Category Archives: Federal Reserve

Extreme Measures I: Bill Gross at Pimco

We’ve noticed a new theme among economics writers: Extreme Measures. Commentators have suddenly looked into the abyss, either of the depth of the US subprime/housing problem or the progressing credit crunch that has already caused a seize up in the money markets, and are proposing radical courses of action. Our first sighting was Paul Krugman, […]

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Fed Acts More Directly to Shore Up Battered Asset-Backed Commercial Paper Market

For those of you who have been following the turmoil in the money markets, the problem stems from a near-complete repudiation of asset-backed commercial paper, which constitutes roughly half of commercial paper outstandings. The reason for the concern is most asset-backed CP has mortgages as collateral, and some of those mortgages may be (hold your […]

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Thinking the Unthinkable: Regulating the Brave New World of Finance

Earlier this week, I sought to frame the prevailing views of what the supervising adults, namely central bankers, should do about the turmoil in the financial markets. They break down into four groups (names of representative spokesmen included): The keep the party going types (Jim Cramer and his less histrionic brethren) who argue that markets […]

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Central Bank Efforts to Stabilize Money Markets May Not Be Working

An update from Bloomberg tells us that commercial paper outstandings fell 4.2% in a week, which suggests the efforts of central bankers to restore confidence in that market, and particularly in asset backed commercial paper, may not be adequate. 4.2% may not sound like much of a drop until you do some quick and dirty […]

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Update From the Man Who Popularized "Minsky Moment"

George Magnus, senior economics adviser at UBS and the person responsible for bringing economist Hyman Minsky to the public’s attention, invokes him again in a good piece in the Financial Times. In keeping with his affinity for the world view of the dour economist, Magnus depicts our current credit crunch as a Minsky moment and […]

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Martin Wolf Defends the Fed

Normally, I have the highest regard for Martin Wolf, the Financial Times’ lead economics writer. He is forthright, data-driven, articulate, sober, and insightful. However, I take issue with his current article, “The Federal Reserve must prolong the party,” and see its failings as symptomatic of the state of economics. In brief, Wolf argues that the […]

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Has Smoke and Mirrors Worked?

In an inspired bit of stagecraft, Senate Banking Committee Chairman Christopher Dodd reported today on a meeting with Fed chairman Ben Bernanke and Treasury secretary Henry Paulson that the Fed stood ready to use “all of the tools at his disposal” to address the current money market liquidity meltdown and general credit market distress. This […]

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Chaos Continues in the Money Markets

The Fed’s move on Friday to lower discount rates and its policy shift towards addressing risks to growth has not brought relief to the sector that was in the most distress, the money markets. Panicked action continued Monday, begging the question of what, if anything, the authorities can do. Institutional are fleeing from counterparty risk […]

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On What the Fed Hath Wrought (So Far)

A gut-wrenching two weeks in the credit markets have been capped by unprecedented moves by central bankers. The ECB’s offer of an unlimited infusion to member banks the week before last was followed last Friday’ by the Fed’s discount rate cut, which included stern warnings that those who needed it better use it and a […]

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Nouriel Roubini and Marc Faber Are Not Impressed

Nouriel Roubini and Marc Faber are well known bears, but that fact has not prevented them from being largely right of late. And since the events of the last few weeks have been particularly nerve-wracking, the US media has taken to focusing on the more soothing aspects of news developments, to the extent they can […]

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Is the Criticism of Bernanke Warranted?

A Bloomberg story, in what may be becoming conventional wisdom, charges Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke with making a novice’s error: By lowering the discount rate and issuing a statement conceding threats to the economy, Federal Open Market Committee members effectively ripped up the economic-outlook statement from their Aug. 7 meeting. Some economists describe the […]

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Fed Found, and Dismissed, Signs of High Correlation in Hedge Fund Strategies

It’s summer rerun time. By happenstance, I came across a May post, which referred to a Federal Reserve study that had found that risks of hedge funds pursuing highly correlated strategies appeared, by some measures, as high as before the LTCM crisis. We had thought the Fed might be making a mistake in dismissing its […]

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Asset Backed CP Yields Move Higher

Even though the Fed cut the discount rate to 5.75%, and more important, said it was concerned about risks to growth, asset backed commercial paper, which is the epicenter of the credit shock, is being placed at newly high yields: 5.99%, which is now above the discount rate. And remember, not only has the Fed […]

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