Wednesday, February 9, 2011

Thalidomide and the Fed

Until their plan to buy everything-under-the-sun the Fed provided (or extracted) liquidity mainly through an O/N market by the way of so-called “repos” or “reverse repos,” these with so-called registered dealers. The Fed fine-tuned with “Fed Funds” as the speedometer. FF’s is the rate prime banks charge each other for O/N money on which to make their required reserves good with their regulator. Some are flush, some aren’t. The hungrier banks are to make loans the more pressure on FF’s. If the Fed wants to slow things then they won’t meet the demand in that mkt; short term rates will spike, and in theory, economic activity will slow. If the Fed wants to be accommodative they supply more money to that market; banks take it as reserves and (Econ 101) the multiplier effect takes over.

Key here folks is that nothing was forced on the market, on the general interest rate environment; takers could come to or stay away from the trough, given demand or lack of in the economy. Longer-term rates ( 2 - 30 yrs) which impact all of us, were left to find their own level.

This worked fine until Q4 ‘08. Policy makers were desperate. Nothing in the medical cabinet would impact this new pathogen. Thus massive Fed intervention - no longer just short term operations, but buying long treasuries and mortgage paper, QE 1 (12/08 - 3/10) - was meant to 1) prevent a world meltdown and then 2) fire a recovery with lower rates. The meltdown was prevented. No one knew the side effects of this kind of medicine however.

Now there is no crisis but they’re at it again. We all know that Bernanke decided on the second major dose - QE 2, Nov ‘10 and plans to continue that medication to Q3 ‘11. Bernanke is now out of his league; if there is a Oath of Hippocrates for central bankers he hasn’t taken it.

Instead of a central banker he has become a government planner. QE2 is fraught with danger. His intervention is a useless as Obama’s attempt at gov’t planning, that which delayed the recovery. Bernanke is providing money which is not needed or wanted, except by the gov’t, banana republic style (The fed owns more Treasuries now than the Bank of China.) The US economy in not in need of liquidity.

The Fed’s program is meant to 1) feed the gov’t and to 2) feed the home market, a repeat mistake. It only penalizes the prudent - savers who would otherwise put their savings to more productive uses. This provides a distortion as these lower rates are purely artificial, driven by money created out of thin air. The Fed’s buying spree could create the very bubbles which brought us here in the first place. At the very least it is creating malformations on the US economic body.


Robert Craven

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