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REPEAT: MNI: Little Sign of Financial Stress In Fed Index

Repeats Story Initially Transmitted at 18:48 GMT Jan 19/13:48 EST Jan 19
--Current Loose Fin'l Conditions Driven By Low Volatility, Narrow Spreads
--Chicago Fed Leverage Measure Linked to Imbalances Closer to Historical Average
By Jean Yung
     WASHINGTON (MNI) - Low interest rates, record-setting stock prices and
narrow credit spreads making for the most accommodative U.S. financial
conditions in decades have analysts worrying about excess, but a barometer out
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago traditionally associated with financial
imbalances has remained subdued.
     A subcomponent of the Chicago Fed's National Financial Conditions Index,
the nonfinancial leverage subindex, currently gives little indication of
financial stress. 
     Tight financial conditions are associated with below-average credit and
leverage, the latter of which provides a reference point for financial debt
relative to equity. The nonfinancial leverage subindex is a highly predictive
and robust leading indicator of financial stress, able to signal imbalances up
to a year ahead.  
     It nosedived in the aftermath of the financial crisis. After bottoming out
in 2011, it has risen steadily toward its long-run average of zero, registering
at -0.23 in the week ended Jan. 5.
     Overall, the National Financial Conditions Index, an important gauge of
financial activity tracked by policymakers, "is currently close to but slightly
below its mid-2014 value," according to Chicago Fed economist Scott Brave, who
oversees development of the index.
     The weekly indicator is constructed as a weighted average of 105 indicators
of risk, credit, and leverage in the U.S. financial system and is
methodologically similar to other financial condition measures such as the
Goldman Sachs financial conditions index. Positive values indicate financial
conditions that are tighter than on average, while negative values indicate
financial conditions that are looser. 
     The last time the index was lower was in the late '90s. An adjusted version
of the index that takes into account current levels of economic growth and
inflation is seeing a similar trend and currently sits close to the range last
seen in the middle of 2015. 
     Late 2016 seems to mark an inflection point for the index, as the driving
factors behind loosening conditions began to intensify, according to the index.
That roughly coincides with Donald Trump's surprise election win, which gave way
to a historic market run-up on anticipation that a one-party sweep of Congress
and the White House will deliver fiscal stimulus, tax cuts and regulatory relief
to businesses. 
     Since then, both the unadjusted and adjusted National Financial Conditions
indexes have dipped about two-tenths standard deviations from their historical
means, to -0.91 and -0.76, respectively, in the week ending Jan. 5. 
     "What's been driving that has been pretty consistent across the unadjusted
and adjusted versions: low volatility in equity and treasury markets and
compressed interest rate spreads," outweighing factors such as high yield bond
spreads and consumer credit spreads pushing in the opposite direction, Brave
said.  
     Risk premiums, price volatility and parties' willingness to borrow and lend
at prevailing prices are largely driving the easy financial conditions, "as
opposed to the leverage category," Brave said. He declined to comment directly
on what trends in the index might imply about the outlook for the economy, the
transmission of monetary policy or financial stability. 
--MNI Washington Bureau; tel: +1 202-371-2121; email: kevin.kastner@marketnews.com

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