Friday, February 16, 2024

The US and the Jenga economy

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Feb 16, 2024 View in browser
 
POLITICO Morning Money

By Zachary Warmbrodt

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QUICK FIX

It’s becoming clear that the surprising strength of the U.S. economy isn’t just a boon to domestic consumers, businesses and the political prospects of Joe Biden. It’s also just what the world needs as other wealthy nations struggle to sustain growth post-Covid.

The last 24 hours has told a slowdown story across some of the world’s biggest and most developed markets. Japan lost its position as the third-largest economy and entered an unexpected recession as inflation hit spending. The U.K. also fell into recession, putting fresh political pressure on Prime Minister Rishi Sunak ahead of a tough election. EU officials slashed their forecast for growth and downplayed hopes for a quick recovery.

As State Street senior macro strategist Noel Dixon wrote to clients this week, divergences among G10 countries are widening, particularly on growth and inflation. Most of the countries are growing below trend with the U.S. being the outlier, he said.

The split, which wasn’t entirely unexpected, is posing a new question: What does the U.S. have going for it on the other side of the pandemic that its peers do not?

“Is it about productivity growth? Is it about technology in the U.S.? We don’t know all the answers yet,” said the Atlantic Council’s Josh Lipsky, who previously served at the IMF and the State Department. “There’s something that appears structurally different in the U.S. economy than other peer advanced economies.”

EY-Parthenon chief economist Gregory Daco attributes it to a few things. The exceptional vigor of the U.S. labor market accompanied by strong productivity. U.S. service-sector resilience. A reliance on fixed-rate debt that delays the effects of tighter monetary policy. And finally, stronger fiscal support than in other economies. He cites the CHIPS law and the Inflation Reduction Act, but also some Covid-era policies that are having a lingering effect.

“We don’t typically see this type of economic divergence between the U.S., which remains the global growth engine that is doing relatively well, and the rest of the world, which is really lagging in terms of economic momentum,” Daco said.

Institute of International Finance executive vice president Clay Lowery, a former top Treasury official, said the biggest driver is consumer spending driven by real wage growth.

“What that implies is, there was a lot of excess savings coming out of Covid, and the U.S. consumer has basically drawn them down,” he said. “Whereas in other countries the consumer has not.”

The divergence message is something that the Biden administration has been highlighting for months. The Treasury Department released a report in October comparing the U.S. recovery to other nations, arguing that “the progress we have made on growth, labor markets and inflation stands out across the globe.”

NEC Director Lael Brainard told reporters Thursday that the trend in the U.S. “is perhaps the biggest contribution we can make to the global economy.”

"Obviously, we want to see healthy growth around the globe,” she said. “We are actually seeing improvements in some emerging markets."

It could all have geopolitical implications, in particular for the way the U.S. and China get along.

“Has China sought to find more accommodation with the United States … because they need to find a way to have a better economic relationship with an economy that is strong and has grown faster than other economies, while their own economy has frankly not done so well?” Lowery said.

There’s a risk that stagnation in other major economies could become a drag on the U.S. That’s where China’s growth story could also have an impact.

“If the rest of the world is struggling, that is going to weigh on U.S. exports, on U.S. investments abroad, and will have a detrimental effect on growth in the U.S.,” Daco said. “Fortunately, the U.S. is a fairly closed, large economy, and so the passthrough is not as direct as if you were talking about a small, open economy. But it is noteworthy that this backdrop is likely to weigh on growth.”

Lipsky compares the global economy to a kind of Jenga tower that could get wobbly. The U.S. and India are two of the strongest pieces.

“You look at it from above and it looks sturdy,” he said. “But if you pan the camera down, there are some holes. You can only take so many of those at once before the whole structure is destabilized.”

Happy Friday — Send thoughts and tips to zwarmbrodt@politico.com.

 

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Driving the day

PPI for January is out at 8:30 a.m. … Fed Vice Chair for Supervision Michael Barr gives a speech on bank oversight at a Columbia Law School conference at 9:10 a.m. … The University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment report is out at 10 a.m.

Progress at Wells Fargo? — The OCC terminated a 2016 consent order imposed on the megabank for opening fake accounts, Declan Harty reports. The giant lender, which has been led by CEO Charles Scharf since 2019, remains subject to a Fed growth cap. Scharf said the OCC's order is the sixth that regulators have closed out for the bank over the last five years.

A new Wall Street climate rift — The FT reports that JPMorgan Asset Management and State Street Global Advisors are leaving an investor group focused on fighting climate change. BlackRock is scaling back its role.

The departures from Climate Action 100+ illustrate a split between U.S. money managers and those in other parts of the world as Republicans ramp up political pressure on climate issues.

Trump’s SEC win — The former president’s media startup is getting closer to a Wall Street listing after winning a key approval from the agency, Declan reports.

What the Fed wants to know — Get ready: The Fed announced the scenario for annual stress tests that measure how banks would fare in a severe recession. Our Victoria Guida has the details.

In this year’s hypothetical scenario, asset prices would collapse, including a 36 percent decline in house prices and a 40 percent decline in commercial real estate. Banks will also be asked to examine the effects of unemployment rising to 10 percent.

The Fed is expanding the “exploratory” component of the test. It won’t affect bank capital requirements and will be used to assess the banking system broadly, rather than individual firms. As part of that analysis, the central bank will examine what would happen if there were “a rapid repricing of a large proportion of deposits at large banks.” The largest most complex banks will also have to consider what would happen if five large hedge funds failed.

Economy

Inflation weighs on the left’s economic dream — Victoria is out with her debut column this morning, and it explores a simmering political conundrum for liberal policymakers and advocates. They’re getting a strong economy on their terms, but inflation is making it tough for voters to appreciate it.

One prominent progressive policy advocate told Victoria: “There’s a healthy amount of fear and introspection happening among the architects of these efforts that folks aren’t necessarily buying what we’re selling.”

On the Hill

Some Dems say no to Waters on capital — Rep. Maxine Waters is seeking lawmaker signatures for a letter that will urge regulators to finalize a proposed hike in capital requirements for large banks. But she’s facing resistance from some Democrats, our Eleanor Mueller scoops.

Democrats including Reps. Brittany Pettersen and Sean Casten said Waters approached them, but they ultimately decided against signing.

"We're staying focused on our own letter," Casten said. His correspondence with the agencies raised concerns over the proposal’s potential impact on clean energy projects.

Others like Rep. Gregory Meeks, who sent his own letter pushing back, said Waters didn't even approach him. "She knew how we felt,” he said.

A full draft of the Waters letter obtained by POLITICO encourages regulators to “promptly finalize these rules and reject industry-led attacks to materially weaken if not block the implementation of these safeguards."

Stablecoin stability — The positive vibe around House stablecoin legislation is persisting.

Per Eleanor, House Financial Services Chair Patrick McHenry said Republicans have an “understanding” with ranking member Maxine Waters on the bill. They’re just waiting for a green light from the Fed, the Biden administration and the Senate.

McHenry said he might use a Mach 6 hearing with Fed Chair Jerome Powell to advance the issue.

Crypto AML clash heats up — Per Eleanor, Republicans and Democrats on House Financial Services butted heads at a hearing over how to police financial crime in crypto. Republicans argued that existing regulations might be sufficient while Democrats called for greater guardrails.

The spat matters because agreement on anti-money laundering safeguards might be needed to advance any major crypto legislation. McHenry said lawmakers are still in the information-gathering phase.

"This is the very beginning of the choose-your-own-adventure," he said.

CBC presses Navy Federal CEO — Congressional Black Caucus members met with the CEO of Navy Federal Credit Union behind closed doors on Thursday. They raised concerns about a CNN report showing a 29-percentage-point gap in mortgage approvals between white and Black mortgage borrowers.

Jasper Goodman reports that Rep. Steven Horsford, the chair of the Congressional Black Caucus, said Navy Federal's responses to the lawmakers were "inadequate."

In a statement, Navy Federal said it shared analysis suggesting the reported difference in approvals drops significantly “when all other factors that we consider when approving home loans are incorporated, including credit score, verified income and property information.”

 

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Regulatory Corner

Banks press SEC to rethink crypto policy — Washington’s top banking and financial trade groups are calling on the SEC to revise crypto custody guidance that they say cuts banks out of the market, Declan reports. The American Bankers Association, the Bank Policy Institute, the Financial Services Forum and the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association are behind the push.

 

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Zachary Warmbrodt @Zachary

Victoria Guida @vtg2

Declan Harty @ @declanharty

Eleanor Mueller @eleanor_mueller

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Sam Sutton @samjsutton

 

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