Of Inhuman Bondage

Waldman, Amy

Of Inhuman Bondage The bond market has policymakers in its grip BY AMY WALDMAN STANLEY DRUCKENMILLER does not come across as a life-of-the-party kind of guy. He rarely gives...

...As they so often do, stocks followed: By mid-day, the Dow was down 129 points (it recovered to close 70 points down...
...Not only that, he says, but this disinflationary trend is “a bond investor’s best friend...
...But if any effort that requires real spending-from investing in infrastructure to providing health care for the young-will be vetoed by the bond market, and thus by the Treasury and the President’s economic advisors, the power of government to act as an agent of change will be severely constrained...
...After the Republicans took Congress in 1994, Druckenmiller wagered that the GOP would curb spending and force a balanced budget deal...
...He is watching the skies-or actually the screens-to calibrate the strength or weakness of the economy, and most of all for signs of inflation...
...a fear that Clinton may have a little bit more of a New Democrat than a conservative Democrat image to him, and the programs of health care and crime-related bills have influenced, to some extent, these higher rates...
...Bond traders abhor signs of economic growth or lower unemployment, which they believe portend inflation...
...Bond Boors In theory, of course, bonds are perfectly innocuous, simply a mechanism by which governments and businesses raise money...
...So while Stanley Druckenmiller lost his bet last year, he will be ready to wager again as Congress once more contemplates a balanced budget amendment...
...The market now runs 24 hours a day, seven days a week...
...securities market may, in fact, be the most influential market in the world...
...That’s the real money-in-politics scandal of our time...
...Economists are beginning to question whether the old paradigms of business cycles and NAIRU (nonaccelerating inflation rate of unemployment) still apply...
...That only slowed the economy more-exacerbating the recession...
...The words were a warning to Clinton: Embark on a major social policy initiative at your peril...
...In September of 1995, Senator Pete Domenici (RNM), the chairman of the Senate Budget Committee, flew to New York for a dinner at Seagram House with a dozen contributors, mostly large fund managers...
...Today, they are traded at a frenzied pace, and their value can fluctuate over the course of a day or even an hour...
...If the market bid up bonds in anticipation of that happening, he would make a killing...
...But increasingly, it’s also an absurdity-because more and more, the inflation paranoia seems wrong-headed...
...just thousands of brokers and dealers nationwide buying or selling from their offices or company floors...
...One profile reported that he went to bed at 8:30 p.m...
...And mortgage rates, corporate borrowing, and other long-term loans all correspond to bond yields (specifically that of the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond...
...He told Domenici that the market would trade around a default if there were a balanced budget agreement...
...The mere prospect of that happening-a prospect, mind you, supported by quite flimsy evidence-was enough to prompt a frenzied sell-off that sent the markets into a tailspin...
...The financial press calls him a “bond guru,” and it’s easy to see why...
...Newt Gingrich began broadcasting the same message, telling a meeting of the Public Securities Association-the bond industry trade group-that a balanced budget would be worth the price of a default...
...He has to keep the market’s confidence...
...In fact, he’s not handling paper at all: In the netherworld of today’s bond market, everything is done electronically...
...Traclung campaign contributions seems an easier way to document and fathom the influence of money in politics...
...As they learned in the 1980s, more borrowing means more bonds, driving bond prices down...
...An ugly day in the bond market,” CNN’s “Moneyline” began on June 7,1996...
...But where the Fed weighed all the evidence, the bond market focused on the payroll figure, sending interest rates to a four-week high...
...The bond market’s influence shows how much political power is concentrating there too...
...And an influential one: The U.S...
...And the stock market now regularly follows the bond market’s direction...
...Eventually, the bond reaches maturity, which means that the government or corporation in question must repay the loan...
...We would prefer, as bond vigilantes, to have lower deficits and less spending on the part of the government...
...And it was probably basing that decision in part on data also released June 7-data showing that the unemployment rate had risen to 5.6 percent...
...The 1970s left deep scars on the market, a psychological disorder that can only be called inflationphobia...
...The dictate that growth must be contained well below 3 percent leaves us with less money to invest in research and development or Social Security or crumbling schools or deteriorating sewers...
...Because the bond market represents what financial journalist Steven Beckner calls “the interaction of government and the marketplace,” its reach extends to the corridors of power in Washington-not just the Federal Reserve, but the White House and Congress as well...
...he was an investor who had bet gargantuan sums that a balanced budget deal would be reached...
...Or move Congress...
...Like the tides, the market rises and falls on each new trickle of data, but its analysis of that data is more junk science than exact...
...Over the past year or so, of course, the markets and Fed have grudgingly come to tolerate unemployment of about 5.4 percent, only because there hasn’t been a corresponding rise in inflation...
...The result: Yields rise...
...The Federal Reserve didn’t raise interest rates at its next meeting, or the one after that, because it recognized that there was no real threat of inflation...
...That day, the bond market took its biggest one-day loss in five months...
...The cost of a “train wreck,” Druckenmiller insisted, would be minor compared to the benefits of balancing the budget...
...Because that morning, The Wall Street J o~r n a t s“ Heard on the Street” column had suggested that Japanese institutions might call a halt to their buying binge in the U.S...
...Inflation fears hammer [ed] bonds and sen [t] long-term interest rates sharply higher...
...The fear of inflation can be called bond vigilantes’ Carter doctrine-and the fear of government spending their R e a p doctrine...
...And since a government that needs to borrow a lot also needs to issue a lot of bonds, the market was flooded...
...You’re probably hoping in vain-not only because conservatives are ideologically opposed, but because Bill Clinton understands the bond market’s power all too well...
...The great irony is that the only real inflation in the economy now is in the financial markets...
...So while the names John Huang and Mochtar fiady now trip mellifluously off our tongues, what should really concern anyone worried about the influence of foreign money on American policy is the fact, recently reported by The Wall St~eetJozimalt,h at foreign governments have purchased at least three fourths of all the new securities issued by the U.S...
...Po Bronson perfectly captures the surreal intangibility in h s novel Bombardiers, when he has his protagonist, a bond salesman, suddenly realize that although he sells millions of dollars worth of bonds a day, he has never laid eyes on an actual bond...
...When inflation hit in the 1970s, bond holders learned the hard lesson that fixed-income investments meant little when the value of money wasn’t fixed...
...I’m hoping in a perverted type of way that the economy is weak...
...For Druckenmiller, a bet was not a ten-spot with some friends...
...Those sectors of the economy in turn reverberate: Mortgage rates, for example, affect homeowners and homebuyers, who in turn duence the health of the construction industry, and so on...
...The Fed acts similarly in healthier times: When the economy heats up, and a nervous bond markets pushes long term rates up in response, the Fed will move to keep inflation on a short leash by raising short-term rates...
...That meant that bonds were again devalued-the more bonds in circulation, the less they’re worth...
...on weekends...
...But he is also representative: If you’re loolung for a metaphor for the power of money in American politics, or an explication of how private interest influences public policy, look no further than the bond market...
...Try telling that to the market, which, as Gross concedes, continues to look through a “rear view mirror...
...There is no central locus, a la the stock exchange...
...Of course, he doesn’t really need to give: His ability to destabilize the market is enough to ensure that attention will be paid-by Robert Rubin and Bill Clinton as well as Newt Gingrich and Pete Domenici...
...The Fed controls short-term interest rates, but the bond market sets long-term rates...
...Over that period, inflation has averaged below 3 percent (and, if the Consumer Price Index is as off as Michael Boskin claims, it’s been even lower...
...Most traders subscribe to multiple analysis services, and “shop” for the story-the interpretation of the numbers-that supports the transaction they’re trying to make...
...Domenici carried that message back to Capitol Hill...
...His perfectly spun plan snagged on Bill Clinton, however, whoresisted the Republican cuts and started warning of the dangers of a default because of the GOP refusal to raise the debt ceiling...
...Over the last 15 yearsand especially in the last five-commerce in Treasury securities has become the ultimate capitalist bazaar...
...It made the bond market, with its daily fluctuations and massive buying and selling, more like the stock market...
...he would go into the vault and clip interest coupons off the bonds so the coupons could be mailed into the Treasury...
...Then, in August, Saddam Hussein invaded Kuwait, and oil prices temporarily spiked up...
...Bond traders negotiate prices and interest rates based on expectations of what will happen in the economy...
...The corollary, that unemployment must be maintained above 5.6 percent lest fuller employment translate into wage inflation, now more often translates into stagnating wages, as well as a lot of people without work...
...Good evening...
...In a sense, imagined inflation is more firmly embedded in the economy than real inflation,” Institutional Investor wrote last May...
...To grasp the change, consider the arc of William Gross’s career...
...That means foreign countries own a significant portion of our debt-and that gives them a great deal of leverage over our economy...
...The Republicans seemed poised to let a balanced budget deal slip away...
...If fear of inflation drives the bond market, keeping the bond market happy drives Washington...
...The inflationary threat wasn’t real-it didn’t take a PhD in geopolitics to realize that the Saudis, who desperately needed American help, had every reason to pump enough oil to keep our economy from being wrecked...
...If the markets believe the chaos will finally lead to decisive action, they will rise...
...But for Druckenmiller, a lack of color is no hindrance to being heard: When he talks-or betsCongress listens...
...And the development of computer- driven complex mathematical models greased the way for arbitrage and speculation...
...One bond futures trader said, ‘You can’t ignore this data . . . it’s above average . . . The Fed has to look at it...
...His first job was as a “coupon clipper”: His company bought bonds and kept them in a vault...
...Druckenmiller may be an extreme-perhaps the most extreme-example of how one speculator can unhinge the market for bonds (or stocks, or currencies, or futures, or wherever he chooses to lay his bets) and thus make Washington pay attention...
...He now manages Soros’s money, as well as that of other gold-plated investors...
...But the more bonds in the market, the larger the market becomes-and in the 1980s, it was becoming very large indeed...
...They don’t just thrive on bad news-they help create it...
...All of this made bonds sexy-Tom Wolfe, Tom Hanks sexy-and more profitable...
...In November, Druckenmiller took the same message to an ad hoc Republican hearing, where he testified...
...You don’t want to stand in front of 100-mile-an-hour freight train”-a bond market selling madly because it thinks inflation is coming, he says...
...But the bond market didn’t care...
...The bond market determines the cost of capital, for the government and much of the rest of the economy...
...It apparently didn’t trouble Domenici or Gingrich that Druckenmiller was hardly an objective sage offering wisdom...
...bond values fall...
...In return for cash, they issue bonds and pay bondholders interest for the use of their money...
...The bond market’s evolution is a parable for how the financial interests of a relatively small group of people-large investors, traders, money managershave come to bear disproportionate weight in our political process...
...Hoping that the government will put out some real money to help employ welfare mothers...
...It’s a betting market, in which speculators wager on the market’s direction...
...Gross alone trades $100 million a day...
...So the Fed and the Treasury know they need to keep the bond market happy...
...Of Inhuman Bondage The bond market has policymakers in its grip BY AMY WALDMAN STANLEY DRUCKENMILLER does not come across as a life-of-the-party kind of guy...
...bond prices, for example, have been increasing by 20 to 30 percent a year over the last few years, thanks largely to the fall in interest rates prompted by Clinton’s deficit-cutting...
...Druckenmiller was among them...
...Gross now heads Pacific Investment Management Company, which he founded, in Newport Beach, California...
...The evolution of technology that made possible the almost instantaneous trading of large volumes also expanded the market...
...Druckenmiller and another big investor also bought a full page ad in The Washington Post that said, “let’s not allow fears of temporary ‘market instability’ to serve as an excuse for equivocating on spending cuts...
...This shaped Bill Clinton’s early decision to abandon an investment plan in favor of deficit reduction...
...Brokers and analysts and research divisions and economists evaluate, instead of a corporation’s product and prospects, economic conditions and indicators to set prices and give a “story” for why the person on the other end of the transaction should buy bonds...
...In the face of imagined inflation, Greenspan is powerless-and so are rational souls like Gross...
...And calculation drives others to perpetuate that belief: Some members of the market-including, probably, that Chicago futures trader-make heavily leveraged bets that there will be a sell-off, then try to stir up fears of an interest rate hike in order to capitalize on their prophecy...
...As James Glassman subsequently reported in The Washington Post, Druckenmiller speculated that the market would react favorably to a balanced budget deal, because as the government needed to borrow less, bonds would become rarer and thus more valuable...
...all too often, the bond market is the tail that wags the dog in Washington...
...Whenever new data on payroll figures, or purchasing orders, or consumer spending is released, the market goes into paroxysms, as traders sell or buy madly in anticipation of an interest rate hike or cut...
...You have to be cognizant of what the market thinks rather than what you think...
...If the markets believe decisive action will not be forthcoming, they will decline...
...He is regularly quoted by the press, and is a frequent guest on the financial TV talk shows whose explosion has paralleled the market’s-the all-day CNBC, CNN’s “Moneyline,” and now CNN’s new financial network...
...The catalyst: a much stronger than expected report on jobs, the government reporting the economy added 348,000 new jobs in May, twice what most economists expected...
...The result is a relentlessly volatile market...
...The 1980s brought profligate deficit-spending...
...It implies inflation will be low down the road,” Gross says, adding sweetly, ‘We are the ghouls of the financial world, because we thrive on bad news...
...An even more sluggish economy didn’t bother the bond market nearly as much as it did the rest of us-especially those who lost jobs and income during the recession’s protracted duration...
...And it continues to shape what happens-or doesn’t-in Washington...
...No one can deny that deficit reduction is important, or that these fiscal disciplinarians have helped bring spending under control, or that Clinton’s success at cutting the deficit has been good for the economy...
...Greenspan may not think that healthy consumer spending this Christmas is going to trigger inflation, but he has to speak and act in response to wild gyrations in a bond market that thinks it does...
...Druckenmiller didn’t win his bet, of course, and he ended up selling off his big stake without reaping big profits...
...it meant buying millions of dollars in Treasury bonds...
...So the bond market has made a balanced budget into Washington’s Holy Grail...
...Gross stops tracking it-reluctantly-only when he has to sleep...
...With fewer buyers, interest rates on bonds would rise, which would be bad for bond holders since the value of bonds drops as interest rates rise...
...The radical transformation of the bond market...
...So when the market tanked during that oil inflation scare in 1990, the Federal Reserve, which should have been lowering rates in August and September in order to short-circuit the recession, instead did nothing during that crucial period, thus giving the recession even more time to put down deep roots...
...The Manhattan-based protege of billionaire George Soros, Druckenmiller reportedly earned $700 million last year...
...This power can be difficult to grasp: The bond market is complicated, and even its most dramatic rallies tend to spark prose from The New Ywk Times along the lines of, “Traders were exceptionally busy at their computer terminals...
...Which tells us somethmg: That the fear of inflation unjustly protects Wall Street while punishing Main Street is a truism...
...Gross says he will often respond to economic indicators based not on what he thinks the numbers say, but on what he thinks the rest of the market will think they say...
...They can’t ignore it.’’ But ignore it they did...
...And a growing deficit holds the threat that the Fed could inflate the money supply to bring the deficit under control...
...Bond traders do the same...
...Druckenmiller had a stake in getting his way, and he was willing to push the Republicans to the brink of default-or even over the edge-to do it...
...He is, in short, a speculator of leviathan proportions, part of a small elite of money managers with such large stakes in the markets that their decisions to buy or sell can move those markets...
...Bonds were bought, and they were held...
...He rarely gives interviews, but when he does the word “dour” is the inevitable modifier...
...The Rumor Mill The radical transformation of the bond market can be traced to three causes: inflation, deficit-spending, and technology...
...Even William Gross says that we’re actually experiencing disinflation-that the globalization of labor and capital, and the productivity increases due to technology, now have more effect on inflation than the rate of growth or unemployment do...
...And, just to be sure he’ll have the GOP majority’s ear, he recently gave another $250,000 to the RNC...
...Greenspan knows only too well that the longer it takes to cure this pessimistic psychology, the longer the economy will have to endure boom-bust cycles before true price stability and higher real growth can be achieved...
...Deficit Vultures The hostage takers, so to speak, call themselves “bond vigilantes,” in reference to the discipline bond traders exert on economies: The globalization of cap: ita1 markets means that if they are dissatisfied with a government’s monetary or fiscal policies, if inflation is too high or the money supply too loose or the currency too low, they can simply sell-thus driving bond prices down-and take their money to another market-Germany, say, or Japan...
...It involves taking the millions of Soros or his clients, borrowing even more, and then making enormous bets on the direction of stock, bond, and currency markets worldwide...
...government over the last year...
...If we get entitlement reform, it may be largely because of pressure from the bond market...
...To Congress, Druckenmiller was not just another private citizen giving his opinion: He became “the voice of the market”-so much so that when Alice ?Win, then the director of the Office of Management and Budget, warned Congress of the devastating effects a default could have on the bond market, Domenici, fresh off the New York shuttle, publicly disputed her, authoritatively citing his contacts on Wall Street...
...Most of its clients, such as the pension fund of IBM, tend to be institutional investors, which means he spends his time trying get a safe rate of return in a volatile market...
...It panicked, sending yields up above 9 percent...
...So Druckenmiller began telling his Republican friends in Congress-and as a man who had given $250,000 to the Republican National Committee in 1994 he had a lot of friends-that the financial markets would tolerate any means to the end of balancing the budget, including a default...
...But the relationship between policymakers and the bond market is ultimately more potent than that between PACs and politicians...
...Until the market’s mind is changed, in other words, the wild swings will continue, and policy will continue to be held hostage to phantom fears...
...The 1970s left deep scars on the market, a psychological disorder that can only be called inflationphobia...
...Reflex drives many to assume inflation is on the way...
...On the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade, “Moneyline” reported, traders had re-priced Treasury securities to account for what they called a “now certain interest rate hike” by the Fed that summer...
...He has also become something once unthinkable for a bond manager: a pundit...
...Arbitrage-buying and selling bonds simultaneously on the same or different markets, and profiting off the margins of differenceis where the real money is...
...Needless to say, Gross isn’t clipping coupons anymore...
...They began demanding higher interest rates in anticipation of their bonds devaluing, and thus, interest rates began fluctuating with the value of money-or rather its anticipated value...
...In 1994, for example, Bill Gross noted on “Moneyline” that Clinton had lost popularity with the bond market because “I think there’s...
...If traders anticipate higher inflation, they either demand higher interest when they buy bonds or they simply sell bonds...
...He may as well have been in plastics for as much resemblance as that market bore to today’s...
...In mid-1990, for example, sluggish growth was prompting worries about an impending recession (in fact, one was just getting underway, although that wasn’t known at the time...
...Managing, for Druckenmiller, does not involve looking for good rates of return on bank deposits...
...These people are part of the “one percent”-the thin sliver at the top of our economic stratum where wealth, income, and financial assets have been concentrating since the 1980s...
...It’s best to step aside and let the market have its way...
...There’s no sign of inflation on the horizon, and there hasn’t been for the past five years...
...As anyone who has ever read tea leaves knows, you tend to see what you’re looking for...
...Pretty staid stuff-whch is why, until the early 1970s, bonds were the Dullsville of the financial world: a no-risk, conservative investment for the country club set...
...To understand how, take December 11,1996...
...He got into bonds in 1971...
...But his ability to convince congressional naifs that a default was no big deal is alarming nonetheless...
...His company manages close to $90 billion...
...In this relationship between government and the marketdace, the mar- I . ketplacihas the upper hand...

Vol. 29 • January 1997 • No. 1


 
Developed by
Kanda Sofware
  Kanda Software, Inc.