
According to the Bank for International Settlements, the total of public and private debt in the G20 Nations is 30 percent higher than it was before the Great Recession of 2008 and 2009. And when you think of a crisis as a period for deleveraging, or starting to reign in and payback debt, that hasn’t been the case across the world’s 20 largest and emerging market economies, and policies like ultralow interest rates and quantitative easing have only acted to encourage and exacerbate the issue.
The concern stems from the stimulus driven policies of the world’s central banks that have allowed consumers to go out and make big ticket purchases at relatively low financing costs. Buying that new car or managing mortgage payments were made significantly more achievable because of how longer term interest rates were and are being suppressed. But as the Fed enters this period of altering their form of stimulus which they provide to the market by shifting away from an exhausted bond purchase program towards enhanced forward guidance on record low policy rates, the market still conceals a lot of uncertainty that becomes difficult to price in.
We like to believe in the efficiency of markets and that the price of an asset reflects all the current available information to any level of investor. And that encompasses the fact that expectations of future events are priced into the market as well. Hence the episode back in May of 2013 when Chairman Bernanke hinted at the idea of paring back bond purchases, the effect on financial markets was significant because easy money policies from the Fed provided fuel for risky assets. But now that the markets have seemed to have digested the idea of a taper from the US Federal Reserve and the realization that Quantitative Easing (QE) can come to an end, some analysts suggest that this is then realized in the price of financial assets.
