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  • The Fed's Exit Strategy

    The Fed's Exit Strategy
    The Fed has financed its loans and securities purchases in the past year by creating new reserves for the banking system (in effect, printing money). Reserves have rocketed, to almost $900 billion now from an average of $11 billion in the year to September. Many analysts see these excess reserves as a pool of inflationary fuel just waiting for the match of credit demand.

    The Fed considers this analysis flawed. It sees excess reserves as a problem only if they overwhelm its ability to raise the federal funds rate when need arises. That risk has shrunk since the Fed received authority in September to pay interest on reserves, as other major central banks have long been able to. That in theory should put a floor under the Fed funds rate. Banks should not lend excess reserves at, say, 1%, if they can earn 2% from the Fed.

    That said, the Fed cannot be certain that paying interest will work as planned, so it would also like to be able to soak up some reserves. Some were created by the Fed’s myriad loans to banks, issuers of commercial paper and others to unfreeze the credit markets. Those liquidity facilities charge borrowers a penalty rate which makes them less attractive as private credit returns. That is now happening, and the liquidity facilities have begun to shrink (see chart). The Fed could hurry that process up by raising the penalties.

    Managing its growing securities holdings will be tougher. The Fed could simply sell them but that would create waves. “The day you sell will be a big market event,” says Mr Dudley. “Historically, the Fed has been buy and hold.” Since the average maturity of the Fed’s bond holdings is five to ten years, the Fed will have to find a way to mop up, or “sterilise”, the related bank reserves for a long time. The usual approach is to conduct reverse-repurchase agreements, borrowing from one of its 16 primary dealers for short periods of time in order to finance the assets on its balance-sheet. But dealers may not have the necessary capacity for the task.

    The Fed is currently absorbing reserves by having the Treasury issue more debt than it needs. When dealers purchase the debt, cash shifts from their reserves accounts to Treasury deposits at the Fed, where they remain, unspent. But the Treasury itself is constrained by the debt ceiling set by Congress, and an independent central bank should not rely on the fiscal authority for one of its tools.

    A better solution would be for the Fed to issue its own bills, as other central banks do. It could rely on a wider variety of investors, not just primary dealers, to manage its balance-sheet. It would restrict the maturity of such bills to less than 30 days to avoid interfering with Treasury’s longer-dated issuance. The hitch is that Congress has to authorise it. It may come to that. “As long as people are worried about whether we have adequate tools, it makes sense for us to get more tools even if we don’t think we need them,” says Mr Dudley.

  • #2
    Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

    my own skepticism about the fed is not based on a lack of tools, but on a lack of will in the absence of robust economic growth.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

      Originally posted by jk View Post
      my own skepticism about the fed is not based on a lack of tools, but on a lack of will in the absence of robust economic growth.
      +1

      it can't be said enough

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

        Originally posted by jk View Post
        my own skepticism about the fed is not based on a lack of tools, but on a lack of will in the absence of robust economic growth.
        but haven't you heard? no inflation without rapid economic growth.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

          Originally posted by jk View Post
          my own skepticism about the fed is not based on a lack of tools, but on a lack of will in the absence of robust economic growth.
          I think Obama will have his American Excess card cancelled by Congress within a few months.

          I was watching C-SPAN today, there appears to be momentum building to pull the reigns on the FED and Obama to put an end this folly. Eventually they will get it. Unfortunately so many horses will be out of the barn by the time they get the doors shut.

          China tells Geithner to essentially "balance your budget or else" last week (repeated to Congress by Bernanke this week) ... as they shift to 2 year treasuries.

          Mrs. Merkel suggested that the central banks may end up doing more harm than good. She told a conference in Berlin: "What other central banks have been doing must stop now. I am very sceptical about the extent of the Fed's actions and the way the Bank of England has carved its own little line in Europe," she told a conference in Berlin. She said she views "with great scepticism what authority the Fed has and the leeway the Bank of England has created for itself." Should be an interesting conversation between Merkel and Obama Friday.

          http://www.businessweek.com/globalbi...lobal+business

          On Wednesday, Sen. Richard Shelby of Alabama, the top Republican on the Senate Banking Committee, was the latest member of Congress to express unease with the Fed's current form. "An inherent web of conflicts is built into the DNA of the Fed as it now exists. There are serious, serious...unexamined questions regarding the Fed's failure to fulfill its pre-existing regulatory responsibilities. With that in mind, I will view with great skepticism any move to give the Fed expanded authority," Shelby said.

          http://www.marketwatch.com/story/fed...s?pagenumber=1

          I'd love to see Congress turn off the spigot and start the investigations ... it would restore a little faith ... and slow down the printing press.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

            Originally posted by BigLandbaron View Post
            I'd love to see Congress turn off the spigot and start the investigations ...
            "Suppose you were and idiot and suppose you were a member of Congress. But I repeat myself." - Samuel Clemens

            Congress will take a stand on nothing of consequence.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

              There are only two possible exit strategies for the Fed:

              1. Treasury will buy the poorly-performing assets from them -- directly monetizing the debt (they will call it "capital injections" -- in effect, TARP for the Fed), or

              2. The Fed will fail, as many central banks before it have failed.

              Any talk of being able to raise rates and sell off their assets in the public market is pure fantasy.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                how much did they pay for the 750B of MBS they purchased? PAR?
                95% of Par, 90% PAR?
                Housing is never coming back to 2006 levels unless there is high inflation for a long time. I'm sure they did not purchase the cream of MBS, they purchased the crap. The underlying loans will default. How many of those loans are for houses in Florida or California? Where housing prices are cut in half, and the unemployment rate is spiraling out of sight? So 750B of $$$ were created, and the assetsthe fed owns are or will be worth pennies on the dollar. Other sales of distressed MBS that happened in the summer of 2008 fetched 30 cents on the dollar. So 70% of 750 = 525B of money that can't be destoryed is out there, chasing fewer goods as the economy collapses.

                So are you saying sharky that the treas will sell bonds, to buy the crap off the fed balance sheet. Can the treas market endure any more sales? Will that spike interest rates?

                If #2 occurs what does that mean for the man on the street?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                  Originally posted by BigLandbaron View Post
                  Should be an interesting conversation between Merkel and Obama Friday.
                  http://news.goldseek.com/GoldSeek/1244050251.php

                  I was watching the NBC special called "Inside the White House" last night and was struck by a meeting with Larry Summers and the President.

                  http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/30892505/#31073805

                  It was touted as an "all access" day in the life of the President but at 7:15 minutes into Part 1 Larry Summers and a man who I believe is Austan Goolsbee come into the Oval Office for a call with "the Germans". Summers is obviously on edge and shuts down the cameras when he begins to discuss the problem.

                  Summers: "Life has changed..ahh..since the briefing…ahh”

                  Obama: "For the better or for the worse?"

                  Goolsbee: "Net-net for the better…wouldn’t you say Larry?" (Goolsbee speaks loudly and unconvincingly for the cameras.)

                  Summers: “(nervous laugh)..there’s elements of both. The Germans...actually we should stop (the cameras) here."

                  The cameras and staff are quickly “ushered out” of the Oval Office.

                  For those who don’t know,
                  Austan Goolsbee is on the Presidents Council of Economic Advisers and is touted as Larry Summers’ “Economic Internet Guru”. In that capacity there is no doubt in my mind that he monitors all the gold internet sites as well as being in charge of coordinating all the “gold disinformation” articles. Like Summers, Goolsbee believes in a kind of “Psychological Tendencies Economic Model” touting that it is perception that steers the worlds economic markets not necessarily fact. Having fought the gold manipulation battles for so long we all know perception can be managed and manipulated as I discussed in my articles “Operation Confidence Con” and “Geithner Plan=Sustained Manipulation”.

                  On May 28th, the night before the White House taping, Jim Willie of Goldenjackass.com posted an article called
                  “The Hitman Cometh” where he claimed the Germans are trying to withdraw all their physical gold from US control and several “hit men” have been hired to take down the COMEX and the LME:

                  "The Germans have demanded that gold bullion held in US custodial accounts be returned to their owners, with physical gold shipped back to Germany ."

                  I'll bet my last gold Kruggie that the Oval Office phone call was a desperate plea to buy more time before the Germans destroy the physical gold manipulation scheme.

                  This together with rumblings of China, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Dubai scrambling to get their hands on physical gold has put the Obama Manipulation Team in major gold panic mode.

                  It's amazing to see these few people in the White House scrambling to prolong a failed policy of trying to manipulate the gold markets of the world.

                  What a sad state we find ourselves in.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                    Hey Ash,
                    You seem to have a grasp of what the Fed is doing. Can you comment on the collapse of the banking system? I've heard that whatever printing the Fed has done is dwarfed by the dollar destruction in the credit crisis and shadow banking system.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                      Until we see a well thought out plan to start the process of the investment of the equity capital required to underpin any new industrial success; nothing will change.

                      All the most recent news responds to the forecast in "The Downwave" by Robert Beckman where he suggested that there would be a period of upturn where everything would seem to be back on track and at which point the full collapse would enter the final plunge to the bottom.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                        Just to add to the FED strategy picture this interesting bloomberg article on lipsticking big banks' accounts:

                        http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?p...d=alC3LxSjomZ8


                        I copy this below, as I feel it will probably be smoothed or dropped from Bloomberg site quite soon ;)

                        June 5 (Bloomberg) -- Big banks in the U.S. say they’re on the mend. The five largest were profitable in the first quarter, rebounding from record losses for the industry in the fourth quarter. Share prices have jumped, with the KBW Bank Index doubling since March 6. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner, after “stress testing” 19 banks on their ability to withstand a worsening economy, declared in early May that Americans can be confident in the banks’ stability and resilience. Wells Fargo & Co. and Morgan Stanley were among banks raising $43 billion in new capital since then through share sales.
                        “With our capital and assets, stressed as they have been, we can go back to focusing all our attention on managing our business and restoring value,” Citigroup Inc. Chief Executive Officer Vikram Pandit said after Geithner’s examinations were completed.
                        The revival may be short-lived. Analysts who have examined the quarterly profits and government tests say that accounting rule changes and rosy assumptions are making the institutions look healthier than they are.
                        The government probably wants to win time for the banks, keeping them alive as they struggle to earn their way out of the mess, says economist Joseph Stiglitz of Columbia University in New York. The danger is that weak banks will remain reluctant to lend, hobbling President Barack Obama’s efforts to pull the economy out of recession.
                        ‘Bogus’ Profit
                        Citigroup’s $1.6 billion in first-quarter profit would vanish if accounting were more stringent, says Martin Weiss of Weiss Research Inc. in Jupiter, Florida. “The big banks’ profits were totally bogus,” says Weiss, whose 38-year-old firm rates financial companies. “The new accounting rules, the stress tests: They’re all part of a major effort to put lipstick on a pig.”
                        Further deterioration of loans will eventually force banks to recognize losses that their bookkeeping lets them ignore for now, says David Sherman, an accounting professor at Northeastern University in Boston. Janet Tavakoli, president of Tavakoli Structured Finance Inc. in Chicago, says the government stress scenarios underestimate how bad the economy may get.
                        The accounting rule changes that matter most for the banks came on April 2, when the Financial Accounting Standards Board gave companies greater latitude in how they establish the fair value of assets. Lawmakers, including Representative Paul Kanjorski, a member of the House Financial Services Committee, had complained that existing mark-to-market standards worsened the financial crisis.
                        Debt Valuation
                        Along with that change, FASB also let companies recognize losses on the value of some debt securities on their balance sheets without counting the writedowns against earnings. If banks plan to hold the debt until maturity, they can avoid hurting the bottom line.
                        At Citigroup, the recipient of $346 billion in fresh capital and asset guarantees from the government, about 25 percent of the quarterly net income came thanks to the debt securities rule change, the bank said.
                        Another $2.7 billion before taxes came from an accounting rule that lets a company record income when the value of its own debt falls. That reflects the possibility a company could buy back bonds at a discount, generating a profit. In reality, when a bank can’t fund such a transaction, the gain is an accounting quirk, Weiss says.
                        Citigroup also increased its loan loss reserves more slowly in the first quarter, adding $10 billion compared with $12 billion in the fourth quarter, even as more loans were going bad. Provisions for loan losses cut profits, so adding more to this reserve could have wiped out the quarterly earnings.
                        Wells Fargo
                        Without those accounting benefits, Citigroup would probably have posted a net loss of $2.5 billion in the quarter, Weiss estimates. In the five previous quarters, Citigroup lost more than $37 billion.
                        Wells Fargo also took advantage of the change in the mark- to-market rules. The new standards let Wells Fargo boost its capital $2.8 billion by reassessing the value of some $40 billion of bonds, the bank said in May. And the bank augmented net income by $334 million because of the effect of the rule on the value of debts held to maturity.
                        Wells Fargo spokeswoman Julia Tunis Bernard declined to comment, as did Citigroup’s Jon Diat.
                        The higher valuations Wells Fargo put on its securities probably won’t last, as defaults increase on home mortgages, credit cards and other consumer and corporate lending, Northeastern’s Sherman says.
                        Fed’s Optimism
                        “These changes will help the banks hide their losses or push them off to the future,” says Sherman, a former Securities and Exchange Commission researcher.
                        The Federal Reserve, which designed the stress tests, used a 21 percent to 28 percent loss rate for subprime mortgages as a worst-case assumption. Already, almost 40 percent of such loans are 30 days or more overdue, according to Tavakoli, who is the author of three primers on structured debt. Defaults might reach 55 percent, she predicts.
                        At the same time, the assumptions on how much banks can earn to offset their losses are inflated, partly because of the same accounting gimmicks employed in first-quarter profit reports, Weiss says.
                        “There’s a chance that it might work,” Columbia’s Stiglitz says of the government’s attempt to boost confidence. “If it does, then they’ll look like the brilliant general. But all these efforts also bank on the economy recovering and housing prices not falling too much further. Those are not safe assumptions.”
                        Indeed, while the government and accounting rule makers try to help the banks look their best, they may make the U.S. economy worse. As long as lenders are stuck with bad loans, they can’t provide new money to consumers or corporations to fuel a potential recovery. The banks may look pretty, but they’ll be zombies until they clean up their books.
                        (Published in the July issue of Bloomberg Markets magazine.)
                        To contact the reporters on this story: Yalman Onaran in New York at yonaran@bloomberg.net.
                        Last Updated: June 5, 2009 00:01 EDT
                        Last edited by big67; June 05, 2009, 07:33 AM.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                          Originally posted by charliebrown View Post
                          So are you saying sharky that the treas will sell bonds, to buy the crap off the fed balance sheet. Can the treas market endure any more sales? Will that spike interest rates?
                          Where the money comes from is a secondary question. They might sell bonds, but I'm guessing they won't. They will be motivated to avoid disrupting the bond market. Instead, I think they will just create the money and hand it over to the Fed. I bet it will be done quietly, with little notice taken by the press.

                          Keep in mind that the Treasury almost never creates money itself like that. But it can. However, one key factor here is that a rescue like this can only happen with specific authorization from Congress -- that's where the wild card is.

                          Originally posted by charliebrown View Post
                          If #2 occurs what does that mean for the man on the street?
                          The Fed consists of several different components. One handles check clearing. Even if the main Fed goes under, that process would be retained somehow. Another is managing Treasury sales, money creation, etc. That would go away and be replaced by direct action by the Treasury. Then there's banking regulation. Again, taken over by Treasury. That leaves Fed Funds, the Discount Window, managing member bank deposits and all of the new programs. If the Fed went away, my guess is that those responsibilities and check clearing would be assigned to one or more large commercial banks.

                          However, odds are that Congress won't be able to sit back and let it happen. They will intervene, and either create a new central bank, or (more likely) structure some kind of bailout for the old one.

                          The eventual man-on-the-street impact of a Fed failure is unpredictable. It could mean anything from a new type of currency to replace FRNs, to entirely changing the way people get loans, to limits on the way you can access your bank accounts. Basically, if the Fed goes under, it's an opportunity for Congress to completely re-create the country's banking and monetary systems.

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                            OK, sorry, how does the treasury create money? Can they issue notes like bank notes that are "money"? I thought the treasury was constrained to getting money through either taxation or borrow money through bond sales, not just create money like the fed can.

                            Does the treas issue bonds for the exclusive purchase by the fed which will print the money? then the treas will use the money to buy the crap assets? Is this any different than just pushing out the bonds to the primary dealers?

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: The Fed's Exit Strategy

                              Originally posted by Sharky View Post
                              Basically, if the Fed goes under, it's an opportunity for Congress to completely re-create the country's banking and monetary systems.
                              How long would this take? Would there be an extended bank holiday like back in the Great Depression, or does modern technology make this a "flipped switch" after the setup is complete?

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