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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

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Federal Reserve reverse repurchases

James Hamilton (September 27th, 2009) Writes:

Here I offer some thoughts on Bloomberg's account that the Fed has made inquiries with its dealers about the feasibility of a significant increase in the Fed's reverse repo operations.

First, a little background. The traditional tool of monetary policy is an open market purchase, in which the Fed purchased U.S. Treasury securities that had previously been held by someone in the private sector. The Fed would pay for those securities by crediting deposits in an account that the selling bank had with the Federal Reserve. These reserve deposits of banks represent claims that the bank could use, if it wished, to withdraw green currency from the Federal Reserve. The volume of reserve deposits historically was extremely important in determining the interest rate at which banks would lend the deposits to one another overnight. The traditional understanding of monetary policy was that the Fed would

...

Fed to cut rates today, but does anyone care?

Mike Larson (December 16th, 2008) Writes:
PIt's another Fed day today, with the FOMC's two-day policy meeting set to wrap up later and the results to be announced at roughly 2:15 eastern. Market betting is that the Fed will cut rates by 50 basis points to a record-low 0.5%. But one has to wonder if that really matters. The effective federal funds rate, determined by actual trading in the market, was just 18 basis points yesterday.brbrThe real question is how will the Fed further explain or define its new strategy of quantitative easing and flooding the banking system with reserves. Or as Bloomberg A href=http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087sid=aJOGrevCE.M4amp;refer=homeexplains things/A this morning ...brbrThe Federal Reserve may today reduce its main interest rate to the lowest level on record and prepare for one of the boldest experiments in its 94-year history: using its balance sheet as the key tool for monetary policy.brbrThe Fed’s Open Market Committee will probably cut the benchmark ...

Some Observations on the Ongoing Crisis: Causes and Opportunity Cost Again

Menzie Chinn (September 19th, 2008) Writes:

There's a lot of commentary -- more comprehensive and up to date than I can provide -- on the crisis and the attempts to resolve the logjam in the financial markets.[0], [1] But I stilll have a couple of thoughts about the causes, and the implications, of the process that has resulted in so much turmoil this week.

First, what is the source of the crisis? Is it as is asserted here in this statement from John McCain today?

....

There are certainly plenty of places to point fingers, and it may be hard to pinpoint the original event that set it all in motion. But let me give you an educated guess. The financial crisis we're living through today started with the corruption and manipulation of our home mortgage system. At the center of the problem were the lobbyists, politicians, and bureaucrats who succeeded in persuading Congress and the

...
Tags for this Post:
Afghanistan, Alan Greenspan, American International Group Inc., Bank, bank regulators, Barclays, Barclays Capital Inc., Bethesda, bloomberg, Brad DeLong, Bush, bush administration, California, central bank, Clinton administration, Comptroller of the Currency, Congress, Congressional Budget Office, Depression, Edward M. Gramlich, Fannie Mae, federal bank regulator, Federal Government, Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle, Federal Reserve System, foreign central banks, Freddie Mac, Georgia, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Greenlining Institute, Henry Paulson, Iraq, James Gilleran, Jersey City, John C. Gamboa, john mccain, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Justin Fox, Lou Crandall, Mac, Mark Thoma, Maryland, Mortgage Finance, New Jersey, New York, Nils Overdahl, North Carolina, Office Of Thrift Supervision, Pond Says, Reich, Robert L. Gnaizda, Sandra Hernandez, Sheila C. Bair, sound finance, United States, USD, Washington, Wrightson ICAP LLC

Some Observations on the Ongoing Crisis: Causes and Opportunity Cost Again

Menzie Chinn (September 19th, 2008) Writes:

There's a lot of commentary -- more comprehensive and up to date than I can provide -- on the crisis and the attempts to resolve the logjam in the financial markets.[0], [1] But I stilll have a couple of thoughts about the causes, and the implications, of the process that has resulted in so much turmoil this week.

First, what is the source of the crisis? Is it as is asserted here in this statement from John McCain today?

....

There are certainly plenty of places to point fingers, and it may be hard to pinpoint the original event that set it all in motion. But let me give you an educated guess. The financial crisis we're living through today started with the corruption and manipulation of our home mortgage system. At the center of the problem were the lobbyists, politicians, and bureaucrats who succeeded in persuading Congress and the

...
Tags for this Post:
Afghanistan, Alan Greenspan, American International Group Inc., Bank, bank regulators, Barclays, Barclays Capital Inc., Bethesda, bloomberg, Brad DeLong, Bush, bush administration, California, central bank, Clinton administration, Comptroller of the Currency, Congress, Congressional Budget Office, Depression, Economics, Edward M. Gramlich, Fannie Mae, federal bank regulator, Federal Government, Federal Home Loan Bank of Seattle, Federal Reserve System, foreign central banks, Freddie Mac, Georgia, Goldman Sachs Group Inc, Greenlining Institute, Henry Paulson, Iraq, James Gilleran, Jersey City, John C. Gamboa, john mccain, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Justin Fox, Lou Crandall, Mac, Mark Thoma, Maryland, Mortgage Finance, New Jersey, New York, Nils Overdahl, North Carolina, Office Of Thrift Supervision, Pond Says, Reich, Robert L. Gnaizda, Sandra Hernandez, Sheila C. Bair, sound finance, United States, USD, Washington, Wrightson ICAP LLC

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