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Game changing?


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2008 Feb 12, 3:59pm   16,469 views  152 comments

by SP   ➕follow (0)   💰tip   ignore  

Okay, give all the racist crap a rest for a while. This seems to be big enough to pay attention to...

What do you guys and gals think of this:
link to article

SOMA
Many observers have expressed disbelief that the Fed is actually aggressively reducing the monetary base, in particular that part of the base which directly affects the trading accounts of 20 of the world�s largest banks, the Fed's Primary Dealers ... The vast majority of market pundits, economists, and quasi-journalists for the mainstream infomercial outlets like Marketwatch, the Wall Street Journal, Bloomberg, and especially CNBC, are totally clueless. To a man and woman, they all think that the Fed has aggressively been adding liquidity to the system.

The proof, they say, is in the pudding and the Fed has just served it up in multicolored, multi-layered glory. The Fed itself is confirming, in graphical form, [that it] has aggressively collapsed the size of the System Open Market Account, beginning slowly last July, then moving aggressively beginning in December. The effect has been to withdraw billions of dollars of what is, in essence, margin buying power from the trading accounts of the Primary Dealers.

A lot of folks here are betting on inflation and commodities, so what do you all think of an actual bubble-deflation at work?
SP

[Racist, Sexist, Xenophobic, and Anti-American comments will be deleted, as will troll-posts.]

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41   Brent   2008 Feb 13, 3:23am  

revengeofaone-

I noticed the same trend. UAL cranked up their ticket price the day after Elmer FED went into action, to which I responed by not purchasing the ticket I had planned and instead waited a week for a frequent flier freebie. I also cancelled my annual trip "home" for the holidays and didn't attend an auction in Vegas for the first time in 4 years.

Cable rates also went up here, and unfortunately for Comcast my Tivo died about 2 weeks later. Had an absolutely precious conversation with some teleprompted customer care representative wanting to know if I was moving. Can't handle commercials anymore, and since Tivo recently decided against the lifetime plan, hello Netflix. Couldn't be happier catching up on House MD with a 4x discount. NFLX anyone?

Just doing my part to keep that inflation theory under check.

42   DinOR   2008 Feb 13, 3:24am  

justme,

No, no your explanation is better than anything I could provide! I think OO has it right w/ "re-hash mechanism" for further definition as well.

I was on a conf. call yesterday and it should have been called "Whatever happened to M3?" A lot of it was over "my" head. The PM DID say though that (in spite of OO's cruel, cruel words) that it "might" be time to actually re-visit Japan? He pointed out that 60% of the Nikei is trading below BOOK value!

Then again Bill O'Neil would say things trade where they're at for a reason?

43   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 3:26am  

Couldn’t be happier catching up on House MD with a 4x discount. NFLX anyone?

House is one of my favorite TV show characters. What is better than a misanthropist MD? :)

Amazon.com Unbox is pretty cool too. I get my Stargate Atlantis there.

44   OO   2008 Feb 13, 3:28am  

I actually increased my organic buying at Whole Foods, because the grocery price has been going up so much that buying organic makes more sense financially, at least for now.

I love tomatoes on vine, they used to be $2.99 a pound and sometimes you can get it for $1.49 on sale at Safeway. These days are over. Now they are stubbornly $3.99 or higher, which makes Whole Foods' organic tomatoes on vine at $4.99 look very attractive. Same story for some other vegetables, milk and eggs. The gap is closing between the conventionally grown and organic food.

45   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 3:29am  

in the 1930s, USD is a gold-backed currency. Their hands were tied.

No, they weren't: FDR confiscated all the private gold, then changed the redemption rate from $20 to $35 overnight.

That's a devaluation of the currency that our current gov't can only dream of.

So no, that didn't work then, and it's not likely to work now. It's been tried.

But that is the second most common answer I get when I ask the question, after the "raised rates into the crisis" answer.

Japan lacked ammo because it doesn’t have a world reserve currency.

But Britain had the reserve currency before us, and that didn't work out very well for them, did it? It was lost in a matter of months.

Sorry, I don't find either explanation for why "it's different this time" to be very compelling.

46   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 3:33am  

“tons of optimism still left in the market” Wow! Really?

Buffet offers the monolines a buyout of the only profitable part of their business, and the market roars upward. If that isn't optimism, then it's insanity. Especially given the other announcements of the day.

I stand by my claim of (unwarrented) optimism. Just because it isn't insane optimism, doesn't mean it isn't there at all. How else to explain GOOG's share price? or any tech's share price?

47   OO   2008 Feb 13, 3:34am  

netdance,

you are talking about FDR. Don't forget we need to go from Hoover to FDR, and if FDR was put in place of Hoover, and we confiscated gold way earlier, would the Great Depression still happen?

I am not saying that we won't see the depression again, but history doesn't simply repeat itself, it rhymes with a slightly different tone.

Britain came out of the Great Depression way faster than other countries, you can look up this on wiki, precisely because they debased their currency more aggressively. It was the first western country to recover.

48   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 3:36am  

If that isn’t optimism, then it’s insanity.

Unfounded optimism IS insanity.

49   HARM   2008 Feb 13, 3:40am  

@netdance,

What OO said.

I don't recall ever saying, "the government's efforts to inflate our way out of our massive solvency crisis will be 100% successful, and the banks and speculators will all live happily ever after as the price of everything continues its rise skyward unabated."

What I have said for about the past 3 years is, inflation is the path of least resistance to our short-term obsessed government. It is also the *least unpalatable* option for a general populace with the attention span of a gnat and little-to-no understanding of what's happening to them.

It's not different this time, but that won't stop the government from pulling out all the stops and enacted stupid and desperate measures to try to prevent the Great Debt Unwinding.

50   HARM   2008 Feb 13, 3:44am  

Also note that Japan's ZIRP and "zombie loan" policies, while they did not prevent housing from falling precipitously in real terms, also did not completely fail to accomplish their primary objectives. They vastly slowed the rate of decline (16+ years) and prevented a full-blown Depression.

When inflation is the path of least resistance, all roads lead to inflation.

51   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 3:48am  

They vastly slowed the rate of decline (16+ years) and prevented a full-blown Depression.

IF I were a realtor, I would prefer a sharp housing price decline followed by a stable and gradual recovery.

A long and slow decline will kill the real estate industry. This is NOT what we want, of course.

52   HARM   2008 Feb 13, 3:52am  

What "we" (responsible saver-renter-taxpayers) and peon Realt-turds want is irrelevant. It's what the banksters and PTB wants that matters. If they feel a sharp abrupt drop in RE prices will crash the economy and trigger a massive credit/derivatives unwinding (not to mention political instability), then they'll do anything they can to prevent that. This is what appears to be happening now.

53   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 3:59am  

The ONLY important question: how do we profit from it. Buying ultra short ETFs is insufficient. We need more leverage. Ideas?

54   OO   2008 Feb 13, 3:59am  

It will be completely tragic if we have to go through 16+ years of depression like Japan does.

One can only live so long, and for most people here on this blog, we are at the prime of our lifetime. I would rather the government trash the USD once for all, default on all debts, hit the bottom and be done with it.

55   OO   2008 Feb 13, 4:02am  

Peter P,

if we are going through a long-drawn depression, you CANNOT profit from it. At the beginning, you may profit from an ultra-short ETF, or buying certain commodities at the reflationary phase. But when all asset categories collapse, things move very slowly so that shorting itself may no longer be profitable any more.

Unlike Japan, when they entered depression, US was booming so that Japanese savers could profit from investing overseas. When the whole world plunges into depression, there's no escape. And such a long-drawn, massive-scale depression usually has only one resolution - war.

56   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 4:10am  

But when all asset categories collapse, things move very slowly so that shorting itself may no longer be profitable any more.

There are other ways to participate in downside movements. Shorting is just one of them. If options are expensive enough (IVs are usually high in down markets), writing or spreading them may be profitable.

I personally prefer bear markets because it fits my misanthropist philosophy. Moreover, down markets are more interesting to watch. They are full of surprises though.

Not investment advice.

57   DinOR   2008 Feb 13, 4:11am  

netdance,

Let's not mistake a relief rally for an unbridled and out of control optimism? I wouldn't call the response to WB's actions "roaring" exactly either. Pointing to rare instances like GOOG (which has pulled off quite a bit anyway) doesn't make a broad case for harboring unrealistic expectations. Nearly everything bought in the last year is under water.

58   DinOR   2008 Feb 13, 4:15am  

"usually only one resolution - war"

O.K, this is getting a little doom and gloom for even me. Long... drawn... out..., no_escape_ ugh...

59   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 4:18am  

War is bad. But it is a natural state of affairs in human societies. The current relative world peace is also a bubble that is bound to burst.

In the end Nature prevails.

60   revengeofaone   2008 Feb 13, 4:42am  

yes, we were planning on leaving our snowy midwestern suburb for the president's week holiday to go to Florida (see fam/friends/Mickey) or Las Vegas (see fam/friends in LV), but with the need for 4 tickets + lap child or 5 tickets at $500+ not gonna happen.

We could afford it, but we just don't see the value when we were just able to fly ALL of us for less than that Christmastime!

Moreover, with the flights so full, do we really want to see Mickey, the beach, the Strip, or Uncle Buck that badly after packing us all up, ensuring we don't have too much liquid/gel/toothpaste in our carryon and ziplocking it appropriately, driving to the airport, finding out the covered parking deck is full, going to outdoor parking, taking a shuttle bus, hauling the kids through the airport (and through the lines to demetal our kids for the security check), praying that we can get seats together since we and the kids are not Elite fliers and the electable seats are already full online, paying a few nickels and dimes more for luggage (we made sure it was not >50lbs already at home, right?), making the flight (on time?), getting the luggage (hopefully making the flight with us), shuttle to the rental car, waiting in line for rental car (because the supposed bypass straight to the $500-600 car with the outrageous 30-45% tax is not available per the sign at the rental car agency), driving to the resort/hotel/friend's house or whatever, getting settled, getting the kids to decide yes they should sleep at night even if it's not their usual bed, and then enjoying the rest of the trip, only to replay the above in less than a week later!.

Instead, we can sleep in our own beds, enjoy ourselves, get sitters, go skiing locally, support the local economy eating SUSHI and drinking JAMBA JUICE and relax!

61   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 5:02am  

Yeah, go buy 100 houses and save the world!

Not investment advice

62   DinOR   2008 Feb 13, 5:04am  

Gosh HiThere that's great. Let me ask you though, were we in the midst of a Global Financial Meltdown of an unprecedented scale at any of those times?

What REIC Rag did you dredge that up from? Seriously.

63   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 5:18am  

One can only live so long, and for most people here on this blog, we are at the prime of our lifetime. I would rather the government trash the USD once for all, default on all debts, hit the bottom and be done with it.

Tell it to the Wiemar Republic. That worked out so well for them.

64   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 5:23am  

When inflation is the path of least resistance, all roads lead to inflation.

OK, after having poked holes in my analogy, my turn to poke at yours:

Tell me - how are we going to get widespread price inflation without wage inflation? Because wage inflation is certainly not going to happen.

Instead, it's more likely that the price of all imports will go up, briefly, before a complete deflationary collapse, while wages hold roughly steady (for those who still have jobs). In short, the iTulip ka-poom theory looks good to me. Once deflation takes hold here, that spells doom for most of the world's economies, and you can expect that temporary spike in prices to come back down.

65   OO   2008 Feb 13, 5:26am  

Weimar Republic owed gold and francs to the creditor nations. It also lost its most productive regions as a war settlement.

We owe other countries USD, so we just print them the face value and voila, problem solved (in the meantime we may selectively fulfill certain obligations to some nations that we care about). Grant it, nobody wants to lend us money in the future, but we have enough resources within North America. We have a big enough population base, why do we need world trade?

50 years of isolation later, after this generation dies off, who will remember what we do today? Globalization can start all over again.

66   OO   2008 Feb 13, 5:28am  

netdance,

haven't you heard of stagflation? Things that you absolutely need, like food and fuel, will go up. Things that you don't really need, like houses and electronics, will go down.

We went through this in 1970s.

67   HARM   2008 Feb 13, 5:29am  

@netdance,

The Weimar Republic did not have:
a) the world's reserve currency
b) a credible military

And come to think of it, defaulting on foreign debts and rearmament was exactly the way the Nazis solved Germany's Wiemar hyperinflation woes.

68   HARM   2008 Feb 13, 5:31am  

Tell me - how are we going to get widespread price inflation without wage inflation? Because wage inflation is certainly not going to happen.

Those $100k REIC credit cards I already mentioned? (not all that different from those 'Katrina' cards, just on a much bigger scale)
How about adding a zero or two to everyone's bank accounts, Brazil-style?

69   HARM   2008 Feb 13, 5:37am  

I suspect stalwart Deflationists like Mish are missing a salient point: we have a fiat currency that can be expanded at will by government in myriad different ways.

When government (made up of politicians who always think short-term and in their own interests) faces problems like $45 Trillion Medicare/S.S. unfunded future shortfall, $8.6 Trillion National Debt, consumer Peak Debt, etc., what other option is there really?

70   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 5:37am  

Because wage inflation is certainly not going to happen.

Why not? I thought they just recklessly increased the minimum wage.

71   Peter P   2008 Feb 13, 5:38am  

When government (made up of politicians who always think short-term and in their own interests) faces problems like $45 Trillion Medicare/S.S. unfunded future shortfall, $8.6 Trillion National Debt, consumer Peak Debt, etc., what other option is there really?

I proposed abolishing Medicare/S.S.

72   northernvirginiarenter   2008 Feb 13, 5:43am  

My two cents on the Fed report is that it’s really not that important. It doesn't really reflect inflationary or deflationary policy at all, though the deflationists will surely argue that angle. The reduction in credit is merely a reflection of the lockup, and when FOMC woke up to the solvency risks of a declining RE market the Fed simply reeled back the lines. No big whoop.

This is not an indication of unwillingness to direct liquidity in other areas. The stimulus handout might even be viewed as an inflationary indirect Fed injection of liquidity into the system, and as obscene as it is maybe preferable to throwing cash at insolvent banks.

Some speculation, but my guess is they endeavoring to walk a middle ground between a long, dragged out Japan scenario and the rapid shock to the system. So, what do they do next? They are asking themselves how they inject liquidity directly where it is needed. This is piece that is maybe a bit scary.

Figure we've a Fed and "financial" team that is going to be much more proactive is staving off a depression this go around. If we are to assume that their two priorities right now are getting a solid floor under RRE and equity markets, what might they do? Could we see them actually directly buying equities in our markets? How about a massive purchase of RE, removing inventory from the market and providing a nice political win providing shelter for needful?

We are in a serious crisis, I'd not discount the possibility of our team doing unprecedented things. Netdance, you asked what ammo they have left? Well, I think a large inventory removal or stock purchase is possible. Huge government deficit spends will be inflationary. Massive government infrastructure spends. Along with tax cuts as the tax base crashes and deficits balloon. This is where we will likely see the inflationary policy take hold.

73   skibum   2008 Feb 13, 5:45am  

Tell me - how are we going to get widespread price inflation without wage inflation? Because wage inflation is certainly not going to happen.

@netdance,

As a simple textbook explanation, increasing wages is only one cause of price inflation, due to wage spiral effect and also demand-pull inflation:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inflation#Causes

You need to also consider cost-push inflation, which we may very well be experiencing due to limited supply of certain commodities (oil in particular). Also, the Fed's rate cuts are very likely to fuel inflation expectations, which is a self-fulfilling prophecy kind of a problem.

All this doesn't even account for the possibility of stagflation, as OO mentioned.

74   anonymous   2008 Feb 13, 5:49am  

Aha I see the world is still not ready for my "three ists" hehe. Oh well looking at the text up at the very top, yeah, this is a deflationary discussion thread, not one on how to actually solve it!

OK, so, there are places like Zimbabwe with a paper currency, shortages, that are experiencing a lowering standard of living and inflation. Weimar was of course another good example. But I dunno about the US, wages are so low for 3/4 of the population, that I really see deflation ahead. Wages especially aggressively lower when you're jobless and living in a tent city.

75   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 5:53am  

Could we see them actually directly buying equities in our markets? How about a massive purchase of RE, removing inventory from the market and providing a nice political win providing shelter for needful?

Of course they'll do that - that was done for both the Depression and the S&L crisis, so it's basically a given.

Not that it really helped either time.

76   anonymous   2008 Feb 13, 5:53am  

Revengeofone - Flying has become a huge, huge PITA. The airlines are dying, just just don't know it/won't admit it yet. But we're years from a good domestic passenger rail service. So, in the meantime, you fly and hate it, or drive, or for some vacations you can rent an RV and have the driving, hotel, and fun like cookouts at campsites all in one package. It has to be carefully weighed. I've been on trips where we left the gas guzzler at home and rented a little car for the two of us, I can tell you, the V6 Neon is fun!

I brag about taking the train into SF, but if I had to take 3 friends, it would make more sense to drive the ol' Prius (if I still had it) even with the high parking cost. Because 4 people from Sunnyvale to SF on the train is like $50. And bus fares, etc corresponding multiplied.

This is another thing indicating a falling economy - I believe travel is down by a significant amount.

77   northernvirginiarenter   2008 Feb 13, 5:57am  

@Harm

When government (made up of politicians who always think short-term and in their own interests) faces problems like $45 Trillion Medicare/S.S. unfunded future shortfall, $8.6 Trillion National Debt, consumer Peak Debt, etc., what other option is there really?

Yeah man, thats it precisely.

78   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 5:59am  

Because wage inflation is certainly not going to happen.

Why not? I thought they just recklessly increased the minimum wage.

Beyond certain unknown bounds, that's already proven not to work - for example, imagine that they just increase the minimum to $100/hr. For incremental changes, it's effective, of course, but only to a point.

The problem is that as a country we no longer make *stuff*. We instead sell *ideas* - Hollywood, Silicon Valley, Wall Street, and *services* - RE, doggy day care, gardening services.

For stuff, we're mostly either doing Ag, and construction, both of which are in the crapper.

Anyone making something we can export is going to have to compete with world markets, and that means low, low wages, or unemployment.

Mandating good wages is the same as picking unemployment, so higher minimum wages are deflationary on their face.

79   netdance   2008 Feb 13, 6:05am  

Also, the Fed’s rate cuts are very likely to fuel inflation expectations, which is a self-fulfilling prophecy kind of a problem.

While expectations may arise, it's not very likely that any employees will be in a position to kick off a wage inflation spiral in a down market. They'll have to take their lumps and be thankful they still have a job.

The unemployment rate, as measured by the Nixon administration, is already over 8%, and that's not including the illegals - the numbers are pretty cooked nowadays. Between that and global wage arbitrage, noone's going to be seeing real salary increases for a long time.

80   EBGuy   2008 Feb 13, 6:07am  

My head is doing some serious spinning after looking at the Fed report from which the chart came:
http://www.ny.frb.org/markets/omo/omo2007.pdf
To me it seems pretty clear (as others have pointed out) that most of the cash that came in the door through Treasury redemptions (which decreased SOMA) went out the door through TAF (and to a lesser extent, with Repos). To that end: By allowing the Federal Reserve to inject term funds through a broader range of counterparties and against a broader range of collateral than open market operations, the TAF is designed to help promote the efficient provision of liquidity.

I couldn't help but think of the Soup Nazi when looking at the section under C. Permanent Holdings and Operations -- "No liquidity... for YOU!"
This year there were no purchases by the SOMA account from foreign central banks or other international institutions that hold accounts with the Federal Reserve. Okay, not really a big deal, but it seems worth noting as they purchased around $10 billion domestically from primary dealers.

And Chart 13 under Collateral Distribution in Repurchase Agreements is also worth looking at for the marked increase of MBSes used as collateral for Repos (not that there's anything wrong with that!)
Okay, maybe I need to read tickerforum to see what I should have taken away from the report.

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