Fed’s “Backdoor” Rate Hike Just Became Official

From Birch Gold Group

Markets are reacting sharply to an unexpected decision revealed in the Fed’s newly disclosed meeting minutes. The decision could drastically change the economy’s direction over the coming months, and cause rates to rise far faster than anticipated.

Last month, we discussed how the Fed could implement a “stealth” or “backdoor” rate hike by trimming its balance sheet. At the time, nobody thought the Fed would take such action in the near term, but the meeting minutes reveal it’s coming soon.

Here’s what this news means for Americans and their money.

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Taking Off the Training Wheels

Before the crisis of 2008, the Fed’s balance sheet stood at roughly $1 trillion. Since then it has steadily risen to approximately $4.5 trillion, which is where it stands today.

But why did it grow so quickly?

Well, the Fed can use its power to buy bonds, treasuries, and other securities, which creates more liquidity in the market and encourages activity. Those purchases also passively lower interest rates. Essentially, the Fed prints money and uses it to stimulate the economy.

The technical term for this is “quantitative easing.” The Fed uses it to give the economy extra support, albeit artificial support, and officials were strongly motivated to do a lot of it after our last major crisis.

But the Fed’s excessive quantitative easing and suppression of interest rates over the past several years is completely unprecedented. In fact, it’s the most extreme case of the central bank “coddling” our economy in U.S. history.

With what the Fed’s done so far, we’re in completely uncharted waters, which means nobody knows what will happen when officials start slowly removing all the artificial support they’ve built into the economy over the past 8 years.

The Fed has already taken the first step — raising the federal funds rate (so far twice this year, with more hikes expected) — toward undoing its interventionist policies of the past several years.

Now Fed officials are about to take off the economy’s “training wheels” altogether by pulling back its buying programs as well — which experts believe could send interest rates soaring faster than the economy can handle.

The combined effect of both actions is a total wildcard, and the Fed is moving more aggressively than anyone anticipated. Nobody knows what could happen in the coming months, and all the uncertainty is making markets nervous.

Jeff Cox reports on CNBC (emphasis ours):

Both the stock and bond markets have come to depend on the Fed’s programs — both the low interest rates and the balance sheet expansion — in the post-crisis years. Stocks, as measured by the S&P 500, have surged more than 250 percent since the recession lows, while interest rates have remained low across the spectrum.

Any fiddling with a $4.5 trillion batch of bonds, then, could have major consequences if it’s not done the right way.

Fed critics have worried for years that the central bank’s reluctance to unwind crisis-era policies long after the crisis passed poses substantial dangers. The day is coming, then, when that will be put to the test.

“I have a bridge to sell you if you think a rate hike cycle combined with a shrinking balance sheet will go smoothly,” said Peter Boockvar, chief market analyst at The Lindsey Group. “If the exit process ends up turning messy — defined as a recession and bear market in stocks — was all this easing worth it? Be bullish if you think both news stories will turn out just fine. Be very worried if they don’t.”

How to Use Fed Risk to Your Advantage

Many view the Fed’s current strategy as a major risk, and on the back of the release of the Fed’s minutes this past Wednesday, the markets showed some signs of faltering. For stocks and most other traditional investments, that likely means one of two things in the coming months.

Either…

1.) Markets remain turbulent and volatile from growing uncertainty.

Or…

2.) Markets will fall drastically as a consequence of the new policy.

In either scenario, it would make sense for Americans to keep any money they aren’t willing to lose out of the market. But if you don’t want your hard-earned dollars to waste away to inflation in a savings account, where can you seek shelter?

For both protection and profit, expert analyst Todd Gordon says gold may be the answer.

Annie Pei reports on CNBC’s TradingNation:

Gold has traded in a range since the end of March, but Todd Gordon sees a rise in market volatility coming that could send the yellow metal higher.

The TradingAnalysis.com trader commented Thursday on CNBC’s “Trading Nation” that recent comments by the Federal Reserve could spell more uncertainty in the market. Potential rate hikes aside, Fed minutes released on Wednesday from the March meeting stated its intent to start shrinking its $4.5 trillion balance sheet later this year.

“We’re seeing some volatility in the markets,” said Gordon. “I actually want to look at the gold market, which could be moving up here” off the uncertainty that could result from the Fed.

As the Fed embarks on a journey to revert the greatest act of central banking intervention in history, it could give Americans a chance to benefit from gold in a way that’s just as historic.

Birch Gold Group helps Americans protect their savings with physical gold and silver. Clients can purchase precious metals for physical possession, or move their IRA or 401(k) into a Precious Metals IRA. To learn more, request a free Info Kit on Gold – there is zero cost and zero obligation to you. All you need to do is enter your details at www.birchgold.com

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11 Comments
Boat Guy
Boat Guy
April 9, 2017 9:42 am

Gold &Silver always sounds like a comfortable hedge but if things are as bad as expected you may wish to consider long term food storage . As for precious metals perhaps a supply of lead and brass and several delivery platforms ! True that gold and silver have held some value through out history but you cannot eat it !

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Boat Guy
April 9, 2017 11:38 am

You can’t eat “a supply of lead and brass and several delivery platforms” either, but you can easily get yourself killed with them.

PM’s can always be traded in for whatever new currency develops in the future, or traded for food and other goods at the time.

FWIW, I’m not a big promoter of PM’s, particularly as an investment, but think everyone should own at least some of them just in case.

Butthurt SJW Slayer
Butthurt SJW Slayer
April 9, 2017 9:43 am

Rates are market driven. Despite the Fed’s best efforts to gut savers and pension funds, rates in the bond market are rising. The subversive bastards are just trying to keep up so it looks like it was their idea.

javelin
javelin
April 9, 2017 10:55 am

My wife and I are well diversified between our 2 retirements and investments. She could lose a large chunk of her 401k but then several of my investments would most likely soar–and vice versa. I also always try and keep at least 20 oz’s of AU in 1/4 oz coinage–and another couple thousand oz’s of AG in maple leafs, ASE’s, philharmonics, britannias, libertads etc. I won’t get rich with a jump in PM’s but it is insurance against a declining dollar at some point.

As Boat Guy said though, have lots and lots of staples. Your best hedge against inflation is to buy long-term products at today’s prices. If you have storage space load up on non-perishables, hygiene products, canning supplies, heirloom seeds, cases of water and a large rotation of canned foods.
They won’t get cheaper in the future, so if you can get 10 at today’s price of $1 and not have to pay next year’s price of $2 per–you just doubled your buying power ( or halved your inflation stress)

Anonymous
Anonymous
  javelin
April 9, 2017 11:46 am

If you’re planning for catastrophic circumstances it’s probably best to stick to US or Canadian bullion coinage only, other stuff might not be well recognized for it’s full value if traded to non dealers during an emergency.

IMO, just the way I reason it.

Michael Keane
Michael Keane
April 9, 2017 11:02 am

Toss the goddamn criminal, intentionally – mislabeled, “Federal Reserve”, an English-based, European Central Banking SCAM- out of our finances.

The English have been raping our finances for a century.

We The People have scorned our birthright long enough. Get these pigs in front of a firing squad, already.

Foreclose the financial terrorists.

http://www.webofdebt.com

Anonymous
Anonymous
  Michael Keane
April 9, 2017 11:50 am

You may not like whatever replaces them as much as you expect. IMO, getting rid of them will result in something larger, more consolidated, worldwide and all powerful replacing them.

Michael Keane
Michael Keane
  Anonymous
April 9, 2017 12:24 pm

IMHO, the US needs to evict these Filth as antithetical to why this country was formed, in the first place.

These Filth, as imposters, have counterfeit 1200 Trillions in “Securities Frauds” and “Insurance Frauds”. The Constitution provides remedy, as follows:

Article One, Section Eight, explains, in Unambiguous Language: “The Congress shall have the power … To provide for the punishment of counterfeiting the SECURITIES and current coin of the United States…”.

It doesn’t need more explanation, while quite simple. These Filth have manipulated the US, any number of times and they are, at this moment vulnerable, according to their own rules, as a “Sue or be Sued” entity, under the “Organic Act of 1871”.

This is the proper starting point to every other issue presently under discussion in this country. It is THE reason our Fathers rebelled and THE reason those individuals bequeathed our Birthright, in the first place.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/this-is-how-much-money-exists-in-the-entire-world-in-one-chart-2015-12-18

In order for a “Securitization” of “pools of loans” to be legitimate, proper, well-documented, title transfers MUST take place. This is well-established LAW. When the “Chain of Title” is broken, the underlying “loan” becomes an actionable cause for negligence, possibly tantamount to FRAUD. In other words, Counterfeiting.

Michael Lewis’s “The Big Short”, only tells part of the story.

Visit Rockwell P. Ludden’s, brief, while excellent: http://www.capecodtimes.com/article/20150221/OPINION/150229876

Securitization Fail:

Levitin on the Dire Implications of “Securitization Fail”

https://livinglies.wordpress.com/2011/01/31/adam-levitin-the-big-fail-securitization-never-occurred/

https://cloudedtitlesblog.files.wordpress.com/2016/12/charlies-wallshein_securitization-fail-part-one-001.pdf

Anon
Anon
April 9, 2017 12:00 pm

“But if you don’t want your hard-earned dollars to waste away to inflation in a savings account, where can you seek shelter?”

All of these Birch gold articles seem to forget that Money, like any other commodity is controlled by supply and demand. If the Fed is printing dollar bills like crazy, therefore causing the money supply to go up in relation to “stuff” then your dollar loses value. Ok, there is an argument for owning something more rare as a currency – gold, bitcoin, real estate etc. , AND experiencing the “friction” or trading cost when you convert it back in to dollars later (since that is the official currency of the US currently). However, now they are “warning’ that with the fed lowering its balance sheet and raising interest rates (destroying money and constricting its production) that gold ALSO is a necessity.
You can’t have it both ways, either money is printed and created causing inflation, or it is destroyed and their are foreclosures, stock drops etc. (destruction of money) and deflation, therefore making cash MORE valuable. A strong argument can be made for doing just the opposite, as dollars will start becoming MORE valuable not less IN RELATION to other assets. And really, all dollars or any other currency are basically is a medium of exchange.
Pretty mathematically simple really. This is why people don’t take gold bugs seriously, because like Realtors, it always seems to be a good time to “buy a home” or Gold, or cars or whatever else they are selling….ugh…

Fiatman60
Fiatman60
April 9, 2017 12:04 pm

As ANON said above….. it’s basically an insurance policy against massive inflation.

BTW…. you can have both deflation and inflation across several platforms at the same time, when TSHF, say inflation for commodities and deflation for real estate and the stock market. That’s why you should own PM;s They are good for the inflation commodities aspect, when financials eventually (will) go south, big time.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
  Fiatman60
April 9, 2017 3:32 pm

And if you have enough extra assets laying around, buying deflated real estate in that environment could be very beneficial to ones net worth. Many did quite well after the 1929 crash.

I’m more worried about the necessary dollar devaluation required to fully implement the new SDR system. A thirty to sixty percent haircut to level the NWO playing field is on deck according some.

There are no reliable charts for plying these troubled waters.