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  • Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

    http://www.cnbc.com/id/101963821

  • #2
    Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

    households are sitting on $2.15 trillion in savings
    $2T sounds like a huge amount, but only works out to $7K per American which in my opinion is a reasonable sum.

    It will be interesting to know the total household savings after removing the top one percentile.

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

      The Fed assumes "people" have money, they don't. A very small percentage of "people" have a very large percentage of the money the Fed created. If Central Banks, commercial banks and investment banks are "people" and apparently they are in the US Supreme Court's eyes, then yes, people are hording money. The US Everyman is not hoarding one dime. The Fed cannot "normalize" interest rates to slow asset appreciation, US housing prices will fall and an already upset middle class may revolt. There is no one in power in any country that wants to see civil unrest in the US. Although it's shameful, there is a sane reason we jail more people in the US than anywhere else in the world. We need a perceived state of order so everyone else's version of order looks worse than ours. After all, we have almost a trillion dollars to pawn off on the world every year...and we need them to be happy to take it.

      In one of my first posts on iTulip I was calling for US interest rates to move up. This was probably over six years ago and I was wrong. The idea is still wrong. US interest rates are not going up any time soon. There is apparently no glut of US dollars. In fact there appears to be a demand for the stuff. Imagine China not taking Treasuries for all of the crap and non-crap we buy from them. It makes perfect sense but they can't do it because their currency will move up in value and their products will cease to be competitive. Their sales will falter and their folks will revolt. No one wants a billion pissed off Chinese citizens so they take our crap for their crap. Simple and the world economy keeps moving forward.

      I won't pretend to understand the end game. It would be like predicting the end of the Roman Empire in 37 AD. But no one at the Fed has a clue how this will play out.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

        According to a Federal Reserve report on American households’ “economic well-being” in 2013, fewer than half of all Americans said they’d be able to come up with four Benjamin's on short notice to deal with an unexpected expense.

        The report, released last week by the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve, indicates a disparity between how Americans view their financial situation and the reality of where their finances actually stand — a signal that the recession of the late 2000s fundamentally altered the concept of doing well for many, as well as an indication that the subsequent recovery may yet be more nominal than real.


        Keep the cognitive dissonance rollin', rollin', rollin'

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        • #5
          Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

          How about a ratio of mortgage/CC debt to cash in the bank.

          Speaking of hoarding are they really talking about bank deposits? You know, money that gets immediately loaned out into the community? Letting other people use your money for NO interest is hoarding? Give me a break. The English Language should file charges for abuse.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

            Originally posted by LorenS View Post
            How about a ratio of mortgage/CC debt to cash in the bank.

            Speaking of hoarding are they really talking about bank deposits? You know, money that gets immediately loaned out into the community? Letting other people use your money for NO interest is hoarding? Give me a break. The English Language should file charges for abuse.
            Mortgage debt is currently $8.1T, HELOC and credit card debt are ~$500B each and student loans debt stands at $1.12T. As you can see in the chart below, full recourse student loan debt is the king of delinquency, standing at about 11% or ~$122B over 90 days. If you want to track consumer debt by category, the linked report comes out every quarter. Once you've caught up with the numbers it's really only interesting about once a year unless there's a major trend change. For example you could have seen delinquent mortgages begin to take a big jump up in early 2006.
            Here's the link:
            http://www.newyorkfed.org/householdc...HDC_2014Q2.pdf


            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

              And one last point. When I read about the Fed's confusion regarding "hoarding" I feel like I'm again listening to Alan Greenspan in 2008 telling us there was a "flaw" in his thinking. A flaw most thinking people had seen for years. Now the Fed sees hoarding and can't understand why the velocity of money has dropped from over 17X to 4.4X per year. It really makes you want to scream. You don't have to be very smart to understand that when most of the money is in the hands of those making millions a year, they don't need to spend it.

              What would happen if they could get even 20% of that new liquidity into the hands of the bottom 3 quintiles? That is a pretty simple thought experiment with obvious outcomes. As Einstein said, "the difference between stupidity and genius is that genius has its limits".

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

                Originally posted by santafe2 View Post
                You don't have to be very smart to understand that when most of the money is in the hands of those making millions a year, they don't need to spend it.
                Perhaps I am just not very smart, but where does it go then? Are you suggesting that the money of the very rich gets stuck in bags to mold in basements? If they don't spend it, where does it go such that it is out of the economy?

                When I put money in the bank I am sure it does not sit in a bag in a vault. Someone is using it - who is this someone? Where does the money go?

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

                  Originally posted by LorenS View Post
                  Perhaps I am just not very smart, but where does it go then? Are you suggesting that the money of the very rich gets stuck in bags to mold in basements? If they don't spend it, where does it go such that it is out of the economy?

                  When I put money in the bank I am sure it does not sit in a bag in a vault. Someone is using it - who is this someone? Where does the money go?
                  real assets, homes, farmland, equities, fine art and wine, maseratis, yachts, etc. - just look at the asset markets.

                  car loans and student loans for the masses

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

                    Originally posted by LorenS View Post
                    Perhaps I am just not very smart, but where does it go then? Are you suggesting that the money of the very rich gets stuck in bags to mold in basements? If they don't spend it, where does it go such that it is out of the economy?

                    When I put money in the bank I am sure it does not sit in a bag in a vault. Someone is using it - who is this someone? Where does the money go?
                    Blue Chip Blues

                    Johnny boy makes millions
                    Invests most of it in stock
                    He's a well-paid CEO
                    A real **** of the walk

                    And when he drove to work last year
                    He cooked up quite a plan
                    "I'll float some debt to buy back stock,"
                    Earnings per share would be grand.

                    Financial engineering
                    Kept that stock price high
                    And Johnny's buy-back plan
                    Got investors to roll the die

                    The flooded into JohnCo stock
                    And raised the price some more
                    So Johnny took a mountain of cash
                    And hid it in Ecuador

                    The price of repatriation
                    He claimed was too damn high
                    "I'll just leave billions overseas,"
                    Johnny felt pretty sly

                    But as the leaves' color changed
                    And quarter three rolled around
                    JohnCo saw less revenue
                    No demand could be found

                    "Ah ha!" he said, "I've got it."
                    "I'll put JohnCo on the mend!"
                    "I'll float some debt and buy back stock,"
                    "and pay a dividend."

                    Well, Johnny went and did it.
                    And his trick it worked at first.
                    The stock value went up again
                    Though revenue looked worse.

                    And though he had to borrow
                    At nearly four percent
                    His one A bonds weren't junk yet
                    So off old Johnny went.

                    And he made another pile of cash.
                    And he hid this pile too.
                    Maybe on the Caymans,
                    Or the Republic of Nauru.

                    But those old revenue targets
                    Still weren't being met
                    And the board was getting angry
                    "That Johnny, He's all wet!"

                    But old habits, they die hard,
                    So Johnny made a plan.
                    He called his boys at Goldman Sachs
                    And asked for debt again.

                    "My price per share hasn't dropped a dime,
                    Since I've been in this chair,
                    And I'll be damned if I'll let it,
                    Drop at all this year!"

                    So Johnny did what he knows best,
                    And floated lot of bonds,
                    Then ran off to buy back stock
                    Of this plan, Johnny's fond.

                    "I'll juice the dividend a bit,"
                    Johnny thought aloud,
                    "Their IRA's will love it,"
                    "People will come around."

                    But revenue still missed the mark
                    And Johnny shut down plants.
                    "Making stuff is so old hat,"
                    He said, throwing up his hands.

                    Workers lost their jobs,
                    And product lines shut down,
                    And poverty and joblessness
                    Swallowed up a town.

                    Business was always profitable
                    JohnCo's losing market share
                    And its offshore pile of money
                    Is growing every year.

                    But not quite as fast as
                    JohnCo's pesky corporate debt
                    That'll double in 12 years
                    But by then Johnny'll be set.

                    And his plan to hoard JohnCo's cash
                    Away and safe offshore
                    Works so long as he beats the spread
                    One time thirty-five against compound four.

                    Johnny knew one day, if someone screws up
                    The margin calls roll in
                    And all of Johnny's leverage
                    Will hit him on the chin.

                    He'd rush and call that cash back in,
                    But he couldn't beat the spread,
                    And no one's buying corporate bonds,
                    If the whole damn asset class is dead.

                    It'd be the type of thought
                    Keeping Johnny up at night
                    Except he had a fat account
                    Diversified alright.

                    "Maybe I'll just quite the job,"
                    He thought now with disgust,
                    "I make passive income,"
                    "JohnCo's all rot and rust."

                    "Or better yet, I'll game the stats"
                    "And sell or merge it off,"
                    "One last round of arbitrage,"
                    "Then the parachute goes off."

                    "So long as I pull the ripcord,"
                    "On this golden, pretty thing,"
                    "Before the Minsky moment,"
                    "I'll make out like a king."

                    And all the money all the while
                    Went to strange old spots
                    Lots in Vanuatu and Macau
                    The rest bundled up in stocks

                    That sit safely out in IRAs
                    To the tune of "buy and hold."
                    And most will never cash them
                    Until they've grown a bit too old.



                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

                      Bravo++ Awesome!
                      The only nit I would pick is there is no reference to the ultimate source of liquidity and failure of regs that enables this game, i.e., the Fed and government

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

                        Originally posted by vinoveri View Post
                        real assets, homes, farmland, equities, fine art and wine, maseratis, yachts, etc. - just look at the asset markets.

                        car loans and student loans for the masses
                        Don't forget mortgages.

                        In other words, the money is NOT being hoarded it's being (mal?)invested. There is a big difference.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Fed- Americans Hoarding Money

                          A lot of that money is being saved by banks at the fed. The fed pays them .25% to keep it there. Remember dollars do not disappear unless the fed recalls them.
                          They recall them by reducing their balance sheet, selling bonds and the money goes poof. If Joe buys stocks from Jane, Jane has the dollars. If Moe buys fine wine from Mary, Mary has the dollars. Bank reserves at the fed have swelled from 9B before the AFC to 2.6T today. Most potential borrowers are already debt saturated. A slow economy makes companies and individuals hesitant to borrow (create more money) to take on new projects.

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