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AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

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  • AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

    The Fed is Painted Into a Corner
    March 16th, 2010
    By
    David Goldman
    http://blog.atimes.net/?p=1404

    China and Japan have been reducing their purchases of US government securities, while US and (presumably) foreign banks have been increasing their holdings.



    Since the beginning of the recession, banks have bought about $300 billion of Treasuries and reduced commercial and industrial loans by about $350 billion. Foreign purchases as of January were still running at a $60 billion monthly rate in January–about $195 billion during the last three months for which we have data. That’s an annual rate of nearly $800 billion, or about half the Treasury’s annual borrowing requirement.


    But the demand came not from foreign central banks, but rather from “other foreigners.” Most of this reflects use of the carry trade by foreign banks, or hedge funds, who are doing exactly what the American banks are doing: borrowing at 0.25% from central banks and lending it back to the US government at 1% or 2%, depending how far out the curve they go. The demand isn’t not coming from the oil exporters, who appear to be net sellers. On a geographic basis, the main buyers are “United Kingdom” and the “Caribbean,” that is, banks and hedge funds.


    Raise rates and the carry trade comes crashing down. And so does the Treasury market and the mortgage market and the US economy. The Fed is stuck with loose money just as the Bank of Japan was during the 1990s, and for the same reasons.


    A table of relevant data can be found at original article
    The greatest obstacle to discovery is not ignorance - it is the illusion of knowledge ~D Boorstin

  • #2
    Re: AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

    Well, of course the author's conclusions are correct. And the implications of the Fed's policy are clear.

    Zero Interest Rate policy (ZIP) exposes the economic and ethical bankruptcy of Keynesianism as practiced by a corrupt and immoral government. The entire operation is by and for the benefit of the banksters, who practice the giant fraud of Fractional Reserve Lending.

    In so doing the Fed turns "evil into good, and good into evil" as thrift is punished and profligacy is rewarded, and I haven't even discussed the robbery of the American Taxpayer.

    Greenspan, Bernanke, Paulson, Geithner, Summers, the whole lot of them should get 20 years at hard labor. Or worse. :mad:
    Last edited by Raz; March 16, 2010, 09:25 PM. Reason: Spelling

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    • #3
      Re: AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

      Apparently there is a bill in Congress regarding direct loans to students. It would save many billions of dollars.
      I would like direct to consumer lending by the Fed. We do not need the middlemen.

      The unfairness of it all is what kills me. But, Raz expresses it far better.

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      • #4
        Re: AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

        If the Fed is trapped with loose money because it can't raise interest rates due to the carry trade of its banks, then we have three things pushing the U.S. into a hyper-inflation: a.) loose money for years, and so loose that it funds an enbedded carry-trade by the banks; b.) chronic trade deficits; and c.) a scarcity of domestic savings to fund borrowing.

        But what is the spark that sets-off the hyper-inflation? Right now, pouring gasoline onto the fire is putting the fire out by actually suffocating the flames. (For the Fed: so far, so good.) ;)

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        • #5
          Re: AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

          Originally posted by Starving Steve View Post
          If the Fed is trapped with loose money because it can't raise interest rates due to the carry trade of its banks, then we have three things pushing the U.S. into a hyper-inflation: a.) loose money for years, and so loose that it funds an enbedded carry-trade by the banks; b.) chronic trade deficits; and c.) a scarcity of domestic savings to fund borrowing.

          But what is the spark that sets-off the hyper-inflation? Right now, pouring gasoline onto the fire is putting the fire out by actually suffocating the flames. (For the Fed: so far, so good.) ;)
          Who knows how long it will take, but I think it's a fallacy to believe that foreign central banks, banks, hedge funds and other foreigners will keep lending to the US government in perpetuity. We do have a huge % of debt in short maturities that has to be rolled over soon. At some point, the lending will slow down or stop. I think that is the spark.

          Then the Fed has a choice. Raise rates or monetize. Both of which are apparently disasters.

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          • #6
            Re: AsiaTimes: Fed is Painted Into a Corner

            SDR's and negotiated restructuring/default?

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