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TOPIC: Get Ready to be Disappointed With "Sterilized" QE3
Get Ready to be Disappointed With "Sterilized" QE3 1 year, 2 months ago #1183
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The other big "risk on" news last week, aside from a coercive Greek debt restructuring that was completed "successfully" (but will only make Greece's public debts larger and less sustainable), was a rumor that "sterilized QE3" may be launched by the Fed in the near future (as in, at their meeting this week). The original Wall Street Journal piece by Jon Hilsenrath about this "new novel" program contained precious little in the way of details, yet the pundits and the markets obviously love to jump on the irrational bandwagon first and ask questions later. I, for one, am still very skeptical that the Fed is either able or willing to launch further QE this month. As made clear in Who Killed the Money Printer, U.S. economic data that is subjected to official pressures from the administration will not be allowed to materially disappoint before elections. We see that confirmed once again in Friday's jobs report, in which an alleged 227,000 private sector jobs were created. Needless to say, most analysts who have scratched just a little bit beneath the report's surface have found it to be completely inflated and misleading. Bank of America and TrimTrabs' sobering assessment can be found here. The illusion that America has decoupled from the rest of the world and entered a self-sustaining economic recovery, however thinly veiled it may be, will weaken the Fed's ability to justify more QE. In Political Theater Will Kill the Status Quo, it was also noted that a new QE program would provide a lot of cannon fodder for Republicans taking aim at Obama in the run-up to elections in November, especially when prices at the pump are relatively high. Critics may argue that the administration and Fed can avoid these issues by marketing the QE as a "sterilized" operation, as per the recent rumor. That, however, raises an additional question for me - what's the point? Perhaps the most important factor weighing against a new easing program right now is the perception held by major corporations, financial institutions and the Fed that it won't really benefit the economy or their bottom lines, and may even prove to be counter-productive. That issue was explored in terms of the ECB's dual LTROs in Why Liquidity is No Longer Enough, but the logic applies just as well to QE by the Fed, especially when the easing is being sold to everyone as an operation that will be "sterilized". Sure, that may help you avoid some of the internal and external criticism of those who are against "money printing", but at what cost does that pacification come? Let's first take a brief look at how this "sterilized QE" would actually work. The Sober Look blog breaks down the process for us and explains why there is nothing "novel" about it, since it is a common transactional method among financial institutions and most of its significant aspects were originally conceived by the Fed in 2009. It is simply a way of reaching a broader range of institutions with security purchases (instead of just the primary dealer banks), and also ensuring that the new cash entering the system from these purchases will be drained back out via the use of tri-party repo agreements.
So the basic transaction was something conceived by the Fed in 2009 as a means of draining excess monetary injections in the future, presumably as the economy "recovered" and the Fed began to tighten policy, and it is all quite simple. The structure of a sterilized QE program should not confused for some sort of unprecedented liquidity arrangement that will greatly increase money sloshing around in the system. Instead, it is most useful as a short-term operation that is conducted in modest amounts, as Sober Look explains below.
Indeed, there are no fiscal or monetary policies these days that will achieve either their stated or actual goals efficiently without generating a whole range of unintended consequences, some of which are enough to entirely offset all short to medium-term benefits of the policy enacted (the major benefit being the preservation of the status quo financial system for several more months or years). As noted above, the sterilized QE3 program, along with the current Operation Twist (selling short-term treasuries equal to purchases of long-term bonds), will simply put more upward pressure on short-term rates, negating the benefits of the prior guidance issued by the Fed ("exceptionally low funds rate until 2014"). That will also flatten the yield curve further, making it near impossible for banks to earn any decent spread through their traditional carry trade of borrowing money short and lending it back out long. All of these institutions will still be stuck in a world where solvency actually matters at the end of every day (especially in Europe post-Greek default), and none of these policy tweaks to existing liquidity tools will change that. I believe it is a mistake to assume that this reality is lost on any of the big money managers who will ultimately decide whether it is wise to return to risk-laden portfolios. Obviously, I can't be certain that there won't be an announcement or, at least, further implications of sterilized QE3 this week, or at the next meeting after that. It is highly unlikely in my opinion, but it is still possible. At this point, though, everything that comes out of the Fed is just colored bubbles, blowing in the wind. The Fed has been rendered impotent in this debt saturated environment, and Bernanke knows it too. Or - maybe, just maybe - he has guzzled down his own kool-aid and believes the Fed's policies have actually "worked". I find that very unlikely, but one thing is certain - that would be the last thing the money-managing debt fiends would want to hear. |
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Get Ready to be Disappointed With "Sterilized" QE3 1 year, 2 months ago #1194
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It is called Fedspeak, and it is as meaningful and truthful as the economic statistics from Big Brother. We should be in the midst of an economic boom two weeks before the election according to them.
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Get Ready to be Disappointed With "Sterilized" QE3 1 year, 2 months ago #1246
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