Archive for the ‘QE’ Category
QE2: Debasement Of The Dollar An Abject Failure
You got a 20% debasement (roughly) in the currency, a 20% increase in the stock market (net zero) but look at what went for a rocket ride…. just all the things you need to buy….
QE2 and Bernanke: FAIL
So What 'Ya Gonna Do Now Ben?
There’s no joy here folks. Let’s look first at the bullish view: This is just a normal little dip – buy it.
The daily chart appears to support this. Prices stopped this morning on the trendline, and that would appear to be a pretty-attractive buy-point. There’s a problem with this thesis, however, as is illustrated here:
Here’s the problem – we’ve bought the move from January to now with dollar weakness. And worse, the effect is wearing off – that is, dollar weakness is now becoming negative for the market.
I have often written about the “nightmare” scenario for Bernanke – a market that stops responding strongly to further monetary games. That is, he monetizes debt and instead of producing a ramp the result is a flat market – or even one that starts to break down. This is akin to the common reaction to all addictive behavior – it feels great when you start, but the longer it goes on the worse the damage gets until you’re either forced to dry out or you die.
Unfortunately the real economy is also running into trouble. The monetary games have enabled $1,700 billion in deficit spending over the last year alone, and more than $4 trillion over the last three years. All of that “pumping” has done only thing, however: It has bolstered the big banks’ balance sheets.
How does this help you? Well, it doesn’t, unless you both want to and can afford to borrow more money. But we got into this mess of an economy because people had borrowed too much money!
So now we sit in an interesting place. The dollar can move lower by another couple of percent without breaking the all-time lows. But somewhere there is a place where decline turns into rout. That place is where oil goes up a double-digit number of dollars a day, where gasoline starts pricing upward in quarters instead of pennies, and where the alleged “economy” takes a .50 cal round to the head.
Bernanke must prevent that, since Congress won’t. They won’t stop spending on their own – they’re going to have to be forced to stop. That forcing won’t come from a polite suggestion – it will come only from actual force that the market imposes upon us, much as it did with President Clinton.
Unfortunately the policy response options available to the Chairsatan are decidedly limited. If monetization or even balance sheet rollover produces weakness, he has little he can do other than to defend the dollar. That he can easily do by reducing the divisor (number of dollars) but that act will expose the bogus lending on the bank balance sheets and increase the cost of borrowed capital. It will also spike the stock market – lower.
Hmmmm… might it be that the limits of this game of distortion are finally being reached? Perhaps. Certainly commodities – especially Silver – are saying that the usual response to monetary debasement is no longer going to produce the “expected” response.
It would appear that extreme caution is advised.
Bernanke: I'm Not Moving Gas Prices
If gas prices are all supply and demand, then perhaps Ben can explain why gasoline moved higher by four cents – while he was talking.
Oh, and the dollar?
Forget it – it’s headed for the toilet, which means you’re going to see much higher fuel prices in the weeks and months to come. $5 gasoline by Memorial Day at this rate – count on it.
But heh, stocks will be up…. for a little while, just like they were in 2008….
Anyone remember what came next?
Obama Directs Holder To Indict Obama And Bernanke
(Reuters) – President Barack Obama said on Thursday the U.S. attorney general was assembling a team to root out any fraud and manipulation in the oil markets that might be contributing to higher U.S. gasoline prices.
This case will require 15 seconds to solve. My evidence is below:
The chart is oil, the white line the dollar.
The dollar has collapsed as Bernanke and Obama have together conspired to demand QE2 to support Obama’s insane borrowing and spending in the economy.
There is a near-perfect inverse correlation between these two charts.
Please surrender at the nearest FBI office for your arrest Mr. Bernanke and Mr. Obama.
Case CLOSED.
Healthcare Cuts Loom For 130,000 Vets
Military.com posted an article discussing the various proposals for ‘balancing’ the ever-ballooning budget.
There has been some recent buzz about the House of Representatives proposing more cuts to veterans’ benefits. This time, the focus has fallen on VA Healthcare and excluding some veterans over others. Here is what you need to know about the debate.
The House Budget Committee recently announced plans to cut $6 billion from VA Healthcare for 1.3 million veterans who are in Priority Group 7 and 8. Roughly 10 percent of these, some 130,000 veterans, will be forced out of the VA system with no available alternatives. Veterans from Group 7 & 8 have either a 0 percent service-connection or no service-connected rating. While this does not mean the veteran is fit as a fiddle, it does imply they do not need the amount of care needed for other vets. These veterans pay co-pay and have incomes over $32,000 and net-worths under $80,000, depending on geography. In other words, they aren’t dirt poor but certainly not wealthy, either.
The Congressional Budget Office believes the U.S. can save $62 billion over the next 10 years by removing services for these veterans altogether. According to the agency, 90 percent of the veterans in question have access to some form other healthcare other than VA funded. However, the CBO does not comment on whether the alternative healthcare is affordable.
I’m going to say right up front that this is reprehensible. Not only is it disgusting, it’s pointless to pretend that ANY of these proposed cuts to VA benefits will be anything but a microscopic drop of water in an ocean. Let’s talk about some reality here.
So, let’s see….our overall spending on defense is only about 1/6th of our total budget outlay, or as indicated here, $744 billion. Of that, only a tiny fraction goes towards healthcare to our current and retired military. Keeping in mind that these brave men and women were willing to sacrifice their very LIVES to do their jobs, let’s compare that to banker welfare expenditures over the past 4 years.
First we have TARP, the Troubled Asset Relief Program, the program that has essentially been welfare for Wall Street bankers given by Congress to cover the massive Ponzi scheme they created by selling worthless securities to unsuspecting suckers like your pension and retirement fund managers. This program allowed the US government to purchase assets and equity from financial institutions to ‘strengthen’ the financial sector.
Then we have TALF the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, the program designed to allow the Federal Reserve to use taxpayer money to buy ‘distressed’ (I prefer ‘worthless’) loans.
Then we have the EESA, the Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008. Initiated under Bush, through acts of extortion by then Treasury Secretary Hank Paulson. This spawned TARP cited above, as well as expanded the powers of the US government to basically use taxpayer money wherever and whenever Wall Street deemed it needed it. This was where we got the ‘we’ll see tanks in the streets if we don’t get this money’ threat from Hank Paulson.
1. The Government As Investor: Total expenditure of taxpayer money – $9.0 TRILLION. This includes direct investments in financial institutions, purchases of ‘high-grade’ corporate debt and purchases of mortgage-backed securities issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae (the latter of which is the only legitimately government-guaranteed entity).
2. The Government as Insurer: Total expenditure of taxpayer money – $1.7 TRILLION. Includes insuring debt issued by financial institutions and guaranteeing poorly performing assets owned by banks and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.
3. The Government as Lender: Total expenditure of taxpayer money – $1.4 TRILLION. A significant expansion of the government’s traditional overnight lending to banks, including extending terms to as many as 90 days and allowing borrowing by other financial institutions, which includes foreign banks.
This only includes figures up through February 2009. (Is your hair on fire yet?)
Now, let’s add in the most recent and nefarious taxpayer theft of all, ‘quantitative easing.’ What’s that? Here’s a primer:
While it is often explained as ‘printing money out of thin air’ – that’s not quite accurate. It is more specifically, printing money guaranteed by your future production. It borrows against the taxpayer’s future potential to actually produce something of value. If it sounds a little bit like exploitation or slavery, that’s because that is exactly what it is, which is precisely why the Federal Reserve is content to allow you to think it is printing money out of thin air. As distasteful as that is, it’s preferrable to the truth.
Each time the Federal Reserve prints money for which there is no current production to support, it is ‘pulling forward demand’ or, devaluing the US dollar. This is, in effect, a stealth tax on you, the taxpayer, as it then costs you more of those devalued dollars to purchase the things you need. This is commonly referred to as price inflation. So, you get hit on both sides. Your future production has been used as collateral for these new dollars created and at the same time, it causes you to need to produce more to afford the things you need to live – like food and energy (gas, oil). Conveniently those two catagories of expenditures are not included in the government’s calculation of inflation, (the Consumer Price Index or CPI).
So, what is your total liability for the two rounds of Quantitative Easing performed by the Federal Reserve?
So, let’s see, $14.8 TRILLION has been spent on WELFARE FOR WALL STREET BANKERS!
Now, tell me how there is ANY justification for cutting health care benefits to our Veterans.
While you’re at it, tell me what items can be cut from the budget that even comes close to the liability our government has created by bailing out insolvent banking institutions.
Wake up America. I don’t care where you stand on the current wars, are you willing to throw our troops under the bus for Wall Street welfare?!!

Who and what else are you willing to throw under the bus to allow our government to continue to support and hide massive corruption?
STOP THE LOOTING & START PROSECUTING!
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The Fed's Most Dangerous Game: Checkmate
The Fed can only choose the least-worst option now: either destroy the real economy by sinking the dollar below support and unleashing the Inflation Monster, or abandon the “risk trade” stock market rally.
The Fed’s game plan–sink the U.S. dollar to goose corporate profits, reinflate asset prices and create “modest inflation”–is now the most dangerous game on Earth. As overleveraged assets from real estate to stocks imploded in 2008 and early 2009, the Federal Reserve rushed to flood the global economy with zero-interest dollars. This did a number of things the Fed reckoned were necessary:
1. It gave U.S. banks and other insolvent financial institutions an unlimited pool of money to borrow at zero interest and leave on deposit at the Fed, where it earned risk-free interest.
2. It enabled a vast global “carry trade” in dollars: speculators could borrow unlimited dollars at no cost, and then deploy the cash around the world to chase higher yields in stocks, commodities, etc.
3. It allowed banks to lend profitably in the U.S., as their cost of money was reduced to essentially zero, and to pour “hot money” into U.S. stocks, creating a virtuous cycle of ever-rising equity prices.
4. With the bulk of U.S. corporations’ growth and earnings coming from overseas sales, then a plummeting dollar boosted their profits effortlessly, further goosing U.S. stocks.
5. With savings earning nothing, U.S. investors were driven into the “risk trades” of the stock market and commodities, a flow of funds which reinflated asset bubbles. This reinflation was critical to foster the appearance of widespread “recovery” via the “wealth effect” of rising asset prices.
6. A rising stock market not only offered an illusion of “growth” but it bailed out pension funds and set the stage for Wall Street to reap billions of dollars from the resurgence of mergers and acquisitions, IPOs and derivatives.
The basic idea was to extend the game plan which had worked in the last banking crisis in the early 1980s: don’t force the banks to declare their losses, but “extend and pretend” while offering them risk-free ways to bank billions in profits. The goal was to enable the banks to recapitalize “painlessly” on the backs of consumers and taxpayers.
The other goal of the plan was to create some modest inflation by brute-force depreciation of the nation’s currency. This inflation would be “good” because it would enable debtors to pay off their debts with cheaper dollars, and it would also serve to reinvigorate the “animal spirits” of borrowing and spending the Fed views as the bedrock of the “permanent growth” economy.
If you’re confident that your cash will be worth less next year, you’re highly incentivized to spend it now rather than see its purchasing power decline.
But in choosing to depreciate the dollar, the Fed engaged in a high-stakes game with potentially devastating consequences. By pushing the dollar down to near-historic lows, the Fed now risks a destabilizing criticality: if the dollar breaks key support levels, then traders and holders everywhere will have great uncertainties about how low it might drop. That will encourage them to sell their dollars immediately rather than hold on to find out how low it might fall.
As we can see in this chart, the dollar’s decline has not occurred in a vaccum: when the dollar declines, oil and gasoline shoot up. The dollar and oil (and other essential commodities) are on a see-saw, for oil exporters simply raise prices to compensate for the loss of purchasing power as the dollar declines. (Chart courtesy of dshort.com.)
The Fed is now trapped: if it crushes the dollar any lower, then oil will jump toward its 2008 highs around $140/barrel–a level that triggers recession in the “real” U.S. economy. A recession will disembowel the “recovery” and all the rest of the Fed’s carefully nurtured props of “prosperity.”
The unintended consequences of the Fed’s inflationary plan to depreciate the dollar is evident everywhere in skyrocketing food and energy costs. Destroying the dollar has sparked destabilizing global inflation which threatens to spin out of control.
But if they let the dollar rise, then their precious stock market rally implodes. And what’s left of the mirage of “recovery” if the “wealth effect” evaporates? Zip, zero, nada.
Here is a long-term chart of the dollar, courtesy of Harun I. I have added a few notes.
Note the long-term downtrend. No wonder 97% of the pundits and punters are bearish. The “line in the sand” is not far below current levels: if the Fed pushes the dollar below this level, technically there is no visible support, and oil will be on its way to $200/barrel, far past the point it pushes the economy into recession.
Many technicians have noted the wedge/flag pattern in the dollar’s recent action. Price usually breaks out of a flag in a major move either up or down.
Also of interest is the extended period of indecision traced out between 1988-1994. In a macro perspective, this mirrored the trends and counter-trends in the U.S. and global economy.
The dollar has again traced out a similar period of indecision since 2004–roughly seven years. That suggests the possibility that a key inflection point is close at hand–the same conclusion drawn from the flag-pennant-wedge formation.
The Fed now has to choose between two bad options: either keep pushing down the dollar and let oil’s inevitable rise trigger a recession, or let the dollar recover and watch stocks crater as the “risk trades” reverse.
If the dollar Bears have to cover their short bets, the ensuing rally in the dollar might well be explosive and self-reinforcing. I addressed this possibility in A Contrarian Take on the Dollar’s Demise (March 25, 2011).
If the Fed lets the dollar depreciate in an uncontrolled fashion, then we may well end up with the hyper-inflation (loss of faith) that many expect. My question remains: what course of action will benefit those issuing the whispered orders to their lackeys and toadies on the Fed and in Congress? Will a disorderly and disruptive collapse of the dollar serve the Financial Power Elites’ best interests? I don’t see how it would. Rather, I see it wreaking great damage on their holdings.
Thus it wouldn’t surprise me in the least were the Fed to shock the markets with a “surprise” rate increase within the next few weeks or months. Destroying the real economy to maintain the “risk trades” is a foolhardy way to close down a lose-lose position.
Harun sheds additional light on the broader contexts in his commentary:
Have you ever played chess against someone who refuses to resign even though he or she is down so many pieces chances of winning are zero. All they do is keep moving out of check until there is no more room and they are finally checkmated?
What happens if rates rise? At the time of a loan the principle is created, the interest is not, therefore, everyone who needs to borrow tremendous amounts of money to service existing debt (most of western Europe and the US) will not be able to, therefore there will be cascading defaults of unprecedented amounts. Governments would collapse seemingly overnight. If the game is to continue, there must be enough credit expansion create enough “money” to make interest payments and create so called “growth”. Which brings us to…
Inflating the currency: As with the chess player above, it merely holds off the inevitable. Why is it “different” this time? Why has the system become so intolerant to the smallest adverse moves? Answer: Leverage. At 1:1 leverage 100 percent has to be lost to achieve ruin. At 1:2 50 percent must be lost. Jump to 1:40 leverage and only a 2 percent loss brings about ruin.
So what is our leverage? First, we must stop this version of off balance sheet accounting. This version of private household accounting keeps off the liability side of its balance sheet the federal deficit. It is also further skewed by dispersing the federal deficit amongst every person in the US. When is the last time a person bought a house and turned to their infant in the stroller happily using its toes as a pacifier and said, “your portion of this mortgage is $25,000.00?”
If total debt, private and public were carried on household balance sheets and divided only among the productive, i.e. employed, the reality of it would change the conversation dramatically. What would be realized is that the US and most of Western Europe is hopelessly over-leveraged and it is only a matter of time before the structural instability created by this leverage manifests in some unpleasant way.
And no, the answer does not lie in a one world currency. Without getting rid of current levels of debt we would run into Dr. Bartlett’s analogy of microbes doubling every minute in a bottle. How much time would it take to fill three more bottles. Well, in the first minute the first new bottle would be full, and in the next minute the two remaining bottles would be full (remember, they are doubling). So if debt levels remain the same debt must double in order to service existing debt and providing growth.
This is why California and other states keep running into problems they thought they fixed. While they make minimalist cuts to spending those cuts are outstripped by the exponential growth of the interest on existing debt. This is also why the current deal in congress is an insult to every intelligent adult in America. Interest on the debt will consume that $33 billion spending cut in no time at all.
BTW, this is the same reason why discovering a brand new super-giant oil field will not matter if demand growth continues at a constant rate. Any and all growth is exponential and therefore will continuously double at some point.
The DXY yearly chart (not shown) shows that bulls have not been able to force a test of the previous three year highs. The quarterly chart shows bears have been able to push price down breaking quarterly lows to important support. What happens next depends. If historical support is broken then the probability increases that price will continue down and things get really interesting. If support holds or if price dips below support enough to get those stops and then move back up through support turned resistance the probability increases there will be a sharp rally as bears cover. But this tells only a portion of the story.
Look at what has happened while the DXY has been range bound. In the case of energy (and just about all other commodities) the DXY has underperformed dramatically. More specifically if you stayed in cash, the cost of gasoline has gone up four fold since the bottom in 2009.
Do this exercise across the commodity spectrum and the results will be roughly the same. So the question is, how long can can the current course be maintained?
Thank you, Harun. As I wrote Harun, it’s Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke’s move, but he faces a cruel dilemma: if he moves his king out of check, he will lose his queen.
There are only bad choices left, Mr. Bernanke. That’s the consequence of playing the world’s most dangerous game with the dollar, grain and oil









