By Jon Sindreu
Central banks across the developed world are facing a tough
stretch: Months of political events -- chief among them Tuesday's
U.S. election -- that will put their loose policies and their
independence in the crosshairs.
If monetary policy becomes politicized, investors worry,
financial-market turmoil could follow.
"Stuff will come to pass if central bankers are seen to be too
political, " said Paul Griffiths, chief investor at London-based
First State Investments. "That can be quite damaging."
With economic figures coming in strong, markets price in a 72%
probability that the U.S. Federal Reserve will nudge up interest
rates in December. But some warn that a presidential victory by
Donald Trump could upset such expectations, because of his repeated
accusations that Fed Chairwoman Janet Yellen is keeping borrowing
costs "artificially low" to benefit Democratic nominee Hillary
Clinton.
"With his election campaign tirades, Trump undermines the Fed's
standing, " said Ulrich Leuchtmann, currency analyst at German
lender Commerzbank AG. "It would therefore be quite understandable
if in case of a Trump election victory it postponed a rate hike
that was actually due."
While Ms. Yellen has denied any influence of "partisan politics"
in the Fed's decisions, many analysts think attacks on central
bankers could resonate.
Since the financial crisis, central banks in developed nations
have deployed unprecedented waves of monetary stimulus, which have
been effective at parrying financial shocks but have failed to
significantly boost economic growth. Policies like government
bond-buying, known as quantitative easing or QE, threaten to tear
down the walls between politics and central banks -- in Japan, many
analysts argue they have already been breached under Prime Minister
Shinzo Abe's economic reflation plans.
But the growing prominence of central bankers could itself be a
double-edged sword: It may now set them up to take the fall for the
economic ills that have fueled populist movements all around the
world.
Were the independence of central banks really reduced, "the
consequences would be higher risk premia in markets across the
board," said Valentijn van Nieuwenhuijzen head of strategy at Dutch
asset manager NN Investment Partners.
While few investors foresee a sudden end to central-bank
independence, they fear a war of attrition.
During the Conservatives' party conference in October, U.K.
Prime Minister Theresa May criticized the central bank's
bond-buying scheme for its role in fostering wealth inequality.
Shortly thereafter, Michael Gove -- until recently a cabinet
minister -- said that "the era of their much-vaunted independence
will come, possibly quite dramatically, to its end."
The U.K. government has denied any plans to take away the
central bank's autonomy, granted in 1997, but BOE Gov. Mark Carney
faced tough questions during the referendum campaign, after he
warned that leaving the European Union would have bad economic
consequences.
"We are not going to take instruction on our policies from the
political side," Mr. Carney said in a speech last month. On
Thursday, he denied feeling under any political pressure.
Nevertheless, investors are pondering whether political pressure
-- together with tentative signs of returning inflation -- will
push policy makers to deliver less stimulus. As a result, 10-year
sovereign bond yields have risen roughly 0.3 and 0.5 percentage
point in Germany and the U.K. respectively over the past month.
"We are in a calendar now with huge amounts of political
events," said Martin Horne, head of European high-yield investments
at Barings. "We believe it will subdue a pace of aggressive
monetary policy."
Indeed, the European Central Bank is facing a complicated
schedule. Next year, euroskeptic parties in France and Germany are
expected to pose a challenge to the ruling governments. Because of
his easy-money policies, ECB President Mario Draghi has long been
politically contentious in saver-fixated Germany.
Earlier this year, German finance minister Wolfgang Schäuble
accused the central bank of being responsible for "50% of the
results" that the right-wing Alternative for Germany garnered in
regional elections. Right after, Bundesbank President Jens
Weidmann, a longtime critic of easy money inside the ECB, stepped
up to defend the central bank's independence.
Mr. Draghi has also subtly backed some of the policies of
Italy's reformist Prime Minister Matteo Renzi, such as the need for
fiscal policy or providing a taxpayer backstop for the country's
troubled banks -- both of which EU officials oppose. Mr. Renzi
risks being severely weakened in December if he loses a referendum
on constitutional reform.
For about 20 years, mainstream economists have supported making
central banks independent inflation targeters, aiming to fend off
temptations by politicians to make credit cheaper ahead of
elections. Most investors are keen for monetary policy to be
unaffected by politics as well, because it makes market moves more
predictable.
Some economists, however, have now started to question the
status quo, arguing that coordinating money-printing and government
spending would deliver the potent stimulus the economy needs.
Riva Gold contributed to this article
Write to Jon Sindreu at jon.sindreu@wsj.com
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
November 05, 2016 07:14 ET (11:14 GMT)
Copyright (c) 2016 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
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