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Showing posts with the label federal reserve

Learn to be a Central Banker (in 10 easy steps)

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This via Barry Ritholz @ The Big Picture Learning to Be A Central Banker in 10 Easy Steps Start with one policy – for example – interest rates. Place the policy ball in your right hand and begin by   lowering   rates. which causes the ball be tossed-up into the air, in an arc, and land in your left hand. Note how, when the policy ball is in your left hand and you raise rates, the ball returns in an arc to your right hand. Repeat several times to get the feel. (Note this doesn’t work if you are left-handed) Now with he first policy ball in your left hand, take a second policy ball in your right hand, say the value of the US dollar. Notice how when you   lower   interest rates while the PBoC, and other official buyers in BRICs and GCC countries buy Long Bonds, the 2nd policy ball, the Dollar, feels heavy as if it wants to fall to the ground. Exerting appropriate pressure, you must force it up to arc, after which it should fall back down landing in the left hand...

Sheila Blair loses it (humorously) re: Income Inequality

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(The Chair of the FDIC.  That Sheila Blair) Shes got a wonderful op-ed going at The Washington Post .  Excerpts below, but go read it ! [...]For several years now, the Fed has been making money available to the financial sector at near-zero interest rates. Big banks and hedge funds, among others, have taken this cheap money and invested it in securities with high yields. This type of profit-making, called the “carry trade,” has been enormously profitable for them.   Under my plan, each American household could borrow $10 million from the Fed at zero interest. The more conservative among us can take that money and buy 10-year Treasury bonds. At the current 2 percent annual interest rate, we can pocket a nice $200,000 a year to live on. The more adventuresome can buy 10-year Greek debt at 21 percent, for an annual income of $2.1 million. Or if Greece is a little too risky for you, go with Portugal, at about 12 percent, or $1.2 million dollars a year. (No sense ...