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DIfference OMT and QE
This is analyzed by Morgan Stanley
First, the Fed’s MBS program is up and running
By contrast, the start of the ECB’s OMT is conditional upon a country
going into an EFSF/ESM program or a precautionary program (ECCF), or a
country in an existing program regaining market access. Hence, while
this is not our base case, there is a possibility that the OMT will
never be activated.
Second, while both programs are aimed at unblocking the
monetary transmission mechanism, the Fed’s MBS purchases are targeting
the mortgage market, while the ECB will buy short-dated government bonds.
Both make sense to us, because the origin of the US financial crisis
was in the mortgage market, which in the Fed’s analysis requires ongoing
support, while the epicenter of the current European crisis is in the
government bond markets.
Third, while the Fed’s buying program will lead to a further
increase in the central bank’s balance sheet, the ECB plans to fully
sterilize its purchases. Note, however, that sterilization is
merely a fig leaf to placate German concerns because the size of the
ECB’s balance sheet is entirely demand-driven due to its current policy
of full allotment at its refinancing operations. Provided they have
enough collateral, banks can take out any amount of liquidity they like.
Note also that the term deposits which the ECB offered to banks when it
sterilized the SMP purchases were eligible as collateral in the refi
operations.
Fourth, the conditionality attached to the Fed’s and the ECB’s purchase programs is very different in nature.
The Fed has tied its MBS purchases to an economic variable – it will
continue until there is a substantial improvement in the labor market,
while the ECB has tied the OMT to a political variable – whether or not a
country goes into and adheres to an adjustment program. As government
action (or non-action) is unusually more difficult to predict than labor
market performance, this makes the scope of the OMT much more difficult
to predict than the Fed’s MBS program.
Fifth, while the Fed’s action is fully aligned with its dual
mandate, which includes ‘sustainable employment’ alongside price
stability, there are some – the Bundesbank and the German Constitutional
Court – who view the ECB’s OMT as potentially violating the ECB’s
mandate, which prohibits direct monetary financing of
governments. While the ECB’s position is very clear – it views the
secondary market bond purchases, which are aimed at unblocking the
monetary transmission mechanism, as in line with its mandate – the
challenge coming from Germany provides additional uncertainty about the
scope and effect of the program.
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