Submitted by: Donald Hank
Worst. Loan Creation. Ever
For all the endless
talk of a recovery during the past five years, there is a very tangible
reason why for most people this is nothing but spin, propaganda and lies:
when one strips away the retroactively adjusted GDP, the seasonally
adjusted (and politically mandated) counting of temp jobs, the constantly
upward revised jobless claims, the Fed’s $4+ trillion balance sheet of
course, and even the declining (yes,
declining) real disposable income per capita, what one is left with is the
lowest loan creation out of a recession (or depression) in history, and is
at indexed levels last seen during the Lehman collapse over five years
ago!
Why is loan creation
important? Because in traditional economics (not their “New Normal”
equivalent, where central planning decides everything), loans – i.e.,
money created by commercial banks – ultimately leads to GDP growth. It
also has a direct bearing on the steepness of the bond curve and thus,
inflation expectations. Conversely, lack
of loan creation ultimately means the government is
forced to adjusted the definition of GDP to make it seem as if there is
growth, or to rely on an inventory stockpiling boost to “growth” and all
other recently seen gimmicks to force the conviction of
“growth.”
There’s more. As the
charts below show, there is a direct link between loan demand (and thus
creation), and EPS growth, Industrial Production, Employment and CRE
development. Obviously, the lower the loan creation, the worse all of
these will look.But how is it possible that banks continue to function in an environment in which there has been zero loan creation for the past 5 years? Simple: the banks’ excess deposits (a liability) has been pumped higher by about $2.5 trillion thanks to the Fed’s excess deposits:
… and instead of lending out reserves, which banks don’t do (for those still confused about this, read the following primer from S&P), banks instead use them as initial and maintenance margin for risk-chasing trades as JPM so kindly explained over a year ago.
… which is also why once excess deposit creation, i.e. “flow”, slows down, halts or is put in reverse, watch out below.
Furthermore, as long as the Fed creates
reserves, and excess deposits, banks have no incentive to force loan
creation.
In other words, as
long as QE continues, and the Fed injects however many tens of billions
into the commercial bank balance sheets each month, all talk of an
economic recovery will be bullshit, simply because all of the Fed’s money
makes it only into capital markets, resulting in asset inflation, but not
into the economy, where it is up to commercial banks to create loans, and
the resultant money that then leads to an increase in money velocity and
ultimately, if allocated carefully, growth.
In the
meantime, there
will be no economic growth, period, as long as the
loan creation in the top chart shown above refuses to move higher, and any
talks of an economic recovery will be merely lies, propaganda and yes –
more lies.
Charts:
Barclays, JPM, Zero Hedge
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