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  • Fed may issue its own debt



    Via JESSE'S CAFÉ AMÉRICAIN who comments that it may be a prelude to selective default.

    Fed Weighs Debt Sales of Its Own (WSJ)
    By JON HILSENRATH and DAMIAN PALETTA
    DECEMBER 10, 2008

    Move Presents Challenges: 'Very Close Cousins to Existing Treasury Bills'

    The Federal Reserve is considering issuing its own debt for the first time, a move that would give the central bank additional flexibility as it tries to stabilize rocky financial markets.

    Government debt issuance is largely the province of the Treasury Department, and the Fed already can print as much money as it wants. But as the credit crisis drags on and the economy suffers from recession, Fed officials are looking broadly for new financial tools.

    The Federal Reserve drained $25 billion in temporary reserves from the banking system when it arranged overnight reverse repurchase agreements.

    Fed officials have approached Congress about the concept, which could include issuing bills or some other form of debt, according to people familiar with the matter.
    Benny sure does not lack imagination. I am beginning to believe he fully understands the situation (better than the rest of us) and is doing all he can within the rules of the game he has been given. He is sidestepping congressional authority to issue its own money because he knows the pols are both clueless and not interested in a solution. In a way, he is the last American hero (an unselfish autocrat) although I don't know whether I believe in heroes.

    One illuminating comment on naked capitalism, introducing the idea that the Fed is attempting to maturity match and interest-rate match to limit its risks:

    ndk said...
    does anyone have a good/authoritative/correct link/page that talks about what is fed's "balance sheet constraint?" and why the fed would want to pay interest on the reserves?

    If you can stand getting a little technical, and you're probably going to have to given the subject matter, Sims has a good paper.

    dont quite understand. Why do they need to issue debt to finance asset purschases in this day and age of quantitative easing? Whatever happened to the good old printing press.

    There is no such thing as "just" a printing press. There are assets and liabilities. The Fed is like any other bank. When it wants to create cash, it has to buy or repo something in return. Usually it did this with Treasuries, but that's basically pointless right now and doesn't further policy goals much. You can see the excess reserves just sitting there in the sewers of the banking system.

    So, to meet their policy goals, they need to buy something else. Anything else exposes them to a variety of risks, and as Sims' paper points out, the central bank's balance sheet certainly does matter.

    Issuing CD's instead of dollars actually significantly reduces the Fed's risk here. The dollars are a liability of the Fed with zero maturity and a floating interest rate. Buying back those dollars isn't free: it has to sell off one of its own assets. Usually it sells Treasuries, but it can't, because it doesn't have many left. If all it holds is bad paper, it can't get enough of those zero-maturity dollars back in an inflationary environment. The bad paper would probably be worth less than when the Fed bought it, so the Fed would show a significant capital loss.

    Again, I feel Sims lays this out very well. I encourage everyone to take a look at his "Bad luck: Inflationary spiral" scenario to get a feel for the issues here. This action would make that spiral slightly less scary, because the Fed's balance sheet would be a lot less likely to go negative, while the purchasers of the CD's would be in more trouble.

    Still think this is all madness, but this is better madness. Sorry for posting so much. It's just really interesting.
    Last edited by *T*; December 10, 2008, 07:28 AM. Reason: Added ndk's quote
    It's Economics vs Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics wins.

  • #2
    Re: Fed may issue its own debt

    One word: chutzpah!

    A precursor for one world currency, Fed bucks besides Dollars, in Yen, Euros, whatever... As a matter of fact the U.S. Govt. accepts Federal Reserve Tokens at par.

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    • #3
      Re: Fed may issue its own debt

      Are not SDRs already a world currency suitable for international balance of payments?
      It's Economics vs Thermodynamics. Thermodynamics wins.

      Comment


      • #4
        Re: Fed may issue its own debt

        Originally posted by *T* View Post
        Are not SDRs already a world currency suitable for international balance of payments?
        No, not quite. It was a failed attempt, since Gold and USD were the so called reserves. Poke around the IMF site for info.

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        • #5
          Re: Fed may issue its own debt

          Originally posted by *T* View Post
          Are not SDRs already a world currency suitable for international balance of payments?
          Yes, but they're only a fiat currency based on other fiat currencies:

          Wednesday, December 10, 2008
          Currency Currency amount under Rule O-1 Exchange rate 1 U.S. dollar equivalent Percent change in exchange rate against U.S. dollar from previous calculation
          Euro 0.4100 1.29330 0.530253 0.732
          Japanese yen 18.4000 92.78000 0.198319 -0.065
          Pound sterling 0.0903 1.48170 0.133798 0.379
          U.S. dollar 0.6320 1.00000 0.632000
          1.494370
          U.S.$1.00 = SDR 0.669178 2 -0.283 3
          SDR1 = US$ 1.49437 4


          http://www.imf.org/external/np/fin/data/rms_sdrv.aspx
          http://www.NowAndTheFuture.com

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          • #6
            Re: Fed may issue its own debt

            This is about managing the effective FF rate w/o bothering with the Treasury.

            In other words, a coup.

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            • #7
              Re: Fed may issue its own debt

              Originally posted by phirang View Post
              This is about managing the effective FF rate w/o bothering with the Treasury.

              In other words, a coup.
              Or evidence to support our counter-argument to the deflationistas for many years: the Fed and Treasury hold an endless bag of tricks. They are going to keep reaching in and pulling things out until inflation expectations rise.
              Ed.

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              • #8
                Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                Originally posted by FRED View Post
                Or evidence to support our counter-argument to the deflationistas for many years: the Fed and Treasury hold an endless bag of tricks. They are going to keep reaching in and pulling things out until inflation expectations rise.
                If the Fed is desperate to create inflation expectations, what does that tell you about the current environment?

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                • #9
                  Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                  Originally posted by phirang View Post
                  If the Fed is desperate to create inflation expectations, what does that tell you about the current environment?
                  What it does not tell me is if and when they will be successful, which is fundamentally much more important.

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                  • #10
                    Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                    Originally posted by FRED View Post
                    Or evidence to support our counter-argument to the deflationistas for many years: the Fed and Treasury hold an endless bag of tricks. They are going to keep reaching in and pulling things out until inflation expectations rise.
                    Not endless FRED, they are running close to the precipice. After all, it is just a confidence game. They need enough inflation to maintain political stability and the integrity of the Payments system, let's see if they can do that successfully without a war.

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                    • #11
                      Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                      Let us assume, for a moment, that they all know, by that I mean all the CB's know, they are one step away form a complete meltdown. This surely comes down to who makes the first move? Either way, they might win, but this way they remain in control rather than events being in control. Might they thus be about to create their own version of an SDR? What would be the advantages?

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                      • #12
                        Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                        For some of us who are new to this strange world of finance and who are taking the iTulip crash course in bubble economics, this is really some fascinating stuff. I had no idea of the intricacies of what the Fed and Treasury dept. could do.

                        I'm wondering if the Feds goal in issuing new debt might be a way to offer Obama bonds? Could the Fed be planning on exchanging Tbills from other CB's with new Fed issued Obama bonds in the currency of your choice?

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                        • #13
                          Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                          ----nm----
                          Last edited by politicalfootballfan; February 02, 2009, 08:22 PM.

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                          • #14
                            Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                            Originally posted by FRED View Post
                            Or evidence to support our counter-argument to the deflationistas for many years: the Fed and Treasury hold an endless bag of tricks. They are going to keep reaching in and pulling things out until inflation expectations rise.
                            you cant fault them on their creativity that is for sure! Yet mainstream thinks it will be deflation!

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                            • #15
                              Re: Fed may issue its own debt

                              Originally posted by politicalfootballfan View Post
                              Chris, I would appreciate it if you can expand on your analysis. For example, when you say, "who makes the first move," who are the parties that you are referring to here. Also, when you say, "they might win," who are "they?" Thanks in advance.
                              CB's are Central Banks, for example the Federal Reserve in the United States, or The Bank of England, or again the European Central Bank.

                              There are banks and then there are the central organisations, central banks, that oversee the banks in every nation. "Who" in this case are the movers and shakers in these central banks.

                              "They" - "might win" in the sense that the movers and shakers succeed in preventing the whole system, world wide, from collapsing.

                              Your local, normal, bank, is, in a very real sense, not in any control of the current events that have now brought the entire credit system to a complete halt. So when we talk about the events that are occurring, we are more often really trying to connect with the thinking that is going on in the minds of these movers and shakers inside the likes of the Federal Reserve. What will they do next, and why.

                              I hope that helps you.

                              Communism is religion for ants.
                              Last edited by Chris Coles; December 10, 2008, 02:19 PM. Reason: Add the final quip.

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