Anyone else STRONGLY disagree with what the Fed is doing?

Discussion in 'Economics' started by SoyUnGanador, Oct 18, 2022.

  1. TheDawn

    TheDawn

    Anyone else STRONGLY disagree with what the Fed is doing?

    -Yes Cathie Wood!! She thinks all her fund's troubles were all caused by the Fed raising interest rates.
     
    #31     Oct 19, 2022
  2. Nobert

    Nobert

    If they wanted the people to benefit & not the market, they would have raised rates by 2020.
    But those longs had to recover, so.
     
    #32     Oct 19, 2022
  3. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Hiking rates <> buying bonds.
     
    #33     Oct 19, 2022
  4. Then you think Fed funds futures are a short (you think yield needs to go higher), and would sell US2Yr bonds. The impact of that to long-duration assets would keep you short or underweight.
     
    #34     Oct 19, 2022

  5. Yes, not equal. They can stop buying bonds and still be hiking rates into Bolivia, which is exactly what they are doing. After me responding to you like 37 times my original point still stands. But happy to keep responding to things you point out that I already know and that don't dispute my original point LOL.
     
    #35     Oct 19, 2022
  6. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    Fine just so you finally understand, unlike what you previously said, The FED is no longer buying bonds.
     
    #36     Oct 19, 2022
  7. Where did I say that they were continuing to buy bonds LOL?
     
    #37     Oct 19, 2022
  8. SunTrader

    SunTrader

    "But the Fed BUYING those bonds by printing money is what is behind all this inflation. As you said, they just need to quit purchasing, and let them expire."
     
    #38     Oct 19, 2022

  9. LOL, I see the confusion. I should have said "needed" not "need". My point was all they needed to do was stop the bond buying, not (also) hiking rates to Bolivia. Sorry for confusion.
     
    #39     Oct 19, 2022
  10. Inflation comes in two forms - "cost push" and "demand pull".

    The first type is when scarcity causes costs to go up, due to shortages (bad crops, less oil coming out of the ground, loss of productivity from brain drain, boomers retiring). This was the main cause of the 70s inflation and it started with the oil embargo and energy price shocks.

    The second type is when there is a lot more money bidding on the same items. Fastest way to get here is to print money to pay bribes, because they tend to get spent quickly.

    We've had both.

    Fed is targeting the cause of the second type by trying to decrease the money supply but the Chinese, Saudis and Russians have been subsidizing the cause of the first type for decades, and now that is coming to an end. Nothing the fed can do about that.
     
    #40     Oct 19, 2022
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