(经济学人) What happens when the Fed starts losing money
(2013-01-28 23:29:00)(经济学人) What happens when the Fed starts losing money当美联储开始亏损,情况会怎样?
The Fed’s profits
美联储的利润
The other side of QE
量化宽松政策的其它影响
What happens when the Fed starts losing
money
当美联储开始亏损,情况会怎样?
Jan 26th 2013 | Washington, DC |From the print
edition
EVER since the Federal Reserve first started buying up
financial assets back in 2008, some have fretted about taxpayer
exposure. The private debt purchased by the Fed to prop up the
financial system might sour. The government bonds it has bought
with newly created money, a strategy dubbed “quantitative easing”
(QE), could fall in value if interest rates
rose.
自2008年美联储首次购买金融资产以来,
The reality has been happier. The Fed’s assets have ballooned
to nearly $3 trillion, mostly in Treasuries and mortgage-backed
securities (MBS). It paid $89 billion in profit to the Treasury for
2012, the largest in a string of record-breaking remittances (see
chart). Before the crisis, the Fed’s profits were typically only a
third of that.
现实情况稍乐观一些。美联的总资产已经扩张到将近3万亿美元,
The Fed makes its money much as most banks do: from the spread between the return on its assets
and the interest paid on its liabilities. The Fed’s
liabilities are principally made up of currency in circulation,
which pays no interest, and reserves, the cash that commercial
banks keep on deposit at the Fed. Since 2008 these reserves have
exploded to $1.6 trillion, on which the central bank pays only
0.25% interest. The difference between that modest cost and
the average return of about 3.5% on
its bond holdings explains the whopping “seigniorage”, as
the profit the Fed earns from printing money is
called.
美联储盈利的方式与大多数银行类似:
Some Fed officials worry about what comes next. When the Fed
raised rates in the past, it meant little for profits because
reserves were trivial and earned no interest. Since 2008 the Fed
has paid interest on reserves in order to maintain control of
interest rates. So when the Fed
eventually tightens monetary policy, it will have to pay out more
interest. To absorb reserves it may have to sell some bonds for
less than what it paid, incurring capital losses. In theory, it
could end up losing money, a risk that grows the more bonds it
buys.
一部分美联储的官员对接下来将发生的情况表示担忧。过去,
In a recent paper five Fed economists calculated that if the
Fed buys $1 trillion of bonds this year and starts tightening in
2014, then the Fed’s profit will turn to loss by 2017. Cumulative losses could eventually reach $40
billion, from higher interest expenses and realised losses
on MBS sales (the economists assume the Fed will hold its
Treasuries to maturity). If interest
rates rise more sharply than expected, losses could peak at $125
billion, and the Fed would pay no profit for six
years.
在一份最近的研究报告中,5位美联储的经济学家预计,
For the government as a whole, these losses are less than
meets the eye. The interest paid on reserves by the Fed partly
substitutes for interest the Treasury would be paying the public if
its bonds were not held by the central bank. But it may still worry
some Fed officials, given the attacks it regularly endures from
Republicans in Congress. “Being seen to have lost taxpayer money
could only intensify pressures on the Fed, to the point where at
least some of the central bank’s independence could be put at
risk,” says Roberto Perli, a former Fed economist now with ISI
Group, a broker. He thinks some officials could be worried enough
to oppose continuing QE once it reaches $1 trillion at the end of
this year, even if the economy is not yet up to
snuff.
对于国家整体而言,这点损失微不足道。
Whether such concerns would
really blow the Fed off the course dictated by economic
circumstances is debatable, however. The Fed would not actually
need a taxpayer infusion. One of the perks of central banking is
that it can print the money needed to pay interest. If that
generates a loss, it creates an offsetting“deferred asset” on its
balance-sheet, representing future profits it won’t have to send to
the Treasury. The forgone
profit would pale in comparison with total interest saved, higher
tax revenue due to stronger growth and roughly $500 billion of
profit that QE had previously made
possible.
More importantly, the losses would occur only once the
economy was healthy enough to require higher interest rates, which,
after all, would be proof that QE had
worked.
然而,
更重要的是,只有当经济增长非常良好,