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  • President Trump is a big fan of low interest rates.

  • Frankly, if we ever got interest rates down where they should be and if

  • they weren't raised so fast, you would see another probably ten thousand

  • points on the Dow. The Fed acted too soon.

  • I turned out to be right. They acted too soon and too violently.

  • The Fed moved, in my opinion, far too early and far too severely.

  • It puts me at somewhat of an advantage.

  • We'll see what happens with the Federal Reserve, whether or not they

  • finally get smart and reduce interest rates.

  • Like many other places around the world that we have to compete with.

  • If you look at what the other Fed equivalents are doing all around the

  • world, they're at a much lower rate.

  • And it makes us harder to compete.

  • Recently, Trump even went so far as to praise Germany's zero percent

  • interest rate. In Germany, they have zero interest rate, and when they

  • borrow money, I mean, when you look at what happens, look at what's going

  • on over there. They borrow money, they actually get paid to borrow money.

  • And we have to compete with that.

  • Then he went even further on Twitter, referring to the Fed as "boneheads".

  • But what if Trump got what he wished for?

  • What if interest rates were actually zero, or negative, like Sweden or

  • Japan? What if instead of a bank paying you to hold your money, you

  • theoretically had to pay the bank to keep it there?

  • It could happen with negative interest rates.

  • Negative interest rates first appeared in 2009, when Sweden cut its rate

  • to -0.25

  • percent. The move was meant to provide a short term jolt that would

  • stimulate a stagnant economy and encourage banks to lend, since holding

  • onto money meant financial institutions would have to pay interest to

  • Sweden's central bank.

  • But there was a fear the move could also impact savers who could be

  • charged by the banks holding their money.

  • Economists feared savers would hoard cash rather than pay the bank to hold

  • it. But that's not what happened.

  • Instead, Swedish savers spent or left it there.

  • That's not surprising, since Sweden has one of the higher savings rates in

  • the developed world, according to the Organisation for Economic

  • Co-operation and Development.

  • Since then, central banks in Denmark, Switzerland, Germany, Japan, even

  • the ECB have followed suit, taking rates into negative territory.

  • So what exactly are negative interest rates?

  • Interest rates are generally thought of as the cost of borrowing money.

  • Central banks raise interest rates to cool off an economy that's close to

  • overheating.

  • zero or negative interest rates, on the other hand, are seen as a way to

  • stimulate an economy.

  • In theory, negative rates force banks to lend more.

  • But it doesn't always work that way.

  • Instead, negative rates can actually have the opposite effect.

  • They can squeeze profits so much that financial institutions actually lend

  • less. They can also have an impact on government funding.

  • For example, Germany's economy is on the verge of a recession, so its

  • lowered interest rates to -0.31

  • percent, which means investors could be charged for keeping their money in

  • the bank. But the country still needs to fund the government.

  • So in August 2019, Germany attempted to sell 2 billion euros worth of

  • 30-year bonds, which would mature in 2050 and they had a negative yield.

  • As a result. Investors only bought 869 million euros worth with a yield of

  • -0.11 percent.

  • In other words, investors will in theory pay to have the German government

  • hold their money. Anybody who holds this bond throughout its full life, is

  • guaranteed to lose money and they're guaranteed to lose money over a

  • period of 30 years.

  • Now, what this is telling us really is that anybody who thinks that this

  • is a good investment is factoring in an extremely bleak economic outlook.

  • You're talking about no growth, no inflation for the next three decades.

  • In the end, the German government was forced to buy the remaining bonds

  • itself, which could push down interest rates even further.

  • At the same time, the European Central Bank, or ECB, has continued on its

  • own negative rate path.

  • The ECB recently lowered its main deposit rate to -0.5

  • percent, a 10 basis point cut.

  • It also reintroduced quantitative easing as a means to try to stimulate

  • the economy. Negative yields and low interest rates in Europe have also

  • had another effect. They've driven investors to the U.S.

  • bond market in search of safer investments with a yield.

  • Negative rates cause uncertainty in the markets.

  • Many experts believe negative rates in Europe have only had a modest

  • impact on Europe's growth.

  • While it lowered the cost to borrow money, it didn't do anything to

  • increase demand for goods.

  • As a result, businesses didn't invest.

  • Lowering rates even further could put the entire global financial system

  • at risk. Negative rates cause a decrease in margins, which decreases

  • profitability for banks, and that can cause a bump in fees for loans,

  • including home mortgages.

  • They also make it more difficult for countries institutional investors to

  • find appropriate opportunities for clients.

  • If markets shift, bondholders seeking gains in price rather than yield

  • could get stuck holding too much risk.

  • Germany's negative interest rates have dramatically pushed up prices.

  • Recently, traders paid the equivalent of $195.87

  • for $100 and 20 year German bonds, which translates into a technical

  • negative yield of .386

  • percent. Former Fed chief Alan Greenspan has said that he doesn't believe

  • negative interest rates in the U.S.

  • would be that big of a deal.

  • But others disagree, saying negative rates can be a trap, that they may

  • not boost flagging economies and can even become the norm.

  • And that hurts banks, savers and companies in the long run.

  • It is the financial sector, the banks, the insurance companies, the

  • pensions, the security settlement is all structured, invented on one

  • assumption: positive interest rates.

  • Marginal reserves.

  • Marginal reserves. Everything is on positive interest rates.

  • You take those away and now the investment decision loses your money in a

  • negative interest rate world? The banking system doesn't work.

  • Pensions don't work==.

  • How does the European system work? They're doing a little fudging, aren't

  • they? Some creative movements, you are telling me about?

  • Yeah. The European system works because we, the reserve currency, are

  • still positive. Banks like Deutsche Bank are restructuring their entire

  • worldwide reserve system to invest in U.S.

  • dollars because they've got positive yields.

  • If we go down that road and go negative yields with them and cut everybody

  • off from positive, I think the financial system is at severe stress then

  • at that point. There's also a concern that negative rates encourage

  • governments to borrow more without concern for growing debt until the

  • rates go up and the bill comes due.

  • Meanwhile, trade wars have taken their toll on the global economy and

  • there's a growing concern because rates are so low now, the next recession

  • could force the Fed's hand.

  • Then negative rates could be the only alternative.

  • Larry Summers, former Treasury secretary under President Bill Clinton,

  • says that once rates go negative, it could be extremely difficult to get

  • out and the global financial system could get stuck.

  • And I think the great concern is with what I've called the monetary black

  • hole, that zero rates appear to be where we're stuck in Europe and Japan

  • and we're one recession away from a situation of that kind.

  • It's a very different world when everyone's stuck at zero interest rates.

  • We've got to think about stabilization policy.

  • Institutions are going to have to think about their investment policy in a

  • very different world, in a very different way when we have a black hole,

  • zero interest rate world.

  • And that's what I fear we're headed into.

  • And Morgan Stanley CFO Jonathan Pruzan agrees, saying that negative rates

  • provide little relief.

  • Clearly, the negative rates have not really been helpful to spur the

  • economy in some of these markets.

  • And we'll have to just see how it plays out.

  • But this negative rate dynamic continues to have investors searching for

  • yield. And I think that's a trend that's going to continue because not

  • only there are a lot of negative rates.

  • If you look at this stack of debt products out there, there is not that

  • much inventory that's yielding over 5 percent.

  • So on the one hand, you have a lot of negative rates and on the other

  • hand, not a lot of places where you can find yield.

  • And that's why Harvard Professor of Economics Ken Rogoff believes negative

  • rates will eventually make their way to the United States.

  • But he also says there are more challenges involved for the US than just

  • the rates themselves.

  • I think eventually it will come here to the United States.

  • It may happen sooner rather than later.

  • However, the United States, beyond the Federal Reserve, the government

  • would have to take a lot of steps in changing tax laws or regulatory laws,

  • and particularly how to deal with cash hoarding to really have negative

  • rates dip very far.

  • So Trump may get his wish of zero or negative rates, but the economic

  • slowdown that led to them would dampen the president's prospects of

  • re-election, and the end result could be even worse for the U.S.

  • economy. Well, I am terrified if we go negative rates in the United

  • States, it will virtually destroy the banking system as it is doing in

  • Europe as we speak.

  • That would be a major, major crisis.

  • I continue to think there'll be consequences, you know, in the long term

  • for negative rates as an experiment.

  • I certainly hope in the US there's never a consideration of negative rate

  • policy here in the US.

  • I think it's interesting to see where we are in the economic cycle, where

  • we are from a job perspective and just balance the policy that we have

  • today. You know, personally, I'm not a Fed governor, but personally I've

  • been surprised still by the amount of monetary policy or kind of the low

  • rate environment that we still have at this point in the cycle.

  • I would've expected something slightly different, but negative rates are

  • not something that I think when we look back on history and write the book

  • on that, I'm not sure that'll be a good chapter.

President Trump is a big fan of low interest rates.

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負利率對消費者和經濟意味著什麼? (What Would Negative Interest Rates Mean For Consumers And The Economy?)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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