Today's Focus On PMI Release

 | Oct 23, 2014 05:29AM ET

Nowotny lets the cat out of the bag ECB Governing Council member Ewald Nowotny made a striking admission yesterday: he noted that although there’s no decision yet on buying corporate bonds, “the main concern of the ECB is that we have a shrinking balance sheet. And so of course the point is how to achieve growth of the balance sheet, which I personally think is a legitimate point. Corporate bonds are one of the markets that are still open for this.” The statement shows how the ECB’s aims have changed. Until now it’s cloaked its operations as a way of easing credit and ensuring that monetary policy is transmitted effectively throughout the Eurozone, but Nowotny now says the ultimate aim is simply balance sheet expansion. That’s the definition of quantitative easing. The question of whether buying corporate bonds is a fair and effective way to get credit to the private sector is therefore secondary.

With the ECB launched on QE and the Fed set to end its QE next week, the dollar rose against all its G10 counterparts overnight. Indeed it also rose against almost all the EM currencies we track, too (except for ZAR).

Will the ECB be able to pick up the slack from the Fed and support the global economy? I think it would. I did a small experiment. I made the following assumptions: 1) The ECB grows its balance sheet back to the previous peak level by end-2015. 2) The Fed’s balance sheet stays unchanged. 3) The Bank of Japan and Bank of England continue to grow their balance sheets at their current rate (the average for 2014), while 5) the Swiss National Bank grows its balance sheet at double the recent pace because of intervention as EUR weakens. The result, as shown in the graph, is that total central bank assets would continue to rise and at an accelerating pace during 2015. This should keep global economies – or at least global financial markets – afloat. It also means the Eurozone and Japan would be the major source of new liquidity, which implies that EUR and JPY will be the main funding currencies. It looks to me like they are set to weaken further.