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Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

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  • Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

    Good old Ralph Nader strikes again, this time with an open letter to Janet Yellen.

    I don't post other articles in full out of respect for iTulip's policy against it, and my respect for the author's ownership (and my fear of their lawyers), but I doubt Mr. Nader will mind at all if I do it this one time.

    Here is the link to Mr. Nader's blog
    https://blog.nader.org/2015/10/30/an...rs-of-america/

    Dear Chairwoman Janet Yellen:

    We are a group of humble savers in traditional bank savings and money market accounts who are frustrated because, like millions of other Americans over the past six years, we are getting near zero interest . We want to know why the Federal Reserve, funded and heavily run by the banks, is keeping interest rates so low that we receive virtually no income for our hard-earned savings while the Fed lets the big banks borrow money for virtually no interest. It doesn’t seem fair to put the burden of your Federal Reserve’s monetary policies on the backs of those Americans who are the least positioned to demand fair play.

    We follow the reporting on your tediously over-dramatic indecision as to when interest rates will be raised – and no one thinks that when you do, it will be any more than one quarter of one percent. We hear the Federal Reserve’s Board of Governors and the various regional board presidents regularly present their views of the proper inflation and unemployment rate, and on stock market expectations that influence their calculations for keeping interest rates near-zero. But we never hear any mention of us – the savers of trillions of dollars who have been forced to make do with having the banks and mutual funds essentially provide a lock-box for our money while they use it to make a profit for their firms and, in the case of the giant banks and large mutual funds, pay their executives exorbitant salaries.

    We are tired of this melodrama that exploits so many people who used to rely on interest income to pay some of their essential bills. Think about the elderly among us who need to supplement their social security checks every month.

    On October 27, the Wall Street Journal headlined the latest rumors of twists and turns inside the secretive Federal Reserve: “Fed Strives For Clear Signal on Rate Move: As 2016 approaches, the central bank hopes to better manage market expectations.”

    What about the expectations of millions of American savers? It is unfortunately true that we are not organized; if we were, we would give you and the Congress the proper signals!
    Please, don’t lecture us about the Fed not being “political.” When you are the captives of the financial industry, led by the too-big-to-fail banks, you are generically “political.” So political in fact that you have brazenly interpreted your legal authority as to become the de facto regulator of our economy, the de facto printer of money on a huge scale (“quantitative easing” is the euphemism for artificially boosting the stock market) and the leader of the Washington bailout machine crony capitalism when big business, especially a shaky Wall Street firm, indulges in manipulative, avaricious, speculative binges with our money.

    When it comes to the Fed, Congress is mired in hypocrisy. The anti-regulation, de-regulation crowd on Capitol Hill shuts its mouth when it comes to the most powerful regulators of all – you and the Federal Reserve. Meanwhile, Congress goes along with the out-of-control, private government of the Fed—unaccountable to the national legislature. Moreover, your massive monetary injections scarcely led to any jobs on the ground, other than stock and bond processors.

    So what do you advise us to do? Shop around? Forget it. The difference between banks, credit unions and mutual funds may be one-twentieth or one-tenth of one percent! That is, unless you want to tie up money, that you need regularly, in a longer term CD or Treasury. Even then interest rates are far less than they were ten years ago.
    Maybe you’re saying that we should try the stock market to get higher returns. Some of us have been impelled to do that, but too many have lost their peace of mind and much money in the market.

    The Fed’s near-zero interest rate policy isn’t helping younger people with student loans (now over 1.3 trillion dollars), whose interest rate ranges from six to nine percent. It doesn’t help millions of pay-day loan borrowers or victims of installment loan rackets – mostly the poor – whose interest rates, rolled over, can reach over 400 percent!
    Chairwoman Yellen, I think you should sit down with your Nobel Prize winning husband, economist George Akerlof, who is known to be consumer-sensitive. Together, figure out what to do for tens of millions of Americans who, with more interest income, could stimulate the economy by spending toward the necessities of life.

    For heaven’s sake, you’re a “liberal” from Berkeley! That is supposed to mean something other than to be indentured by the culture and jargon of the Federal Reserve. If you need further nudging on monetary and regulatory policies of the Fed, other than interest rate decisions, why not invite Berkeley Professor Robert Reich, one of your long-time friends and admirers, to lunch on your next trip home?

    Start imagining what we, the savers, have to endure because of plutocratic, crony capitalism for which the Federal Reserve has long been a leading Tribune.
    Can we expect your response?


    Sincerely yours,
    Savers of America


  • #2
    Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

    Have to agree with most of it. I am not sure how the "ant-regulation crowd" is, but they have not been silent about the FEd.

    http://www.cnbc.com/2015/06/21/

    Comment


    • #3
      Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

      Originally posted by ralph

      Please, don’t lecture us about
      the Fed not being “political.” When you are the captives of the financial industry, led by the too-big-to-fail banks, you are generically “political.” So political in fact that you have brazenly interpreted your legal authority as to become the de facto regulator of our economy, the de facto printer of money on a huge scale (“quantitative easing” is the euphemism for artificially boosting the stock market) and the leader of the Washington bailout machine crony capitalism when big business, especially a shaky Wall Street firm, indulges in manipulative, avaricious, speculative binges with our money.
      .....

      Start imagining what we, the savers, have to endure because of plutocratic, crony capitalism for which the Federal Reserve has long been a leading Tribune.

      Can we expect your response?
      heh - we've already seen it - more of the same

      the most nefarious, illegitimate con game S.C.A.M. organized criminal HEIST ever pulled off - while the current occupant and his inner circle-jerk of academic dweebs - most of whom have never even had a REAL JOB - you know, like: out here in the REAL ECONOMY ??
      vs their ivory tower 'safe places' - even as he congratulates himself for 'saving the economy' - mostly for HIS primary campaign contributors' direct benefit - who's private jets, yachts and beachfront palaces grow ever larger!


      i'll tell you what the response should be, Ralph:

      IMMEDIATELY:
      raise the rates on all FDIC 'insured' accounts to whatever the 'offishial' rate of inflation is plus 2%

      NOW!
      anything less than this simply allows the bankstahs to continue their T.H.E.F.T of OUR money
      Last edited by lektrode; June 02, 2016, 08:38 AM.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

        Lektrode,

        that is a clever idea, and one I had not heard before. The gov could still low ball the inflation figure, claim it is -1%, but credibility would suffer.

        If market forces took over, we'd be on a different financial planet.

        Comment


        • #5
          Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

          thanks PS - i've got clever ideas for everything that bedevils The Rest of US (altho bernie's ideas are certainly to the left of most of em...)

          however, my ideas dont follow political expedient, so they wont ever see the light of day.

          2nd, on my list of 'how to fix the economy' ?

          shitcan ALL of the current appointees in the EPA, the DOJ, the DOE and most of the DOD.
          they've outlived their usefulness
          (just like FANNie and FREDie and ALL of their demorat party aparatchix, all holder-overs from the 1930's and/or the 1st clinton admin DISASTER - and make no mistake, every last GD one of the holder-overs from the 1990's has been an ABJECT FAILURE - far as what they've 'done for' The Rest of US - but a 'home-run' for their 1% 'margin of victory' who are now squirting all over themselves cuz they get to use their new/mandated ?+tranny restrooms - which might've been a joke, but considering all the other 'milestones' in their agenda add up to The Most Divisive/Disruptive/Corrupt Admin in All of US History)

          and RE-INSTATE GLASS-STEAGALL,

          NOW !!!!

          and let the chips fall wherevah they may...
          Last edited by lektrode; June 02, 2016, 03:01 PM.

          Comment


          • #6
            Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

            Originally posted by lektrode View Post
            thanks PS - i've got clever ideas for everything that bedevils The Rest of US (altho bernie's ideas are certainly to the left of most of em...)

            however, my ideas dont follow political expedient, so they wont ever see the light of day.

            2nd, on my list of 'how to fix the economy' ?

            shitcan ALL of the current appointees in the EPA, the DOJ, the DOE and most of the DOD.
            they've outlived their usefulness
            (just like FANNie and FREDie and ALL of their demorat party aparatchix, all holder-overs from the 1930's and/or the 1st clinton admin DISASTER - a..

            I'd say a good example of that is the federal involvement in education. Sure, the states and regions had some problems. But now, we have major problems
            across the nation, due to the pre-occupation with standardized tests, computers in the class room, early reading, way too much homework at many schools.

            Comment


            • #7
              Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

              Originally posted by Polish_Silver View Post
              I'd say a good example of that is the federal involvement in education. Sure, the states and regions had some problems. But now, we have major problems
              across the nation, due to the pre-occupation with standardized tests, computers in the class room, early reading, way too much homework at many schools.

              I believe the preoccupation with standardized texts is a racket.
              Until fifty years ago, the big public school racket was overpriced textbooks made in small runs with only small differences between editions.
              The Houghtons and Mifflins made fortunes.

              Now it's standardized tests and school software, raking in billions and billions.

              Comment


              • #8
                Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                Even 2 or 3% on savings would be nice.... My parents are retired and these low rates are killing them.

                They're not helping me either, and I have a mortgage. My house taxes have gone up something like 75% since the FED started trying to "save" me. Instead of having a $150,000 house and a reasonable mortgage I have a much more "expensive" house and more debt and more taxes. Given local salaries my house should be about 1/2 the cost it is now.

                There is no way my kids can afford to enter this economy unless interest rates go way up.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                  I think the government is trying to tell Americans something. There's too much savings sloshing around in the system. Sorry savers who want no risk, it turns out no risk savings are like any other commodity, when they're in over supply, they don't have much value. I've no sympathy for this argument. Here's a few investments that do have returns:
                  INTC - 2.5% after tax
                  F - 3.5% after tax
                  MSFT - 2.1% after tax, (BTW, I really like this for growth long term).

                  Real estate investments, 4% net after tax.

                  If someone wants an easy ride they should have bought 30 year bonds in 2006. I don't remember the exact date but EJ recommended buying long term bonds almost 10 years ago.

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                    Originally posted by santafe2 View Post
                    I think the government is trying to tell Americans something. There's too much savings sloshing around in the system. Sorry savers who want no risk, it turns out no risk savings are like any other commodity, when they're in over supply, they don't have much value. I've no sympathy for this argument. Here's a few investments that do have returns:
                    INTC - 2.5% after tax
                    F - 3.5% after tax
                    MSFT - 2.1% after tax, (BTW, I really like this for growth long term).

                    Real estate investments, 4% net after tax.

                    If someone wants an easy ride they should have bought 30 year bonds in 2006. I don't remember the exact date but EJ recommended buying long term bonds almost 10 years ago.
                    i think the fed [along with the markets] is trying to tell congress something. there's a need for fiscal stimulus so that the burden of stabilizing the economy is not solely on the monetary authorities. further, it's trying to tell them that there's plenty of demand for treasuries, so they can issue long dated bonds at very low rates to fund a big infrastructure spend aimed at boosting long term productivity growth. this would be true supply-side economics- while tax cuts don't pay for themselves, productivity enhancements should boost growth and indeed pay for themselves in the long run.

                    [meanwhile, it's no accident that productivity growth is so low lately - corporations are borrowing to buy back stock, not fund productivity-increasing investments, because end demand is weak. and gov't isn't investing in publicly funded productivity enhancements, because the minions of the 0.1% don't want to do anything that might hint, even indirectly, at a need for more tax revenue.]

                    barnanke blamed low rates on a "savings glut," though i believe most of that glut was thought to be in china at the time.

                    ryu, which holds both utilities and telecoms, pays 3.21% [pre-tax] and is a purer yield play, benefitting from continuing disinflation/deflation, as evidenced by things like yesterday's terrible jobs report. [ryu was up 1.48% yesterday on the jobs news.] so ryu is negatively tied to the health of the economy. otoh, intc, f, msft will be positively tied to the economy.
                    Last edited by jk; June 04, 2016, 07:53 AM.

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                      Originally posted by jk View Post
                      ryu, which holds both utilities and telecoms, pays 3.21% [pre-tax] and is a purer yield play, benefitting from continuing disinflation/deflation, as evidenced by things like yesterday's terrible jobs report. [ryu was up 1.48% yesterday on the jobs news.] so ryu is negatively tied to the health of the economy. otoh, intc, f, msft will be positively tied to the economy.
                      Have you run RYU, MSFT, INTC etc. through the Total Return vs Price Return calculator? After looking at about 50 index and low-fee-for-their-category funds, comparing categories, sectors, expense ratios, turnover, risk and return scores, etc., I ran 21 ETFs through it at 36-month and 6-month periods. SPHD, RHS, VPU and RYU are impressive. They're all considered more defensive than growth oriented, but outperformed more volatile growth funds like SCHG and VOOG.

                      Be kinder than necessary because everyone you meet is fighting some kind of battle.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                        Originally posted by shiny! View Post
                        Have you run RYU, MSFT, INTC etc. through the Total Return vs Price Return calculator? After looking at about 50 index and low-fee-for-their-category funds, comparing categories, sectors, expense ratios, turnover, risk and return scores, etc., I ran 21 ETFs through it at 36-month and 6-month periods. SPHD, RHS, VPU and RYU are impressive. They're all considered more defensive than growth oriented, but outperformed more volatile growth funds like SCHG and VOOG.
                        i didn't do anything so thorough or sophisticated! i just decided i wanted an etf or cef that had both telecoms and utilities, took a look at the category at etf.com and ryu was the only etf that seemed right. whether it is "growth" oriented depends on your view of the economy. i am increasingly persuaded that we are becoming japanese and that rates will continue going DOWN for some years to come, barring president trump putting through a yuuuuge fiscal stimulus infrastructure bill paid for with his beloved debt.

                        edit: the other options here offer some dividend yield, but will really benefit if there is growth in the economy. ryu is just utilities and telecoms. very stable, defensive. i'm not really looking for yield from ryu, though. i'm looking for capital gains as the economy remains sluggish, and interest rates continue their retreat. i already have a bunch of tlt and edv on this theory, which i bought when the 30 yr was yielding about 2.92. now the 30yr is at 2.51. i decided to add a bit to the position with something a little different.
                        Last edited by jk; June 04, 2016, 07:45 PM.

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                          Richard Fisher discusses how the Fed front loaded the recovery in 2009 and hints at what they may be doing now:

                          http://video.cnbc.com/gallery/?video=3000474362

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                            QE 4 To Arrive In Form Of Defense Spending? Will this take some pressure off the Fed

                            https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHaEVxW8HcQ

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Re: Ralph Nader say the Fed is Unsafe at Any Speed

                              Originally posted by vt View Post
                              QE 4 To Arrive In Form Of Defense Spending? Will this take some pressure off the Fed

                              https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uHaEVxW8HcQ
                              i watched this and another. longer interview with pippa malgren from feb '15. what was most remarkable to me was how far behind the curve she was, at least with respect to itulip. e.g. in early '15 she was talking about her discovery of "shrinkflation" - fewer cadbury eggs per package, fewer oreos for the same price, and so on. i knew we'd discussed that long ago. the earliest thread on the subject began with ej's article "Inflation in America - Part I: Five signs of inflation, from rising prices, to shrinking candy bars, to increased fees" dated APRIL '08.

                              then she talked about what she called "biflation" - the prices of necessities rising while the prices of e.g. electronic gadgets went down.

                              here's the earliest link i could find to an itulip discussion of, yes, "biflation": The B word: Biflation and Ka-Poom theory

                              want to guess the date?.................... APRIL '09


                              she also talked about how gov'ts were grabbing for resources, china for the fish in the so china sea, russia for hydrocarbons in the arctic, and that qe4 was going to be in the form of defense spending, as that was the only means gov'ts would accept to ramp up spending. so, here at itulip, in NOV '10, i started a thread here titled: the commodities squeeze, chinese exports and the cold war "solution."

                              i found myself wondering if she were an itulip subscriber, except she's so far behind the itulip curve that that didn't seem likely.

                              made me all the more aware of what an amazing site and community this is.

                              btw you can subscribe to pippa's newsletter to keep up to date on these developments for a mere 25,000 british pounds per year.
                              Last edited by jk; June 05, 2016, 09:28 AM.

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