I Get By With Alittle Help From My Friends....
Would you like to react to this message? Create an account in a few clicks or log in to continue.
I Get By With Alittle Help From My Friends....

Dinar Outcast


You are not connected. Please login or register

The Real Reason for QE2

Go down  Message [Page 1 of 1]

1The Real Reason for QE2 Empty The Real Reason for QE2 Tue Nov 16, 2010 9:27 am

Guest


Guest

11/15 Bill Baker - The Real Reason for QE2

The Fed's announcement that it will buy approximately $600 billion of US Treasury securities or more in the coming months. Monetary policy has not been a political concern for maybe a century, when William Jennings Bryan lost his presidential bid but made history with his "Cross of Gold" speech in 1896. But now as then, neither the public nor policy makers may understand modern monetary mechanics enough to advocate a coherent solution to our economic malaise. Quantitative easing or not, we will still experience economic headwinds from the aftermath of the housing bubble, as well as from our wanton fiscal policy. And it will likely continue to be expressed through foreign currency volatility, sovereign credit defaults or interventions, and high unemployment.

Three issues: 1) Housing is still deflating, 2) banks are acutely vulnerable to housing credit exposure, and 3) The sustainability of the Fed's operating a system of money that rises and falls in direct proportion to the issuance of credit is questionable. Neither stopping nor starting QE2 can fix a broken system.


Banks have a very thin layer of equity. Almost all of their funding for lending comes from depositors. Contrary to general public perception, depositors' money is not held at banks, waiting to be handed back upon demand. Instead, it was lent out - mostly for "investment" in real estate. More than a few of these "investors" are hung out to dry at prices that may be a tad below the nosebleed highs set in 2007.

If housing prices fall a little bit more, say 25%, then a great number of mortgages that once held decent credit scores would no longer be backed by an asset of equal value. Depositors might sense this, and would rationally ask for their money back, triggering bank runs. The FDIC has even less capital to make good on deposits than the banks have, so this is a real risk that could only be met through an extremely aggressive program of QE. In a shrinking credit system, asset holders may be moved to unload other asset classes such as stocks or bonds in order to avoid bankruptcy.

Thus, although it may not "feel" like anything is wrong now with $2 trillion propping up the banking system, Bernanke knows this, and this is why he favors QE2. Why doesn't he just come out and explain it? He is worried about deflation. But if he explains that the deflation that concerns him is that of real estate pulling the banking system under, and not consumer prices, then he has to educate us all about the pernicious nature of operating a central bank.

Central bank policy affects inflation or deflation in two separate markets: the market for assets such as land or stocks, or the market for consumer goods. The problem with popular economic theories is that they can't explain why we could get inflation in a slack economy (the 1970s discredited Keynesianism), or inflation and deflation at the same time (the post 2008 meltdown). Like the ignominious CEOs of Lehman and Countrywide, no Fed chairman can admit that the emperor has no clothes. Because if he did, it would let the cat out of the bag and people would react by withdrawing funds from the banking system. They could place their money in a mattress (but that would be awkward - think of the physical space needed to house the cash)! Or they could buy something tangible that is not real estate.

Gold and silver are the ideal monetary candidates, since they have the characteristics of money sought for millennia: durability, divisibility, transportability, and lack of susceptibility to counterfeiting. Money should also not vary much in quantity, for if it does, its ability to be a medium of exchange lessens when prices of assets and consumer goods would rise and fall unexpectedly and in no relation to underlying production capabilities.

From time to time man has used for money his most ubiquitous commodities that possessed many of these characteristics. The problem with using them is that each has been violation of one or more of these characteristics to some degree. For example, using oil to back the dollar would require a vast physical infrastructure of storage and transportation, larger than exists today. And it would wreak havoc on the present balance of supply and demand for energy if such a switch were to occur suddenly.

Using fiat money (paper or electronic currency printed out of thin air) poses a similar violation. While it needs some infrastructure (the banking sector consumes an extraordinary percentage of employment and financial capital), its Achilles heel is that its unchecked growth flows into the economy through the creation of debt, stimulating price increases in assets that can be leveraged, particularly real estate. That creates another infrastructure and employment surge in the real estate industry, further misallocating resources.


We are at the crossroads of what may be a habitual breaking point in a national credit based fiat system, which has happened several times previously in the last 200 years. What is poorly understood is that our predicament is not the exception, it is the rule.

Our first two central banks lasted decades at best. The greenback system collapsed by the 1870s. The gold standard of the late nineteenth century came apart at the seams because its gold base became almost completely diluted and irrelevant. Its silver component was outlawed in a backroom deal known as the "Crime of 1873."


Bank credit compounded at 7% annually from the Civil War to 1929, overwhelming any specie that was relied upon historically. The money printed thusly caused financial earthquakes at the founding of the Fed in 1913 and again in 1934. Compounding bank credit accumulated pressure that surfaced in the 1960s, busting open the system in 1971.

2008 may have just been a warning, and it is no surprise that the hapless policy measures put in place in the last two years, while "working" temporarily, have elicited calls from nations for a new monetary order.

2The Real Reason for QE2 Empty Re: The Real Reason for QE2 Tue Nov 16, 2010 10:21 am

Guest


Guest

The financial history is littered with March-May-crisis then cause a much bigger crisis in the fall, interrupted a recovery rally with the theme of "the worst is over now." I found this phenomenon in 1907, 1929, 1931, 1987, 2008. [It is calculated with the previously devastating period of the crisis between 7 November and 23 January

3The Real Reason for QE2 Empty Re: The Real Reason for QE2 Tue Nov 16, 2010 2:24 pm

windreader1



Great find. This was a very interesting read.

Sponsored content



Back to top  Message [Page 1 of 1]

Permissions in this forum:
You cannot reply to topics in this forum