Re: Say Goodbye to Your Retirement and 401K
First, there is essentially zero reserve requirement (e.g. 10% is like gold standard antiquity, or at least pre-FIRE).
Second, we have a nice little chicken, egg and chicken omlette problem that you just posited. (Not sure if it was intentional or not).
So the question that suggests itself is:
Are banks not actively lending because:
A) De-leveraging is causing a contraction in capital adequacy.
or
B) Because they can earn RISK FREE RETURNS on excess reserves.
or
C) A combination of A & B
I don't know.
I do knowthat the $64 Trillion Dollar question is:
Does the Fed WANT banks to lend?
and further,
Do the Fed's policy actions taken so far suggest an ANSWER to the above question?
Subsets of this question are:
1.Does the Fed want lending in the FIRE sphere?
2.Does the Fed want lending in the Production/Consumption sphere?
What Fed policy actions could we examine to try to determine an answer to all of these questions?
I have an answer on a HUNCH. It comes from an insight from Hudson.
P-C Sphere Deflation is desired. (Much better to mask peak-oil symptoms with than a raging P-C sphere inflation).
As an aside, anyone else notice that their gasoline now contains up to 10% ethanol? My gas mileage has dropped by roughly 6% (About right because ethanol has about 60% of the energy content of gasoline by volume)
FIRE Inflation is desired.
I think that he is correct in is supposition about the Fed's motivation, though thinking and proving are two VERY different things.
NONE of this is to say that the Fed CAN'T change their objective, the question is, will they?
EJ wrote an article a while back called "Everyone is wrong, again – 1981 in Reverse" where he argues (successfully, IMHO) that the fed will inflate assets until it dies, the economy recovers or the dollar is destroyed and further that the markets doubt the Fed's veracity to do so.
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=9704
He may have changed his mind, or he may have access to new information due to his new role as a policy adviser. In either case, he has not publicly updated his position on this issue so we are left guessing.
I for one, think Ben S. meant every word he said in his "helicopter" speech, including the part about "helicopters". (esp black ones
)
Originally posted by ASH
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Second, we have a nice little chicken, egg and chicken omlette problem that you just posited. (Not sure if it was intentional or not).
So the question that suggests itself is:
Are banks not actively lending because:
A) De-leveraging is causing a contraction in capital adequacy.
or
B) Because they can earn RISK FREE RETURNS on excess reserves.
or
C) A combination of A & B
I don't know.
I do knowthat the $64 Trillion Dollar question is:
Does the Fed WANT banks to lend?
and further,
Do the Fed's policy actions taken so far suggest an ANSWER to the above question?
Subsets of this question are:
1.Does the Fed want lending in the FIRE sphere?
2.Does the Fed want lending in the Production/Consumption sphere?
What Fed policy actions could we examine to try to determine an answer to all of these questions?
I have an answer on a HUNCH. It comes from an insight from Hudson.
P-C Sphere Deflation is desired. (Much better to mask peak-oil symptoms with than a raging P-C sphere inflation).
As an aside, anyone else notice that their gasoline now contains up to 10% ethanol? My gas mileage has dropped by roughly 6% (About right because ethanol has about 60% of the energy content of gasoline by volume)
FIRE Inflation is desired.
I think that he is correct in is supposition about the Fed's motivation, though thinking and proving are two VERY different things.
NONE of this is to say that the Fed CAN'T change their objective, the question is, will they?
EJ wrote an article a while back called "Everyone is wrong, again – 1981 in Reverse" where he argues (successfully, IMHO) that the fed will inflate assets until it dies, the economy recovers or the dollar is destroyed and further that the markets doubt the Fed's veracity to do so.
http://www.itulip.com/forums/showthread.php?t=9704
He may have changed his mind, or he may have access to new information due to his new role as a policy adviser. In either case, he has not publicly updated his position on this issue so we are left guessing.
I for one, think Ben S. meant every word he said in his "helicopter" speech, including the part about "helicopters". (esp black ones

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