rate game is just a joke. now everyone knows, borrow, borrow, borrow,..... the faster who spent, the faster who makes, who holds his money is the dumbest idiot, since money can be printed, simple and vanila, while those work hard day in day out are just idiots too, what they earned is just token away by the money printing machine......... asshole Benake
You have no idea what you are talking about when it comes to the FED and the U.S. Monetary System and the operations that they have been currently conducting. A coupon-pass is a PERMANENT injection of money into the system by placing money into the accounts of Fed dealers. The recent "auction" activity by the FED at rates that are just slightly below what is offered at the Discount Window are temporary repurchase agreements targeted at the commercial banking sector; meaning that these short-term funds make their way back to the FED! You need to learn the difference. But you also appear to be from another country ( hence your grammar ), so I'll let it go at that. One more thing . . . If you have a problem with the weakness of the US Dollar, take your whining and criticism to George Bush. Bernanke's simply cleaning up the mess.
Bank has no money left; more market crash is coming; unless Bernanke hand out more cash for its banking bodies. Once foreign investors stop pumping cash back into US; you know what will happen.
What in the world is a "banking body"? I'm no fan of Stocktradr3, but he was more informed than 80% of the permabears on here.
All of the Bears and Gold Bugs on this thread keep yammering in absurd fashion about how Bernanke's been PUMPING more and more money into the system . . . If that is in fact the case, then please explain why M1 + Demand Deposits ( see following web-link ) has been FLAT-LINE for the past 2.5 years? http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/fredgraph?chart_type=line&s[1][id]=CURRDD&s[1][range]=5yrs http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/series/M1?cid=25 Any takers? :eek:
Check out the M2 http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/fredgraph?s[1][id]=M2 http://research.stlouisfed.org/fred2/fredgraph?chart_type=line&s[1][id]=M2&s[1][range]=10yrs Interest Part is in the middle of 2001 recession period.
MZM, Money of Zero Maturity, was meant to measure, accurately, true available liquidity. And the right way to measure this for forecasting purposes, is to take the percent change from a year ago. Here it is: MZM, percent change from one year ago Current policy is stimulative, but nothing like either Greenspan after 2000, or Volcker after the impressive disaster of the first couple of years of Reagan.