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How government involvement could change investing

Quan­ti­ta­tive eas­ing may be a bit­ter pill, but it comes with its own spoon­ful of sug­ar and is cer­tain­ly bet­ter than the alter­na­tive


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Restrict­ing the spread of coro­n­avirus has dis­rupt­ed the entire econ­o­my. With busi­ness­es unable to trade, the gov­ern­ment launched a series of stim­u­lus pack­ages to shore up the econ­o­my and main­tain social cohe­sion. 

The cost of this was met by the gov­ern­ment cre­at­ing more mon­ey, by issu­ing debt. Rais­ing cash at a time of great uncer­tain­ty can be risky, so quan­ti­ta­tive eas­ing (QE) was used to sup­port the project. 

QE is throwing money at the problem

Cen­tral banks use QE to cre­ate mon­ey by buy­ing gov­ern­ment-issued bonds from banks and oth­er investors, gen­er­at­ing cash to be pumped back into the econ­o­my.

There is noth­ing new about it. When the banks began feel­ing the pinch caused by bad debts as the cred­it crunch became the finan­cial crash in 2008, the Bank of Eng­land stepped in to smooth things out. 

The cost of keep­ing banks open and pro­tect­ing con­sumers rose to £445 bil­lion by August 2016. In the past year, QE has more than dou­bled this fig­ure to £895 bil­lion by Novem­ber 2020.

We’re all in it together

The UK is in good com­pa­ny when it comes to the appli­ca­tion of QE. The US Fed­er­al Reserve, Euro­pean Cen­tral Bank and Bank of Japan increased their bal­ance sheets by $8 tril­lion in 2020. How­ev­er, quite apart from hav­ing to pay back the debt, QE comes at a cost, by mak­ing all assets, not just bonds, more expen­sive. 

“With cen­tral banks buy­ing mas­sive amounts of gov­ern­ment, or in some cas­es, cor­po­rate bonds, some investors can no longer just hold on to bonds and are forced to look at oth­er, riski­er assets,” says Celene Lee, prin­ci­pal and invest­ment con­sul­tant at Buck. 

An increase in demand for gov­ern­ment bonds, push­es up their price, but reduces the returns on those bonds. The amount repaid to the pur­chas­er over the time it is held is the yield and typ­i­cal­ly yield curves would increase as dura­tions increase. But QE not only low­ers the curve, reduc­ing yields on all bonds, but flat­tens it, so that longer-dura­tion bond yields resem­ble those of short­er dura­tion. 

QE makes all assets more expensive

The return on gov­ern­ment bonds is usu­al­ly referred to as the “risk-free rate” and is the bench­mark oth­er asset class­es are gen­er­al­ly mea­sured against when it comes to risk. 

“When you start to move away from that to cred­it, cor­po­rate bonds for exam­ple, you’re tak­ing on addi­tion­al risk,” says Chris Iggo, chief invest­ment offi­cer at AXA Invest­ment Man­agers.

I’m more wor­ried about stim­u­lus being pulled back too soon, rather than too late. We haven’t fin­ished this cri­sis yet

“Nor­mal­ly you’re com­pen­sat­ed by get­ting high­er yield, but that dif­fer­ence has been reduced. And so investors have been dri­ven into riski­er asset class­es to get the yield they need for their objec­tives.”

Risk is not a bad thing, pro­vid­ed you can afford it. The search for returns has result­ed in boom­ing equi­ty mar­kets and it is gov­ern­ment inter­ven­tion that has boost­ed investor con­fi­dence. 

“These mea­sures have been large­ly respon­si­ble for dri­ving the recov­ery of mar­kets, most of which have returned to, and in some cas­es sur­passed, their pre-crash peaks from ear­ly last year,” says Maike Cur­rie, invest­ment direc­tor at Fideli­ty Inter­na­tion­al. “The steps tak­en ear­ly on pro­vid­ed investors with much-need­ed con­fi­dence fol­low­ing swings in volatil­i­ty.”

Growth will also have a pos­i­tive impact upon some mar­kets, such as com­modi­ties, dri­ving up the price of oil and oth­er impor­tant mate­ri­als. These mar­kets have been sup­pressed while economies were in lock­down.

Avoiding a temper tantrum

Melanie Bak­er, senior econ­o­mist at Roy­al Lon­don Asset Man­age­ment, says the “swift pol­i­cy action” lim­it­ed the “short and long-term dam­age to the econ­o­my” that would have been caused had cen­tral banks not inter­vened. 

Con­cerns that asset price infla­tion will lead to broad­er infla­tion in the econ­o­my – one of the key respon­si­bil­i­ties of cen­tral banks – are valid, but pre­ma­ture. 

“I’m more wor­ried about stim­u­lus being pulled back too soon, rather than too late,” says Bak­er. “We haven’t fin­ished this cri­sis and though we can see some light at the end of the tun­nel with vac­cines, we’re not there yet.”

In 2013, the Fed­er­al Reserve announced it would reduce its QE pro­gramme, lead­ing to a pan­ic that the mar­kets would fail due to a lack of liq­uid­i­ty. 

This event was referred to as the “taper tantrum”, but there is a dan­ger investors become used to QE as the norm, with any reduc­tion in the sup­ply being met with vio­lent reac­tions, much like a drug addict going cold turkey. 

The future is bright and may be green

Despite con­cerns about the medi­um-term effect on invest­ment mar­kets from the influ­ence of QE, increased demand for poli­cies to com­bat cli­mate change presents attrac­tive oppor­tu­ni­ties for investors. 

“ESG [envi­ron­men­tal, social and gov­er­nance issues] and ener­gy tran­si­tion pro­vide the poten­tial for a kind of longer-term eco­nom­ic expan­sion that could be equiv­a­lent to a kind of fourth indus­tri­al rev­o­lu­tion, where returns may be super­charged because of all these new invest­ment oppor­tu­ni­ties,” says Iggo.

Reversing the communication breakdown

As Bak­er points out, it is too soon to say how gov­ern­ments will begin to unwind QE. But one thing the gov­ern­ment and cen­tral banks can do now, says Iggo, is to improve their com­mu­ni­ca­tion on the econ­o­my and their strate­gies to man­age it. 

“There needs to be more clar­i­ty and it’s the same with fis­cal pol­i­cy, which sim­ply con­fus­es peo­ple,” he says. 

There are those in gov­ern­ment, says Iggo, who want to see spend­ing cut and tax­es raised as soon as pos­si­ble. This may not be appro­pri­ate when they want to see it done and the mixed mes­sages of opin­ions and pol­i­cy con­fuse every­one and reduce con­fi­dence. 

How gov­ern­ments man­age their QE poli­cies is like­ly to become a yard­stick for their over­all per­for­mance. This is because QE is here for the fore­see­able future and will not be reversed dur­ing the term of this admin­is­tra­tion or even, per­haps, under a num­ber of future gov­ern­ments.