Category Archives: Federal Reserve

Paulson’s Cosmetic, Cynical Financial Regulation "Reform"

Why is it that the media feels compelled to take pronouncements from government officials more or less at face value? By now, they ought to know that if someone from the Bush Administration is moving his lips, odds are it’s a lie. Today’s object lesson is the so-called financial services regulatory reform plan announced by […]

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Is the Latest Liquidity Crunch in Remission?

CR at Calculated Risk yesterday pointed to an important sign of improving conditions in the credit markets. The fever chart of the so-called third wave of the liquidity crunch, the TED spread, showed signs of improvement. The TED is difference between the interest on three month Treasuries and Libor; the earlier acute episodes were August-September […]

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So How Much Will the Public Pay for Those Bailouts?

As Senator Everett Dirksen once said, “A billion here, a billion there, and pretty soon you’re talking real money.” Although the powers that be have relied mainly on guarantees and loans rather than explicit payment to try to prop up financial institutions and the housing market, the same principle applies. Even though these commitments are […]

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Bear: Did the Fed and Treasury Push Too Hard?

Andrew Ross Sorkin in the New York Times provides some important background on how the Bear deal wound up being retraded today. But he does his readers and the greater public a huge disservice by telling the story so as to flatter Wall Street. According to Sorkin, the $2 price for Bear was the Fed’s […]

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Setser: Foreign Buys of US Assets Increasing Dislocation

Brad Setser, a source for thorough, thoughtful coverage on currencies and related topics, provides his monthly parsing of the Treasury International Capital report (this one from January, plus its survey of foreign holdings of US securities as of the end of June 2007) and does not like what he sees. Since the August TIC report, […]

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Did the Fed Prevent a Financial Chernobyl?

There are two useful but frustrating articles addressing different aspects of the extraordinary measures implemented by the Federal Reserve in the last ten days, in particular the bailout of Bear Stearns. A New York Times article, “What Created This Monster,” is very much worth reading despite its shortcomings. It attempts to say how we got […]

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Desperate Central Bankers to Bail Out MBS Market? (Not Yet, Perhaps….)

I quoted Lucy Kellaway, who once said (apropos management fads), “No idea is too ridiculous to be put into practice,” and warned that the credit crisis would soon get that sort of treatment. A story in the Financial Times indicated we are getting closer to that stage: Central banks on both sides of the Atlantic […]

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Extreme Measures V and VI; Drop Mark-to-Market; Beg Oil Producers to Rescue Banks

A sign of the times: we haven’t sighted an Extreme Measure since October, and here we have two in one day (note that day was Thursday; we started on this last night but there were so many news-driven items that we are getting to this only now). By way of background, an Extreme Measure is […]

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Deflation Watch: US Short Term Rates Fall Below Japan’s

Investors are so nervous that they are willing to take almost nothing in nominal terms, which is tantamount to a meaningful negative real return, to sit in the safety of three-month T-bills, which are now a mere 0.56%. One explanation is the large number of fails in the repo market, which as Alea reports, is […]

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Primary Dealers Get Flattering Marks on Collateral for Fed Loans

A professional investor alerted me to a not-widely-noted element of the Fed’s new discount window clone for primary dealers, the so-called Primary Dealers’ Credit Facility (I am going to lose track of the acronyms given the speed with which the Fed is coming up with new ways to socialize losses). This overview is from the […]

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Quelle Surprise! Wall Street Reluctant to Borrow at New Discount Window

The Wall Street Journal reports that primary dealers have been loath to use their new-found access to the discount window (technically, it’s a “temporary clone of the discount window”), despite the favorable rates on offer. Why? For commercial banks, the assumption is that only the distressed would go to the Fed for dough (the discount […]

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