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Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

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  • Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

    Fed Insider Exposes Giant Central Bank “Easing” Swindle

    by MIKE WHITNEY

    “This was a program (QE) that was devised to help mortgage lending in America…Instead, what we saw was massive Wall Street earnings.” Andrew Huszar, Bloomberg TV Interview

    A former Federal Reserve official who helped the Central Bank manage its bond buying program, dubbed QE, has admitted that the program is a fraud. In a shocking op-ed in Monday’s Wall Street Journal, Andrew Huszar apologized for his role in the Fed’s $1.25 trillion asset purchase program which he described as “the greatest backdoor Wall Street bailout of all time.”

    So far, no one at the Fed has responded to the charges, nor has Congress or the Department of Justice (DOJ) taken steps to investigate allegations that the multi-trillion dollar program was not intended to help Main Street as announced, but to shore up flagging bank balance sheets and zombie financial institutions that would have defaulted without the Fed’s stealth welfare program.

    Surprisingly, Huszar’s credibility has not yet been challenged nor his claim that he played a pivotal role in overseeing the program. As he notes in his confession, he was “managing what was at the heart of QE’s bond-buying spree—a wild attempt to buy $1.25 trillion in mortgage bonds in 12 months.” He was asked “to quarterback” the largest giveaway to Big Finance on record. The fact that his allegations have not prompted an thorough investigation of criminal malfeasance at the Fed boggles the mind and points to a justice system that makes no pretense of operating in the interests of the people it is supposed to serve.

    Huszar admits that he left the Fed –where he’d worked for seven years– because he’d “witnessed the institution deferring more and more to Wall Street”, that is, implementing policies which only benefited the banks.

    “I had come to believe that the Fed’s independence was eroding,” says Huszar. These feelings were reinforced when Huszar was asked to purchase hundreds of billions of dollars of mortgage-backed securities, which according to him, put the system at risk of another crash.

    “We constantly risked driving bond prices too high and crashing global confidence in key financial markets,” he said. “We were working feverishly to preserve the impression that the Fed knew what it was doing.” (“Andrew Huszar: Confessions of a Quantitative Easer“, Wall Street Journal)

    The implication is clear, the Fed shrugged off its mandate of “price stability” and deliberately put the system at risk in order to assist its primary constituents, the banks.

    It wasn’t long before Huszar figured out the program was a fake and that QE “wasn’t helping to make credit any more accessible for the average American. The banks were issuing fewer and fewer loans,” he said. “More insidiously, whatever credit they were extending wasn’t getting much cheaper. QE may have been driving down the wholesale cost for banks to make loans, but Wall Street was pocketing most of the extra cash.” (WSJ)

    This column has been making this same point for more than two years, that all the profits on the interest rate spreads were going to the banks. QE has not led to a credit expansion nor was it designed to do so. It is a lavish subsidy to the financial elites and deep pocket bondholders who control the political-economic system. Huszar’s testimony further underscores that point.

    Huszar again: “From the trenches, several other Fed managers also began voicing the concern that QE wasn’t working as planned. Our warnings fell on deaf ears. In the past, Fed leaders—even if they ultimately erred—would have worried obsessively about the costs versus the benefits of any major initiative. Now the only obsession seemed to be with the newest survey of financial-market expectations or the latest in-person feedback from Wall Street’s leading bankers and hedge-fund managers.” (WSJ)

    No one cared that QE was not stimulating credit, because that was not the objective. The real goal was to boost profits at the banks so they could offset the massive losses on their trove of mortgage-backed assets which dropped precipitously following the Crash of ’08 leaving them exposed to potential restructuring and nationalization. The $700 billion from the TARP bailout merely provided enough operating capital for the banks to continue to run their businesses. In contrast, QE was a strategy to drain the ocean of red ink from bank balance sheets and restore them to profitability. What mattered was profits. Profits at the expense of employment, profits at the expense of growth, profits at the expense the nation’s economic future. Profits, profits, profits. How can anyone fail to see that now?

    Huszar again: “Trading for the first round of QE ended on March 31, 2010. The final results confirmed that, while there had been only trivial relief for Main Street, the U.S. central bank’s bond purchases had been an absolute coup for Wall Street. The banks hadn’t just benefited from the lower cost of making loans. They’d also enjoyed huge capital gains on the rising values of their securities holdings and fat commissions from brokering most of the Fed’s QE transactions. Wall Street had experienced its most profitable year ever in 2009, and 2010 was starting off in much the same way.” (WSJ)
    See? It was an “absolute coup for Wall Street”…the “most profitable year ever.” In other words, QE was a transparent ripoff from the get go, and the Bernanke Fed orchestrated the entire affair.

    And it didn’t stop there either, because the Fed launched three more versions of QE increasing its balance sheet by nearly $4 trillion while inflating asset bubbles in US Treasuries, equities, junk bonds, farmland, housing and financial assets across-the-board. The Fed has created a gigantic bubble in long-term Treasuries which threatens the world’s biggest and most liquid bond market and puts the dollar at risk of losing its position as the world’s reserve currency.

    Huszar admits that the Fed’s actions have dealt a blow to the so called “free market” calling QE “the largest financial-markets intervention by any government in world history.” He also dispels the illusion that QE spurred growth in the real economy. (“Even by the Fed’s sunniest calculations, aggressive QE over five years has generated only a few percentage points of U.S. growth.”) He also admits that the Wall Street banks are cartel that’s been strengthened by the Fed’s actions. (“The biggest ones have only become more of a cartel: 0.2% of them now control more than 70% of the U.S. bank assets.”) And, he also suggests that the Fed suffers from “regulatory capture”, that is, that monetary policy is shaped in a way that best advances the interests of the banks. (“I had come to believe that the Fed’s independence was eroding.”)

    Huszar’s testimony leaves little doubt that QE is a P.R. scam designed to pull the wool over the publics eyes. While the Fed’s critics have always said that that was the case, Huszar is the first insider to confirm those claims and to denounce the program as a blatant bailout for the banks.

    So where are the regulators? Where are the investigations? Where is the DOJ or the US Congress?

    Where is the outrage?

  • #2
    Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

    Outrage? What with the stock market booming and the entire Western advanced economies doing the same things. No doubt QE was initiated when things reached the level of a major national security risk. Letting things take their course was not going to happen. How it ends is unknown but every imaginable effort will be put into delaying a rational economic system as there is no obvious, and AFAIK no actual, way to make the transition.

    I'm inclined to expect some sort of "bail-in" which will start small and escalate as various ad hoc wealth preservation moves are made and fail. And that may be the best case.

    Seeing as how unpleasant the prospect is QE will likely continue to be seen as the only way to keep things together though at a high cost sometime in the future. Not pretty. Meanwhile, lets play some new tunes of the deck of the QE Titanic.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

      So he is promoting his book, I guess.

      I do not care anymore what they do. They are a useless bunch. Where is the outrage? I think most Americans have given up hope. That was the greatest coup they gave us with the Obama puppet .. they showed us that there is no hope.

      A massive repudiation of the dollar will fix most things. I wish the hyperinflation would come quickly. It will suck for a few years but we will make it through.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

        QUANTITATIVE EASING: noun; in Conehead physiology; the natural process of elimination occurring several hours after the consumption of mass quantities.
        In human economic systems; the worst possible response to the consumption of too much debt.
        In either case the odoriferous end products of QE, as it is abbreviated, should be carefully avoided by all rational beings.
        "I love a dog, he does nothing for political reasons." --Will Rogers

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

          Originally posted by aaron View Post
          So he is promoting his book, I guess.

          I do not care anymore what they do. They are a useless bunch. Where is the outrage? I think most Americans have given up hope. That was the greatest coup they gave us with the Obama puppet .. they showed us that there is no hope.

          A massive repudiation of the dollar will fix most things. I wish the hyperinflation would come quickly. It will suck for a few years but we will make it through.
          What do we do with the deflation in the meantime?

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

            Originally posted by photon555 View Post
            QUANTITATIVE EASING: noun; in Conehead physiology; the natural process of elimination occurring several hours after the consumption of mass quantities.
            Originally posted by photon555 View Post
            In human economic systems; the worst possible response to the consumption of too much debt.
            In either case the odoriferous end products of QE, as it is abbreviated, should be carefully avoided by all rational beings.


            I can't agree.

            Seems to me we have an example of avoidance of QE (for the most part) in the policies of the ECB, to compare against the QE policies of most of the other major Central Banks.

            And the end result appears to have been a requirement for more immediate bail-ins, extra-ordinary unemployment levels, collapsing economies, increasing economic migration outside the Eurozone, the liquidation of public assets at fire-sale prices, rising public debt levels (which are increasingly unserviceable) and a rending of the social and political fabric of Europe that risks creating permanent rifts between nations (the UK's shrill debate about leaving the EU one of the more prominent examples).

            As EJ has pointed out numerous times, it is preferable to avoid the policies that promote the bubbles and the excessive speculation driven debt increases on the back of fictitious asset valuations. But history demonstrates, repeatedly, that the public, individual household and corporate sectors all seem utterly incapable of that. Anywhere. Although somewhat less indebted than most of its EU neighbours or the USA, Germany is hardly a paragon of virtue in terms of controlling it's own public debt through this episode:


            Once the asset bubble(s) burst, and the debt is revealed as excessive it would seem applying a bit of all three remedies may be better than an excessive dependence on just one of these:
            - austerity to reduce or stop the rate of new debt build up;
            - deliberate inflation to gradually reduce the real cost of the debt;
            - voluntary or involuntary debt forgiveness (workouts with writedowns, defaults).



            Originally posted by Forrest View Post
            What do we do with the deflation in the meantime?
            Increase your savings and reduce your consumption, because in a truly deflationary world "Cash is King", and whatever you want to purchase will be cheaper tomorrow...
            Last edited by GRG55; November 16, 2013, 04:16 AM.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post

              "What do we do with the deflation in the meantime?"

              Increase your savings and reduce your consumption, because in a truly deflationary world "Cash is King", and whatever you want to purchase will be cheaper tomorrow...


              And thereby add momentum to the deflationary spiral.

              I don't intend this as a critical statement because what GRG suggests is spot on from an individual perspective. It just demonstrates the awful bind in which we've put ourselves.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                Originally posted by Woodsman View Post


                And thereby add momentum to the deflationary spiral.

                I don't intend this as a critical statement because what GRG suggests is spot on from an individual perspective. It just demonstrates the awful bind in which we've put ourselves.
                Precisely.

                By steadily expanding credit availability (as a %'age of GDP) over the past few decades we have raised consumption to levels well above that which can be supported by present incomes (use credit to bring forward consumption to be paid for by future income, instead of the "good ol' days" when one had to save money from current income before buying something).

                And then we compounded the problem by steadily lowering the cost of credit, which merely inflated the price of every leveraged asset class, most notably real estate which is now largely beyond the reach of most people in most developed countries if they were to rationally and unemotionally examine their real ability to afford a house.

                Japan is desperately trying to break more than 2 decades of steady deflation with some of the most extreme monetary policy ever witnessed.

                The soon to retire Fed Chair, Ben Bernanke, is famous for his quote: "The US government has a technology, called a printing press, that allows it to produce as many dollars as it wishes at essentially no cost." "Under a paper-money system, a determined government can always generate higher spending and, hence, positive inflation.". But increasing money supply was only one of seven policy steps he has stipulated in his deflation fighting doctrine (the seventh being the outright purchase of equity stakes in industries, banks and other financial institutions throughout the USA with "newly created money").

                It's not that Central Banks cannot create inflation. It's whether they, and their political masters, are truly "determined".

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                  The encouragement of more debt to finance spending has extended into absurdity. Remember the CARD Act, a measure purported to be encourage if not force banks to be more judicious in extending revolving credit to consumers? Little known is that the Final Rule of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau allows students to include a portion of student loans to be included in their "individual income" when applying for credit. Yes, boys and girls, debt is now income! It doesn't get much more insane than that.

                  See page 26:
                  http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/2...final-rule.pdf

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                    Originally posted by newnewthing View Post
                    The encouragement of more debt to finance spending has extended into absurdity. Remember the CARD Act, a measure purported to be encourage if not force banks to be more judicious in extending revolving credit to consumers? Little known is that the Final Rule of the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau allows students to include a portion of student loans to be included in their "individual income" when applying for credit. Yes, boys and girls, debt is now income! It doesn't get much more insane than that.

                    See page 26:
                    http://files.consumerfinance.gov/f/2...final-rule.pdf
                    Access to cheap and abundant credit is now a "human right"...

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                      Originally posted by GRG55 View Post


                      I can't agree.

                      Seems to me we have an example of avoidance of QE (for the most part) in the policies of the ECB, to compare against the QE policies of most of the other major Central Banks.

                      And the end result appears to have been a requirement for more immediate bail-ins, extra-ordinary unemployment levels, collapsing economies, increasing economic migration outside the Eurozone, the liquidation of public assets at fire-sale prices, rising public debt levels (which are increasingly unserviceable) and a rending of the social and political fabric of Europe that risks creating permanent rifts between nations (the UK's shrill debate about leaving the EU one of the more prominent examples).

                      As EJ has pointed out numerous times, it is preferable to avoid the policies that promote the bubbles and the excessive speculation driven debt increases on the back of fictitious asset valuations. But history demonstrates, repeatedly, that the public, individual household and corporate sectors all seem utterly incapable of that. Anywhere. Although somewhat less indebted than most of its EU neighbours or the USA, Germany is hardly a paragon of virtue in terms of controlling it's own public debt through this episode:


                      Once the asset bubble(s) burst, and the debt is revealed as excessive it would seem applying a bit of all three remedies may be better than an excessive dependence on just one of these:
                      - austerity to reduce or stop the rate of new debt build up;
                      - deliberate inflation to gradually reduce the real cost of the debt;
                      - voluntary or involuntary debt forgiveness (workouts with writedowns, defaults).





                      Increase your savings and reduce your consumption, because in a truly deflationary world "Cash is King", and whatever you want to purchase will be cheaper tomorrow...
                      My answer is simple: The quicker the collapse, the better. Is it better to nibble away at the gangrene or hack it off all at once? Debt as fiat money, fractional reserve banking, and central bank control are all frauds. Like all frauds they must collapse. The longer the collapse can be deferred, the more wealth can be transferred to (stolen by) the ones controlling the money system. Just like all other Ponzi schemes, the longer the scam can be prolonged, the more wealth can be stolen and destroyed.

                      If you want to understand the fundamental reality of the current money system, go to a carnival and lose twenty or thirty dollars playing the ball toss, or some other game. Consider how the carnie produces a constant stream of words to distract you while you are fleeced. Fed meetings, speeches, banker jargon like re-hypothecation, while having a supposedly 'real' meaning in the money world, are just part of the distraction.

                      While it may be true to some extent that future production was pulled into the present by the use of credit, the actual goods and services were actually produced in the present. Increasing production is not time travel. The real problem is that the distribution system, the supposedly free market, was subverted by con artists. Just game it out using a monopoly board. Let the player who is the banker have the privilege of borrowing any amount at a low interest. Of course he will own the board in short order. This is what is playing out now as we enter the last stage of the con and more people can see the end approaching. For a long time the Fed was prudent and rational, after a fashion, at least as much as can be in a fundamentally fraudulent system. I believe the 'front men' actually believed all the distracting rationale for a long time.

                      Let me have the authority to create and loan out a billion dollars for just a year. The loans must be paid off and so the 'new' money will be destroyed by the end of that year. The net money supply will be unchanged, won't it? But even after expenses and write-offs I should have tens of millions of dollars in profit after that year. So the distribution of wealth in the society has certainly changed. Now ask yourself, what service did I do for society that I should be so richly rewarded? Let me and a few others have this privilege as a legal right and we will be able to steal not only the productivity gains but the actual capital of society over time. We will exchange our fiat 'profits' for real wealth, but overall aggregate demand will collapse as everyone else is indebted and employment shrinks. And this is in a deficit free scenario! Of course the state (politicians) wants a piece of the pie, but this banking cartel can easily afford to bribe, and by running deficits and increasing the money supply both can steal even more wealth. Certain favored groups will get first bite of the inflation apple, or course, to buy their political support.

                      Initially, there should be an economic boom, but guess who gets a disproportionate share of the new wealth? Each time there's a bust, or correction it takes more debt to get the economy juiced again. It is remarkably like the response of a drug addict over time from first getting hooked to finally over-dosing and dying. Yes, this process has been explained before and better by many others, but I think we keep getting distracted by the spectacle. The emperor really has no clothes; it's all a scam but even most people playing the scam really don't see it as a scam; rather as just the way things are. The best con artist is the one who doesn't even know that he is a con artist, and that he is conning for someone else who's taking most of the proceeds.

                      Reforming this fraudulent system is like reforming the loan sharking business. "You can only break one leg, unless it's the third Tuesday of the month." It just takes longer for everyone to get their legs broken.
                      "I love a dog, he does nothing for political reasons." --Will Rogers

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                        “The sense of responsibility in the financial community for the community as a whole is not small. It is nearly nil.”

                        --John Kenneth Galbraith, "The Great Crash, 1929"--

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                          Deflation...Fed style. From the Ritholtz blog:


                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                            Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                            Deflation...Fed style. From the Ritholtz blog:


                            Continuation of QE: priceless
                            "I love a dog, he does nothing for political reasons." --Will Rogers

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Fed Whisleblower - Backdoor Bailout Biggest Of All Time

                              Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
                              Deflation...Fed style. From the Ritholtz blog:


                              I can't stop laughing at this. What's next? The Fed seeing how far it can toss the dwarf economy?
                              "I love a dog, he does nothing for political reasons." --Will Rogers

                              Comment

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