Wealth Strategies
Years Of "Nanny Finance" Will Have Enduring Impact – Saxo

The author of this article argues, perhaps provocatively, that the world's capital markets have been unwisely "nannied" on cheap money and not prepared for a more "adult" world where central banks don't endlessly support the market. How long will the effects last?
Even before the 2008 financial crash, investors and other
players, such as banks, relied and became comfortable with
the idea of central banks rescuing them by injecting vast amounts
of money into the system via bond and other asset purchases. The
approach, known as quantitative easing, is now arguably one of
the main reasons for rising consumer price inflation, having
already boosted asset prices in stocks and residential real
estate, for example.
Again, before the crash, there was talk of a “Greenspan put”
– a term taking its name from the options market. Investors
could bet that if stocks fell, Alan Greenspan and his colleagues
at the US Federal Reserve would loosen monetary policy and boost
the market. As a result, betting against equities was seen as a
mug’s game.
According to Charles White Thomson, CEO at Saxo Markets UK, part
of Saxo Bank,
markets have become victim to a sort of coddling, or “nannying”
effect from all this cheap money. (Sometimes one hears of
commentators claiming that zero/negative rates created “zombie”
corporations shielded from the creative destruction of healthy
capitalism.) Whatever the terminology, there’s no doubt that a
decade-long period of zero/negative real rates around the world
has bent the capital markets out of shape. The move back to a
more conventional model is going to be painful.
The editors of this news service are happy to share these
comments; the usual editorial disclaimers apply. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com
Nanny finance in the form of central banks and their years of
excessive quantitative easing, and their desire to cut
rates at the first sign of trouble or discontent, has
dominated the world for many years. This seemingly, overly soft
approach and the desire to step in and make things better has
created a generation of investors with a dependency on being
financially bailed out or rescued.
The consequences of years of cheap money can be seen in asset
bubbles across the globe and the bi-product is rampant inflation.
Financial historians will not be kind as they review this period.
At the micro level we have a generation of investors with a
skewed attitude to risk and a reduced ability to stand alone.
Moral hazard is negative and encourages dependency and a desire
to blame others for negative events.
Nanny finance hasn’t just been soft on financial markets. We can
also see this at the state level, otherwise known as the “nanny
state.” At the heart of this, is the commendable desire to
keep everyone safe from all the difficulties that different life
and business cycles can create. There should clearly always be a
safety net for the most vulnerable, but it is misguided to try
and do this for everyone, all the time.
I always used to think that the archetypal nanny was a figure of
strength and consistency – firm yet fair, your biggest
fan and your biggest critic. A believer in moderation, focusing
on today while keeping an eye out for tomorrow, as one day nanny
would step back and their charge would make their own way
into the big wide world, armed with character and the ability to
stand on their own.
If only the central banks and monetary bodies had applied some of
this traditional logic, we would have had a calmer world with
less of cheap money highs and lows. Ark Innovation is
a fine example of this.
This brings me onto my next concern. Central banks a.k.a
nanny finance in many cases are under heavy criticism for having
been soft in their approach to monetary policy, with a focus on
flooding the system with cheap money, and the poor management of
inflation and the misguided view that this is transitional. The
temptation will be to take on a much more disciplined and austere
persona and to show the world that they too can be tough and very
tough at that.
Should this happen we are well on the way to policy failure, or
accelerating existing policy failure, with a vulnerable consumer
and economy, as the preferred medicine is interest rate
hikes. It is also no time to be soft and shy away from
difficult decisions and actions.
This is all about firm balance and threading the needle of
inflation management, interest rates and a leveraged world. This
will not be easy, and we should be prepared for difficult times
ahead. Nanny McPhee has some good advice for nanny finance about
balance and the role, now and going forward – “When you need me,
but do not want me, then I will stay. If you want me, but no
longer need me then I must go.”
More than ever, I hope Nanny knows best.
Saxo Markets is a licensed subsidiary of Saxo Bank, the
Denmark-headquartered financial services group.