Enter your Email Address


Useful Links

Know What The Insiders Are Doing!
Stock Trading Software

More Links




[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




All this money … going, going, gone!!

Trading School (June 11th, 2009) Writes:
I found this by chance on CNN. It’s just plain scary to me. What do you think? Adam Troubled ASSET RELIEF PROGRAM Financial rescue plan aimed at restoring liquidity to the financial markets Program Committed Invested Description American International Group * See complete AIG bailout below $70 billion $69.8 billion $40 billion in preferred shares were converted to so-called non-cumulative shares that more closely resemble common stock. Treasury later offered another $30 billion in preferred shares for up to 5 years, in return for a 10% dividend. AIG: Where your money is going Asset Guarantee Program Citigroup Bank of America $12.5 billion $5 billion $7.5 billion $5 billion $5 billion $0 Funds set aside to backstop potential losses to government from Citigroup and Bank of America loans. Auto Supplier Support Program GM Supplier Receivables Chrysler Receivables $5 billion $3.5 billion $1.5 billion $5 billion $3.5 billion $1.5 billion Program to help stabilize ...
Tags for this Post:
Adam, American International Assurance Company;, American International Group, American Life Insurance Company;, Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund, Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Money Market Mutual Fund, bank takeovers, Bank, bank fails, Bank Failures, Bank Of America, Bear Stearns, Citigroup, Cnn, Credit union deposit insurance;, Dealer Credit Facility;, failed investment bank;, Fannie Mae, Fdic, Federal Reserve facility;, Federal Reserve System, Freddie Mac, General Motors, Investing Lessons, issued bank bonds;, Jpmorgan Chase, life insurance holding company subsidiaries;, Life Insurance Policies, Loan Facility, Market Commentary, Market Investor Funding Facility;, Merrill Lynch, Mortgage Finance, National Credit Union Administration;, new york fed, Paper Funding Facility;, Term Auction Facility, Term Securities Lending Facility, Trading Lessons, trading school, U.S. Central Federal Credit Union;, United States, Us Government, USD, WesCorp;, White House

The Demise of the Dollar? Should We Worry about Quantitative Easing and Deficit Spending?

Menzie Chinn (April 13th, 2009) Writes:

Over the weekend, I was working on my long delayed manuscript on exchange rate modeling [0], and pondering how useful the conventional econometric techniques were for making predictions about the future value of the dollar.

debtdollar1.gif Figure 1: Log value of trade weighted dollar, against a basket of major currencies (blue), and against a broad basket of currencies (red); and Deutsche Bank forecasts, calculated using implied changes of DB TWI (dark blue boxes). NBER defined recession shaded gray; only peak indicated for current recession. Source: Federal Reserve via FRED II, Deutsche Bank Exchange Rate Perspectives (27 March 2009), NBER, and author's calculations.

Why wonder? Well, in the final chapter of the text, I outlined the use of Taylor rule fundamentals to explain exchange rates (see this paper and these posts [1], [2], [3]). However, the fact that several central banks have hit the

...

The Fed’s new balance sheet

James Hamilton (March 29th, 2009) Writes:

My previous post reviewed the profound changes in the balance sheet of the U.S. Federal Reserve over the last 18 months. Here I comment on some of the concerns that the new Fed balance sheet raises for the conduct of monetary policy.

I would suggest first that the new Fed balance sheet represents a fundamental transformation of the role of the central bank. The whole idea behind open market operations is to make the process of creating new money completely separate from the decision of who receives any fiscal transfers. In a traditional open market operation, the Fed buys or sells an existing Treasury obligation for the same price anyone else would pay for the security. As a result, the operation itself does not involve any net transfer of wealth between the Fed and the private sector. The philosophy is that the Fed should base

...

Money creation and the Fed

James Hamilton (March 27th, 2009) Writes:

A lot of people have seen this picture of the recent behavior of the monetary base and wondered what it means.

Figure 1. Adjusted monetary base. Source: FRED. mon_base_mar_09.jpg

To understand the explosion in the monetary base since September, let's begin with a little background. The Federal Reserve has the ability to purchase assets or make loans with funds (money) that are created by the Fed itself. To buy a billion dollars worth of assets, the Fed doesn't show up with new cash in a wheelbarrow. Instead the Fed pays for any assets it purchases or loans it extends by crediting the funds that the recipient bank has in an account with the Fed, known as reserve deposits. A bank can later withdraw those deposits in the form of green currency, if it chooses, and that's the point

...

Fed’s Damaged Balance Sheet Will Take Down The Dollar

Contrarian Profits (November 13th, 2008) Writes:

“Nothing like this has ever been done before by the Federal Reserve,” says Bud Conrad. From holding mostly US treasury notes and gold, the Fed’s balance sheet has been expanded by a whole range of questionable assets and liabilities. In time, Bud says the consequences for the US dollar will be grim.

This from Whiskey & Gunpowder:

Under Bernanke’s direction, the Federal Reserve has completely rewritten its mission. Many articles in the International Speculator and The Casey Report have reported the strange growth in the loans they have made and explained that Bernanke has, for a long time, espoused unconventional actions to avert deflation and to expand the economy. So the charts below tell that story, and it is truly amazing.

The Federal Reserve was never envisioned to be lender of last resort to a whole slew of investment banks, money market mutual funds, and commercial paper issuers.

...

The Fed Has Completely Rewritten its Mission

Contrarian Profits (November 12th, 2008) Writes:

Under Bernanke’s direction, the Federal Reserve has completely rewritten its mission. Many articles in the International Speculator and The Casey Report have reported the strange growth in the loans they have made and explained that Bernanke has, for a long time, espoused unconventional actions to avert deflation and to expand the economy. So the charts below tell that story, and it is truly amazing.

The Federal Reserve was never envisioned to be lender of last resort to a whole slew of investment banks, money market mutual funds, and commercial paper issuers.

The situation is not easy to sort out, for the simple reason that the extent of their actions is not presented by the Fed via clear and concise data. Instead, the data is complex and hard to analyze, partly because of the piecemeal way the actions were taken, but also probably due to a desire by the Fed to avoid

...

The Federal Reserve’s balance sheet

James Hamilton (October 25th, 2008) Writes:

On Thursday, the Federal Reserve issued its weekly H.4.1 report, which provides details of the Fed's balance sheet. Once upon a time, this was one of the least interesting of the government's many releases of data. These days, it's become one of the most exciting.

The essence of the Fed's balance sheet used to be quite simple. The Fed's primary operations would consist of either buying outstanding Treasury securities or issuing loans to banks through its discount window. It paid for these transactions by creating credits in accounts that banks hold with the Federal Reserve, known as reserve deposits. Banks can turn those reserves into green cash any time they desire, so the process is sometimes loosely summarized as saying that the Fed pays for the Treasury bills it buys or loans it extends by "printing money". Before the excitement began, the Fed's assets

...

Balance sheet of the Federal Reserve

James Hamilton (October 8th, 2008) Writes:

I was astonished when I heard that the Fed is contemplating increasing the Term Auction Facility to $900 billion. I wanted to take another look at the ever-changing balance sheet of the Fed to see how logistically Bernanke might be able to perform such a feat.

The one power that the Fed unquestionably possesses is the ability to create money. It traditionally did so by buying Treasury securities from the public, crediting the sellers' banks with newly created Federal Reserve deposits (a "liability" from the Fed's point of view), and adding the securities purchased to the Fed's asset holdings. Those newly created Federal Reserve deposits are essentially electronic credits that the banks could use to receive delivery of green cash from the Federal Reserve.

The first column of the table below provides a condensed version of the Federal Reserve's balance sheet in the halcyon moments before the credit

...

Newsletter

No recommendations, either expressed or implied, are being made to buy, sell, hold or short any of the mentioned stocks. No legal, tax or accounting advice is expressed or implied. Always contact your attorney, CPA, or tax advisor before acting on any legal or tax issues. StraightStocks.com is not responsible for the content, products, or services of any of the advertisers on this site. StraightStocks.com receives compensation from advertisers on this blog. Services and products referred to herein are trademarks, registered trademarks, servicemarks, and/or registered servicemarks of their respective trademark or servicemark owners.