bank reserves

Wait A Minute, The Dollar And The Fed’s Bank Reserves Are Directly Not Inversely Related

By |2020-07-14T16:37:09-04:00July 14th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One small silver lining to the current situation, while Jay Powell is busily trying to sell you his inflation fantasy, he’s actually undermining it at the very same time. No mere challenge to his own “money printing” fiction, either, the Fed’s Chairman is actively disproving the entire enterprise. While he says what he says, pay close attention instead to what [...]

Swap Me Still

By |2020-06-12T16:55:09-04:00June 12th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

In its earliest years, the Discount Window wasn’t something to be avoided at all costs, it was nearly the whole point. In order to supply largely seasonal liquidity, the word “discount” meant banks could show up at one of the local 12 Fed branches and post collateral for an increase in their reserve balance. No one would be stuck holding [...]

Why The FOMC Just Embraced The Stock Bubble (and anything else remotely sounding inflationary)

By |2020-06-10T19:10:13-04:00June 10th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

The job, as Jay Powell currently sees it, means building up the S&P 500 as sky high as it can go. The FOMC used to pay lip service to valuations, but now everything is different. He’ll signal to all those fund managers by QE raising bank reserves, leading them on in what they all want to believe is “money printing” [...]

We Shouldn’t Have To Be Busting The Flood Myth For A Second Time, And Now We’re Really Going To Pay Prices

By |2020-05-29T19:18:37-04:00May 29th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

It’s now more than two months out from GFC2 and more importantly the Fed’s response to it. Why is Jay Powell’s reaction more important? Simple. Because it outlines what happens next. Had the FOMC been anywhere close to successful in anything other than convincing the media, GFC2 might’ve been a singular instance of disruption related to the non-economic shock of [...]

Stocks Haven’t Been Moneyed

By |2020-05-18T19:57:09-04:00May 18th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets, Stocks|

Why didn’t 1987 turn out to be 1929 redux? Alan Greenspan was deathly afraid this would be the case, and in turn he made everyone else unnecessarily upset along the same lines. Especially Congress. The fact that both stock market crashes occurred during the month of October, though, actually ends the similarities. That plus clueless Federal Reserve officials.Why the one [...]

Overseas Dollar Swaps Are Not As Overseas As You Think

By |2020-05-18T16:44:34-04:00May 18th, 2020|Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

People quite often want to know what I have against the Fed’s swaps. To begin with, they are sourced by bank reserves. My co-host partner Emil Kalinowski likes to say these latter are the equivalent of laundromat tokens, an analogy I can at least get behind. They are monetary in appearance but of (extremely) limited use. Maybe a more comprehensive [...]

There Was Never A Need To Translate ‘Weimar’ Into Japanese

By |2020-05-13T17:26:47-04:00May 13th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

After years of futility, he was sure of the answer. The Bank of Japan had spent the better part of the roaring nineties fighting against itself as much as the bubble which had burst at the outset of the decade. Letting fiscal authorities rule the day, Japan’s central bank had largely sat back introducing what it said was stimulus in [...]

Operation sulfatos

By |2020-05-11T16:59:09-04:00May 11th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The military phase was an all-out joke. Carlos Castillo Armas had fewer than 500 men as his “invasion” force. Yet, with only that many he had expected to take back the entire country. More surprisingly, he succeeded. Lt. Colonel Armas had previously participated in the 1944 Guatemala uprising that had forced Jorge Ubico from power. As a supporter and close [...]

Everyone Knows The Gov’t Wants A ‘Controlled’ Weimar

By |2020-05-06T19:37:25-04:00May 6th, 2020|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There are two parts behind the inflation mongering. The first, noted yesterday, is the Fed’s balance sheet, particularly its supposedly monetary remainder called bank reserves. The central bank is busy doing something, a whole bunch of something, therefore how can it possibly turn out to be anything other than inflationary?The answer: the Federal Reserve is not a central bank, not [...]

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