Wednesday, November 30, 2011

Why the Fed Swaps, Announced Today, Will Expand the Monetary Base

Tony Crescenzi,Senior VP,Strategist and Portfolio Manager at Pimco explains how the swaps announced by the Fed will expand the Fed's monetary base:
[A]ny use of the Fed’s swap facility expands the Fed’s monetary base: all dollars, no matter where they are deposited, whether it be Kazakhstan, Japan, or Mexico, wind up back in an American bank. This means that any time a foreign central bank engages in a swap with the Federal Reserve, the Fed will create new money in order to make the swap. Use of the Fed’s liquidity swap line in late 2008 was the main cause of a surge in the Fed’s monetary base at that time. The peak for the swap line was about $600 billion in December 2008. Some observers will therefore say that the swap line is a backdoor way to engage in more quantitative easing.
Keep in mind that the monetary base is important, however, money in the base does not mean it is necessarily money in the economy. For example, most of the money created by the Fed in 2008,and up until recently, went into excess reserves and thus did not impact the economy. Bernanke may not be so lucky this time. If the money stays in the system and doesn't end up in excess reserves, the price inflationary consequences will be huge.. The money created by the swaps is being used to bailout Greek, Spain etc debt. That money is likely to end up being used to buy even more PIIGS debt, which means it will end up in the hands of the Greeks, Spaniards, etc. and not as excess reserves. German Chancellor Angela Merkel fought tooth and nail to prevent the ECB from .monetizing the PIIGS debt, so instead, Bernanke has stepped in to inflate.  Bernanke is playing with fire here and Americans are all likely to get burned with soaring prices.

6 comments:

  1. Interesting that base metals are not participating in the inflationary action by the Fed. Clearly there is a disconnect. It looks like this rally shall too pass once investors wake up tomorrow and wonder what the hell they have done. Time to start shorting again. LOL I was hoping we would get at least of week of jubilation before the reality of the EZ and China sets back in.

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  2. Where do you get the idea base metals aren't participating? Copper is up over 5%, today.

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  3. And so it continues...got physical gold?? And those reserves sitting pretty are ready to be used, if/when necessary, but who knows when there might be a shortage of cash...

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  4. Talk about a PIIG....Bernanke is a monetary swine, spreading the mudhole even wider and deeper...

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  5. Not only Americans will get burned with soaring prices, the whole world will be burned. The back-door worldwide quantitative easing is looting the world's 99% and give it to the 1%.

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  6. Anon 10:16

    Exactly - all paper everywhere will get burned - what good are mining shares if you cash out and receive worthless paper dollars....this isn't the 70's folks - shares will likely go up but good luck getting any physical gold when the music stops - moreover, u gotta deal with banker games and manipulations that weren't present nearly to the current extent...

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