ECB will hold 8% of the additional asset purchases. This implies that 20% of the additional asset purchases will be subject to a regime of risk sharing”.

So the ECB indicates that the degree of risk –sharing is 20%, which seems a good compromises. However, regarding government bonds, the decree of risk sharing seem symbolic(8/100-12=1/11). To put is simply, the ECB will purchase €70bn on a risk sharing basis while the NCB will purchase the remaining €730bn. Noteworthy, the ECB will likely give objectives to the NCBs (purchases according to the capital keys).

This approach is consistent with our long held view that the ECB QE could not be both large and pari passu. Legal and political hurdles remain large because of the two articles of the European Treaty: Article 123 on prohibition of monetary financing and Article 125 (no bailout clause or no mutualisation clause). The ECB might well be pari-passu ex ante as Draghi argues. Yet, in the case of a debt restructuring, either the CB would avoid the debt restructuring (remind that the Eurosystem avoided the Greek PSI in 2012) or the (bankrupt) national government would probably be obliged to recapitalize its NCB. In both cases, the bigger are the purchases, the larger is the expected loss given default of the private sector. Investors risk seeking such way of proceeding as a lack of confidence in the euro area. Hence the final outcome on sovereign bond spreads might be uncertain debt sustainability concerns increase in the future. The flow of purchases will be positive but lower liquidity and higher expected loss given default will play out negatively.

Will it work?

In a joint paper with rates strategists (What kind of ECB sovereign and what impact?, we argue ECB QE could be five times less efficient than in the US. In December, press reports suggested that the ECB had run studies suggesting that a €1000bn QE programme would only boost price levels by 0.2-0.8 after two years, five to nine times less efficient than the studies for the US or the UK. The impact on GDP is not provided, but it would be reasonable to assume the same impact as on inflation on a cumulated basis. These figures are consistent with our own estimates.

The potential amount of QE needed is €2-3 trillion! Hence for inflation to reach close to a 2.0% threshold medium term, the potential amount of asset purchases needed is €2-3tn, not a mere €1tn. Should the ECB target such an expansion of its balance sheet, it would have to ease some conditions on its bond purchases (liquidity rule, quality...) or contemplate other asset classes- equity stocks, Real Estate Investment Trust-(REIT), Exchange-traded fund (ETF)...- as the BoJ, previously.

So the onus will remain on delivery of better-designed fiscal policy and structural reform. But it is difficult to be hopeful on these fronts.

* * *

Of course, this means that the time to frontrun the expansion of ECB QE 1 has begun. The only problem is that for Draghi to act, stocks will have to crash first, and they can't crash if they are frontrunning the event the follows from their crash.

Good luck figuring that one out.

 

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Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:04 | 5693168 Manipuflation
Manipuflation's picture

This is a classic.  Every ZH'er should see this.  It's Grayson asking questions.  I do not beleive that this should be forgotten.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:53 | 5693649 tumblemore
tumblemore's picture

that was very good

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:14 | 5693205 Cannon Fodder
Cannon Fodder's picture

Why is inflation supposed to be a good thing to be targeted?

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:49 | 5693629 tumblemore
tumblemore's picture

It's a scam. They're counterfeiters who got themselves made legal.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:19 | 5693222 Chad_the_short_...
Chad_the_short_seller's picture

So get long stocks or sit back and watch stocks rally and bitch about it and not make money

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:52 | 5693640 tumblemore
tumblemore's picture

Indeed. They are going to give the banks vast amounts of money for toxic worthless assets and that money has to go somewhere and as it won't be productive investment it will be a bubble.

 

QE: creating a newer, bigger bubble to bail the banks out of the previous bubble.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:20 | 5693230 Baby Eating Dingo22
Baby Eating Dingo22's picture

But I thought 60 billion was carefully calculated and dosed accordingly?

ECB just as clueless, so they simply took Fed's number and went with it

But markit says it's good enough to make everything a screaming buy again

 

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:26 | 5693266 scaffold
scaffold's picture

Yeah. I don't really understand this moaning. QE is bad, it does nothing, it doesn't improve economy etc.

All this moaning while the answer is really simple and should be clear too all. There is no plan to improve economy, to change anything for better. No. The plan is to make big recession. But not now. What they are now doing is just preparing. Setting up the scene. They are just keeping things doing, not falling now. They have to buy this junk bonds to keep illusion. That is all.

But not for long. Not longer than the year.

As for now everything seems to be under control.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:28 | 5693277 TabakLover
TabakLover's picture

C'mon Greeks..............bring down this house-of-cards.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:37 | 5693319 trader1
trader1's picture

SocGen calls and raises....

Into which global / local projects and operations do they see the additional EUR 2 trillion flowing?

How does this contribute towards making the system sustainably, self-improving ad infinitum?

 

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:39 | 5693333 steveo77
steveo77's picture

I sent a small paypal to Dana Durnford, he wrote back right away with some thanks.    I am trying to help him fund his next mission.     We cannot sway the masses without simple visual proof. 

Here is the email exchange

His email is

danadurnford@hotmail.com

More info here, I strongly encourage those of you viewing ENE to consider "what can I do".    Send a few bucks is what you can do, do it.

http://nukeprofessional.blogspot.com/2015/01/dana-durnford-update-jan-17...

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:42 | 5693349 pupdog1
pupdog1's picture

Please sir, I want moar...

Operation Twist.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 15:54 | 5693388 cornflakesdisease
cornflakesdisease's picture

Eurobonds to the rescue!

 

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:22 | 5693515 Joebloinvestor
Joebloinvestor's picture

3 fucking trillion?!

They should have just given 500eu to each person to spend.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:46 | 5693623 tumblemore
tumblemore's picture

They should have let the banks go bust. That 3 trillion is going to fill the black hole of toxic debt inside the banks' balance sheets.

 

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:40 | 5693604 Dodge
Dodge's picture

As the EU falls and the Swiss rises the same decoupling can occur between China and the US -

China To Unpeg Yuan From Dollar?

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 17:09 | 5693702 Sorry_about_Dresden
Sorry_about_Dresden's picture

I have been waiting for China to unpeg the rmb for a few years. I opened a rmb denominated account and put my savings there instead of pissing it away in the stock market trying to do short term trades.

All off my savings went to the Bank of China from 2009 to date. If they decouple I will do well.

If China does remove the $-rmb peg she will experience some job loss and other unintended consequences but I think the new Chinese middle class will pick up the slack left by poor Americans. I have been to China 4 times since 2007 and I think there is enough internal consumption to  survive the decoupling. It seems they are letting the US Treasury reserve mature and buying gold instead of rolling the money back to the USA.

I've got half my savings in Yuan (rmb) denominated account and can't wait for the Chinese to wise up.

I might cash in my 401a and stick in the account. I will make up for the taxes and penalty with the parity of the rmb and dollar.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:44 | 5693615 tumblemore
tumblemore's picture

At mark to market the banks would all be bankrupt due to the scale of their toxic assets left over from the boom. The banking mafia have bribed or blackmailed the politicians into printing money to buy those toxic assets off the banks at face value - so basically transfering the banks' gambling debts to the public.

 

It is the biggest robbery in history and largely why the banking mafia have got so much richer since they crashed the global economy in 2008.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:51 | 5693634 andrewp111
andrewp111's picture

The only way that ECB QE can "work" is if government borrowing increases by an amount comparable to the magnitude of QE. As long as existing bond purchasers are being replaced with a central bank, it doesn't do much other than drive more money into other investments. But if government borrowing actually increases for big stimulus projects, and these are financed by QE, a lot of extra money can be put into the real economy.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 16:58 | 5693658 Clesthenes
Clesthenes's picture

“Should the ECB… contemplate other asset classes [than bond] – equity stocks, REIT, ETF”?

Ah, there’s a category missing: paper that necessitates cannibalism of following generations of European children.

All such purchases are ultimately collateralized by governmental debt (directly or indirectly).  Such debt is the process (and measure) by which current tax consumers financially cannibalize following generations of tax payers.

Currently, there is enough such debt on US Government books to cannibalize following American generations to the end of time.  This time frame is derived from assumptions, data and formulas provided by Financial Reports of the US Government, see Bad News… and Anatomy of a General Plunder, part 1.

 

And, we should expect nothing less from European nations.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 17:03 | 5693672 Archetype
Archetype's picture

Here's why the ECB finally had to cave in on the OMT program - Greece!

 

Weather or not they will leave the € on the 25th, the ECB are going to buy all greek government bonds from the banks. Thus eliminating all greece sovereign risk from the TBTF banks balance sheets while still exporting deflation as intended.

 

Too small or too big (QE) doesn't matter, it's all about bailing out the banks stealth style without the european citizens ever knowing about it. After that they'll make it up as they go.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 17:13 | 5693720 tumblemore
tumblemore's picture

The timing fits.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 17:45 | 5693853 LawsofPhysics
LawsofPhysics's picture

I think that the Swiss know.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 17:46 | 5693848 LawsofPhysics
LawsofPhysics's picture

Yes please, kill all fiat faster!!!

Sounds fine to me.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 18:06 | 5693915 Sirius Wonderblast
Sirius Wonderblast's picture

Translated - "We're going to do too little to help, but enough to make us and our disgusting friends even more obscenely wealthy. The Greeks needn't bother asking, nor anyone else who actually needs help (can't risk it going astray i.e. not to us). It's QE so won't help the real economy at all, just lines our pockets, and we're not even using our own money - we expect the individual CB's to stump up most of the moolah which we will then trouser. Thank you for being so ridiculously compliant."

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 18:33 | 5694023 babylon15
babylon15's picture

They're missing a zero.  €30 trillion, not €3 trillion.

Thu, 01/22/2015 - 18:50 | 5694106 JenkinsLane
JenkinsLane's picture

The patient needs more leeches.

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