To Beat the Bust, Burn Houses Down?

Economist Milton Friedman once famously quipped that price deflation can be fought by "dropping money out of a helicopter."

That, for an economist who normally advocated a small expansion of the money supply as the right way to grow an economy, was about as radical as you could get in fighting sluggish.

Or a case where, like now, interest rates are near zero, housing prices are in a six-year decline and the Federal Reserve seems to be running out of options to stimulate the nation's fiscal condition.

What, instead, if you burn houses down?

Here is a not-so-widely recalled observation by a governor of the Federal Reserve system in 2002.

"If the Treasury issued debt to purchase private assets and the Fed then purchased an equal amount of Treasury debt with newly created money, the whole operation would be the economic equivalent of direct open-market operations in private assets."

Those "private assets" could and have been taken to mean houses. In lieu of tax cuts or other stimulus, the government could increase spending on current goods and services by, in effect, taking overstock out of the picture.

The governor was Ben S. Bernanke, speaking in November 2002 at the National Economists Club in Washington, D.C., on how to prevent deflation from happening here.

Now he is the Fed chairman. And this is what Curtis Arledge, the chief executive officer of BNY Mellon Investment Management calls the "buy houses and burn them down" policy.

The tactic, if invoked, would do two things, he said last week at the company's headquarters 55 floors above Grand Central Terminal in New York:

"When you buy a house, you inject money into the system. The person you buy it from gets liquidity. And, the second thing you do, is obviously deal with the supply and demand dynamics,'' he said.

You end the overhang. Instead of the nation slowly working its way out of its overleveraged, overbuilt state, you speed back to the starting point of health. Build houses-only as needed-and let the inhabitants spend on the goods needed to fill them and the services needed to maintain them.

"Now, you know, some people think that's crazy,'' he said. But one of them is not Fed chairman Bernanke, he said. Or, his predecessor Alan Greenspan.

"You may remember in 'Too Big to Fail' [the book] and in October 2011e again, former Chairman Alan Greenspan actually talked about the idea that the Fed thought the most effective thing they could do was to buy houses and burn them down,'' Arledge said.

But for Bernanke, burning houses down, by Arledge's reckoning, is a seventh and last option in, at the same time, stimulating growth and fighting back the deflation that occurs when an economy is so sick that demand for goods and services shrivel.

The seven steps that Bernanke laid out in his 2002 speech and the steps he's taken so far from that playback go like this, in Arledge's count:

1. Expand the balance sheet. The nation's money supply now stands at $2.9 trillion, according to BNY Mellon. More than $2 trillion of that has been added since the eruption of the housing-led credit crisis that erupted in September 2008.

2. Extend the duration of assets and liabilities held on the balance sheet. On June 20, the Fed for instance launched a $267 billion extension of its Operation Twist, plan to underpin the still-fragile U.S. economy. Under that Twist, the Fed would sell medium-length bonds that are coming due and use the proceeds to buy longer-term bonds, such as 10-year Treasuries.

3. Jawbone. Verbally try to convince the market that rates will stay low. In January, Bernanke pledged to keep interest rates low through at least late 2014. That was an extension of a previous pledge to keep rates low through the middle of 2013.

4. Cap yields. "You just say, we're going to be an unlimited buyer of Treasuries or you say, we're going to buy all of them at 1%,'' said Arledge. "So you just say the 10-year Treasury note is going to yield 1% and we will buy all of them so that they yield that.''

5. Grease the wheels. Make low or even zero interest loans to banks. Extend credit to companies and real estate firms. If that doesn't work, suck up other loans on the nation's books. The Fed, in effect, becomes a manager of credit markets, "because this is your financial system and it's not working,'' Arledge said.

6. Buy foreign bonds. "Potentially, this class of assets offers huge scope for Fed operations, as the quantity of foreign assets eligible for purchase by the Fed is several times the stock of U.S. government debt,'' Bernanke said in 2002. But, Bernanke noted, "since the U.S. is a large, relatively closed economy, manipulating the exchange value of the dollar would not be a particularly desirable way to fight domestic deflation,'' unless other options did not bear fruit.

If none of those work, then there's the burn-the-houses down approach.

Which doesn't really have to involve a torch, Arledge said.

"I would never say burn them down. I do think that there's a lot of productive [assets], both materials and labor, that went into creating it,'' he said. "Should we consider buying houses and potentially rent them as a nation? Yes. I think we should."

When prices of houses are going up, he said, everyone wants to buy them. When they're going down, no one does.

Foreclosures on homes still have not cleared the markets in some regions of the country, he said. "And I think in certain markets it might make sense for the government to consider a plan of buying and renting, to deal with both of those issues,'' he said.

For fund managers, the response, as steps four through seven approach, is fairly clear, according to Arledge and other BNY Mellon investment managers and economists.

Move out of Treasuries and into dividend-yielding stocks and corporate debt that carry a higher pay back (i.e., effective interest rate). Also, look at investing in (or starting) hybrid bond and stock funds, so that customers can benefit from swings in the value of either type of asset, and absolute return funds, which ignore inflation or deflation and just aim for pure return in any circumstance.

"The end of the greatest fixed-income bull market in history is coming,'' said Simon Pryke, chief investment officer at Newton Investment Management, a BNY Mellon unit based in London.

Besides, when it comes to booms or busts, he added, "What if governments actually can't do anything?''

For reprint and licensing requests for this article, click here.
Mutual funds Law and regulation Money Management Executive
MORE FROM FINANCIAL PLANNING