Tuesday, June 25, 2013

"Simply put, the Fed is propping up the banking system" - Wealth Management

QE tapering depends on "rosy projections," ShadowStats' John Williams tells The Gold Report


All the hype over the Fed's so-called tapering is absolute nonsense. Fed chairman Ben Bernanke said the Fed's pulling back of quantitative easing was contingent on the economy recovering in line with the Fed's relatively rosy projections. He also indicated, however, that if the economy worsened, he would expand quantitative easing. When you consider that the official Fed projections are grossly optimistic, the conclusion is that we will have more, not less, bond buying from the government.
The jawboning was a multifaceted attempt to placate the Fed's critics, while soothing the stock and bond market jitters at the same time. The comments, however, hammered equities and bonds, as well as gold
. The negative impact on gold likely would have been viewed as a positive result by the Fed.

The banking system nearly collapsed in 2008. The federal government and Federal Reserve took extraordinary measures to keep the financial system from imploding. Those actions prevented an immediate systemic collapse, but they did very little to resolve the underlying problems. I contend that we're still in recession, with the economy deepening into a renewed downturn. At the same time, the banking system solvency problems continue. Little has changed in the last five years.

The purported nature of the quantitative easing is a fraud on the public. While Bernanke describes the extraordinary accommodation in terms of trying to stimulate the economy, lowering the unemployment rate and attaining sustainable economic growth in the context of mild inflation, those factors are secondary concerns for the Fed. The U.S. central bank's primary function always has been to assure banking system solvency and liquidity. All the easing efforts have been aimed at the banking system. The flood of liquidity spiked the monetary base, but it has not flowed through to the money supply and ordinary people.

Simply put, the Fed is propping up the banking system. Bernanke is using the cover of a weak economy to do that because the concept is not politically popular, but it's what the Fed has to do because the underlying system is just as broken today as it was in 2008. 

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