The corrupt world of the central banks

We live in an era where central bankers have taken centre stage in economic policy. There has been a clear shift as elected politicians have stepped back and unelected technocrats have picked up many of the reins. Some of this is not a little incestuous as politicians spending promises benefit from the QE bond buying of the central bankers who were given permission to do it by politicians,sometimes literally the same one. For example the UK Chancellor Rishi Sunak who gives the Bank of England Treasury backing to buy UK bonds is the same person whose decisions benefit from it. Along this road they have become like the “Masters of the Universe” described by Tom Wolfe in the Bonfire of the Vanities.

Next comes the issue that they invariably end up marking their own homework. Central banking research is used as both an explainer of and a justification for central bank policies. Imagine you are a Phd researcher at a central bank, what sort of report do you think might do terminal harm to your career prospects? You would of course be praised whilst your desk finds its way to an underground cellar that never gets visited by the tea trolley.

There is another curiosity which is they are allowed to express things about markets they know nothing about. For example the present head of Markets Sir Dave Ramsden is a career civil servant ( mostly as HM Treasury). Before him came Charlotte Hogg who rather publically demonstrated how little she knew before departing under a cloud. On such a scale it is hard to know how poor Nemat Shafik was because she was of course moved on early to avoid embarrassment.

Actual Corruption

This has come from the US Federal Reserve and let us remind ourselves of the scale of its operations via last night’s balance sheet update which came in at US $8.5 trillion. So you would hope that those making the decisions would be unimpeachable.

Washington, D.C. — Today, United States Senator Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.) took to the Senate floor to call out the culture of corruption among high-ranking Federal Reserve (Fed) officials. Recent reports of ethically questionable financial activity by high-ranking Fed officials — including Federal Reserve Vice Chair Richard Clarida and two regional Fed presidents — have raised deep concerns over conflicts of interests and have undermined public confidence in the Fed.  ( Senator Warren 5th October )

What did they do?

Last month, it was discovered that during the economic turmoil of 2020 as the Fed was called on to take extraordinary measures to support our economy, Robert Kaplan, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, made multiple million-dollar-plus stock trades.

It was also disclosed that, in the same time period, Eric Rosengren, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston, made multiple purchases and sales relating to his stakes in real estate investment trusts and other securities.

A new report last week revealed that a third key Fed official – Vice Chair Richard Clarida – also traded between $1 million and $5 million out of a bond fund into stock funds, exactly one day before Fed Chair Powell publicly suggested possible policy action that would significantly affect bonds and stocks.

I am sure that you can see the problem but here it is spelled out.

Surely, he understands that the Fed officials’ trades run afoul of agency guidelines, which state that officials should, quote, “avoid any dealings or other conduct that might convey even an appearance of conflict between their personal interests, the interests of the [Federal Reserve] System, and the public interest,” end quote.

That is a critique of Fed Chair Jerome Powell on  whose watch this has taken place. Ot does not add that his own personal portfolio is with Blackrock who are the same firm who do quite a bit of buying for the Federal Reserve.

Soft Corruption

For this we can move to Europe and note this from the ECB Twitter feed this morning.

Historically, the ECB and national central banks across the euro area have focused on communicating with expert audiences.

Indeed which its Chief Economist Phillip Lane did with great enthusiasm.

European Central Bank Chief Economist Philip Lane has come under scrutiny for selectively briefing a group of large financial institutions in a series of private calls.

Mr Lane, a member of the ECB’s influential Executive Board and the former governor of the Central Bank of Ireland, made dozens of these calls this year to the likes of Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Deutsche Bank, according to a report in the Wall Street Journal. ( Irish Independent)

The newspaper went on to highlight what it thought was the problem.

The news has raised concerns that Mr Lane is favouring big market participants by giving them privileged insight into the ECB’s decision making during a time of unprecedented central bank intervention in financial markets.

Of course this came with a barrage of official denials that anything material was said. But if so what was said then? Why were they there? Also it raises a future moral hazard should Mr.Lane later join the board of any of these organisations.

For the ECB it was a case of singing along with Britney.

Oops, I did it again
I played with your heart, got lost in the game
Oh baby, baby

Because there had also been this.

The ECB tightened its communication rules in 2015 after one of its executive board members at the time, Benoît Cœuré, told an audience of hedge fund managers, academics and finance officials at an event in London that it planned to front-load its asset purchases. An internal error meant the information was only made public the morning after the event. When the remarks were published, the euro fell sharply.  ( Financial Times )

The rules have since been tightened again although many may not be entirely reassured as the person doing the tightening is President Christine Lagarde.

A French court has found International Monetary Fund chief Christine Lagarde guilty of negligence but did not hand down any punishment.

As French finance minister in 2008, she approved an award of €404m ($429m; £340m) to businessman Bernard Tapie for the disputed sale of a firm. ( BBC News )

She was considered too important to be actually punished.

Before we move on let me bring things right up to date.

PRAGUE, Oct 12 (Reuters) – Slovak central bank Governor and European Central Bank governing council member Peter Kazimir has been charged with bribery but denies wrongdoing and will defend himself against the charges, Kazimir and his lawyer said on Tuesday.

Comment

I thought I would bring things to the UK and the man to look at here is the one I have christened the “absent-minded Professor” or Deputy Governor Ben Broadbent. Earlier this week there was some unhappiness with his behaviour surfacing in social media.

One other point I would note is that Ben Broadbent has given about 1 speech in the last 18 mths but somehow found time to have a round table lunch at MS last week with a bunch of HF PMs. Not exactly open and transparent communication ( @bund_boy )

They mean Morgan Stanley and HF is Hedge Funds. So plenty of time for them but virtually none for those who pay his salary. It certainly hit a raw nerve because look what happened next.

LONDON, Oct 13 (Reuters) – The Bank of England will no longer hold off-the-record briefings between policymakers and individual private sector firms, it told Reuters on Wednesday, as scrutiny over the links between central banks and finance grows.

Actually in a development you could not make up as people would consider it too extreme Reuters were given it as an exclusive!

We can go deeper because I have long thought it was wrong that Ben Broadbent was made a Deputy Governor. This is because he was an external member at the Bank of England which brings with it the hope of independence. This is likely to be sorely tested by a large salary and an increasingly attractive RPI linked pension. That is before the issue of him being yet another former Goldman Sachs employee.

 

 

16 thoughts on “The corrupt world of the central banks

  1. Hello Shaun,

    Again we are shown that its a big club, and we’re not in it .

    As for oversight our big institutions are apparently a special case, to mis-qoute an advert

    ” this isn’t just any old corruption , this is M$S corruption ”

    Still it look as if the lights might stay on but who knows

    Forbin

    • Hi Forbin

      It is not one of the better nights for the National Grid as wind is a paltry 1.58 GW and we are burning a lot of gas and even some coal. There is good and bad news on the intercommector with France that had the fire. The good is that it can run at 1GW next week. The bad is that it will take 2 years to get back to 2GW capacity,

  2. Shaun you call it out. I hope that all pension provisions are destroyed for Govt workers. Probably the only way to re-introduce a risk and responsibility concept to these people.

  3. RIP Sir Gerry Robinson

    “Businessman and broadcaster Sir Gerry Robinson has died at the age of 72.

    Sir Gerry, a former chairman and chief executive of Granada TV, died at Letterkenny University Hospital, County Donegal, in the Republic of Ireland on Thursday.

    He was knighted in 2003 for services to the arts and business.

    As a broadcaster, he presented a number of series for the BBC including I’ll Show Them Who’s Boss in 2004 and Can Gerry Robinson Fix The NHS? in 2007.

    In 2011, he presented the BBC television show Can’t Take It with You, which helped people to write their wills.

    One of 10 siblings, Sir Gerry was born in October 1948.

    He grew up in Dunfanaghy, County Donegal, before moving to England as a teenager.

    https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-northern-ireland-58917423?at_medium=RSS&at_campaign=KARANGA

    I watched a number of his programes as above including who is boss, helping fix the NHs and helping people write a will. Seemed a really honest and bright guy, died at 72 not an age and a few months younger than me. It brings it home how fragile life is. RIP and my sympathies to all his friends and particularly his family.

    I wonder what he would have thought of the NHS today?

    • He would see it as a behemoth with a wonderful concept
      that has been in need of a new efficient overhaul
      following two generations of poor control.

  4. Wonder if Alistair Darkling (too corrupt to be a lawyer) was at that lunch, as he’s on MS’s books now isn;t he.

    The whole lot is rotten with corruption to the core.

    Bring back garotting.

    By the way, anybody know why we are short of CO2 now when we weren’t during any of the lockdowns, when people could cheer themselves up by drinking themselves to death.

    Anybody know why the supply chains, especially the internal UK ones held up during covid, & for 9 moths after a pre-announced Brexit?

    Anybody really know why we’ve no gas for heating or electricity generating at the ONSET of winter months rather than the end?
    Why isn’t the UK Govt. building dozens of gasometers all over the country?

    Anybody tell me why car fuel prices are through the roof, when a few months ago there wasn’t room to store the surplus?

    Why is it that the one excellent source of animal protein for children is to rocket in price.

    Why now? were we eating less during lockdown, such that the distribution network could handle it then, but not now. Did all these EU workers leave last month?

    I suggest this is being co-ordinated to push for a short spell of high double digit inflation.

    The Great Reset is no longer a conspiracy set in the far future; the Great Reset is being rolled out NOW!

    Bring back garotting!

        • You think it’s incompetence that we’re short of HGV drivers & 45000 licence applications lie behind the letter-box at DVLA?
          You think it’s incompetence that we were told 10 years ago that electricity would be used “as available” rather than “on demand”, and we’re almost there?
          You think iy’s incompetence that there’s no shortage of pillow-pack lettuce, which uses a lot of CO2, but there’s none for chicken?
          Finally, & this is the big one:
          You think it’s incompetence that, immediately after suspension of the triple-lock for pensions & the disabled, we see inflation of the type we’ve not had for 30-odd years let rip?

          You are far, far too generous, Shaun.

          My only hope is that a hungry man is an angry man, because millions of fit & able people, most of the working, have just lost £20-a-week in the teeth of this inflation, & my view is that rioting & overthrow of the govt. is the answer.

          Then let’s have a great, working-class, reset

          Bring back garotting.

  5. It appears that, on the energy front, we have copied Germany.
    Peterson (on Germany), “Well look what happened there; they relied on wind & solar, & the price of energy shot up!”

    Why would we copy Germany’s “failure” if our govt. didn’t want us to have absolutely the same “failure?”
    Only answer can be, because it isn’t a failure, sky high power prices is precisely what the elite want.

    I sincerely hope that those who pooh-pooh what I have to say don’t find elderly or disabled relatives who have died of the co;d this winter, but with 1.8million more homes in fuel poverty this winter, & the price of essential foods rocketing, don’t be surprised if you know someone who dies prematurely.

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