• Tag Archives Quantitative Easing
  • Andrew Huszar: Confessions of a Quantitative Easer

    Where are we today? The Fed keeps buying roughly $85 billion in bonds a month, chronically delaying so much as a minor QE taper. Over five years, its bond purchases have come to more than $4 trillion. Amazingly, in a supposedly free-market nation, QE has become the largest financial-markets intervention by any government in world history.

    And the impact? Even by the Fed’s sunniest calculations, aggressive QE over five years has generated only a few percentage points of U.S. growth. By contrast, experts outside the Fed, such as Mohammed El Erian at the Pimco investment firm, suggest that the Fed may have created and spent over $4 trillion for a total return of as little as 0.25% of GDP (i.e., a mere $40 billion bump in U.S. economic output). Both of those estimates indicate that QE isn’t really working.

    via Andrew Huszar: Confessions of a Quantitative Easer


  • Ron Paul QE3 Predictions Are Already Proving to be Correct

    It has been nearly two weeks since Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke announced that the Fed would engage in another round of “quantitative easing” (QE3) by purchasing $40 billion in mortgage-backed securities (MGS) a month for the indefinite future and would be leaving interest rates near zero for the next few years.

    Longtime Fed opponent and the staunch critic of Fed monetary policy Ron Paul issued a statement the next day regarding Bernanke’s actions.

    “No one is surprised by the Fed’s action today to inject even more money into the economy through additional asset purchases, ” Paul said. “The Fed’s only solution for every problem is to print more money and provide more liquidity. Mr. Bernanke and Fed governors appear not to understand that our current economic malaise resulted directly because of the excessive credit the Fed already pumped into the system.”

    It hasn’t even been a month yet since the Fed made their QE3 announcement, but Paul’s Austrian-based analysis would suggest that it will only continue to make things worse. By further devaluing the dollar, buying up near-worthless debt, and keeping interest rates near zero, the Fed is sending terrible signals to the economy while simultaneously not allowing the debt and malinvestment to be liquidated. Without this necessary correction, true economic production and growth can not be achieved. Paul’s recommendation of a “strong dollar and market interest rates” is once again being unheeded.

    When QE3 was right around the corner, I argued in a PolicyMic article that “monetary injections” by the Fed tend to give the economy a short-term boost at the expense of steady, long-term economic growth (especially in election seasons when it is politically popular) and that Wall Street will do just fine since it is largely their paper assets and bad debts that will be propped up. But in the relatively short time since QE3 has been enacted, even the predictable short-term boost to the economy that defenders and proponents of monetary stimulus claim will result are already falling short.

    The Fed’s decision to buy up mortgage bonds has predictably lowered mortgage yields while inflation-protected bonds (TIP) have risen slowly. This means that QE3 is effectively making it harder for the U.S. government to borrow money — something that the U.S. government is doing a lot of simply to stay afloat, and the exact opposite of what Bernanke has intended to do. But the benefit of a slight drop in mortgage yields thanks to the Fed purchases of MGS is heavily outweighed by the increase in the yield of government bonds.

    In other words, when the Fed buys bonds and the bonds actually go down in price, the bonds are being priced with the expectation of a wave of inflation in mind. Bernanke and QE3 may well be heading us down the road to stagflation. Judging by these factors alone, QE3 has failed even in its attempt to provide a quick boom and backstop.

    Besides, even with the drop in mortgage yields, home prices are continuing to rise even though the market is signaling that they need to drastically fall and clear. This is another sign that the Fed and QE3 are preventing the corrections that are needed by artificially keeping the prices of houses too high.

    Full article: http://www.policymic … ing-to-be-correct%3E


  • Oil tops $116 on Fed stimulus hopes

    Oil prices rose by more than a dollar on Thursday to top $116 a barrel on renewed hopes for a third round of monetary stimulus by the U.S. Federal Reserve despite weak economic data from China.

    Brent crude futures were up $1.21 to $116.12 a barrel by 1155 GMT, having reached $116.38 earlier in the session.

    U.S. crude was up 28 cents at $97.54 per barrel, off a three-month high of $98.29 hit earlier.

    Investors and traders are betting that additional monetary stimulus is imminent after minutes from the last U.S. central bank meeting were released late on Wednesday.

    The minutes noted that many Federal Reserve members “judged that additional monetary accommodation would likely be warranted fairly soon” unless the economy improves considerably.

    This is being interpreted as a hint that the Federal Reserve could act at next week’s Jackson Hole Symposium, where Chairman Ben Bernanke and European Central Bank President Mario Draghi are scheduled to speak.

    Dominick Chirichella, of the Energy Management Institute, noted that Bernanke had announced the second round of quantitative easing at Jackson Hole in 2010.

    Further stimulus may weaken the dollar, which in turn will lift commodities priced in dollars, while any boost to the U.S. economy from the stimulus may also drive up oil demand.

    Full article: http://www.reuters.c … dUSBRE83H17O20120823