Will The Fed Bring Us More QE? Be Careful What You Wish For!

Be careful what you wish forMike Maloney’s video, “If You Don’t Think QE4 & QE5 Are Coming, You’re Smoking Something”, raised a red flag. The Fed did not raise rates and didn’t rule out more Quantitative Easing (QE) in the future. Mike fears QE may include bailing out companies that can’t pay their debts.

QE was different

Unlike historical fed interest rate adjustments, the Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP – followed by doses of QE) bailed out banks directly by taking billions in bad loans off their hands.

Stretching even further, companies like GE received billions in bailout money. New York Times Dealbook reported, “FDIC to Back $139 Billion in GE Capital Debt.”

“GE Capital is not a bank, but granting it access to a new program from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation may reassure investors and help the lender compete with banks that already have government-protected debt, a G.E. spokesman, Russell Wilkerson, told Bloomberg News.

…. G.E.’s finance businesses are able to seek FDIC debt coverage because its GE Capital subsidiary also owns a federal savings bank and an industrial loan company, both of which already qualify.”

What about GE’s AAA bond rating at the time? Why should taxpayers absorb GE’s losses from bad loans?

Governing against the will of the majority

Most Americans opposed the bank bailouts. The first TARP bill was rejected. It was tweaked and the Fed was given a blank check to save the world.

“Democracy is a suggestion box for slaves.”

– Stefan Molyneux

I wrote my congressman urging him to vote no. He said 90% of the people that contacted him opposed the bailout, but he voted for it anyway. He followed with an email justifying his position. So much for representative government!

The LA Times reports, “A decade after the financial crisis, many Americans are struggling to recover”:

“It was a crisis that, in retrospect, had its origin in policy and regulatory failure – along with a healthy dose of old-fashioned greed.

…. The bailouts defied a deeply held American principle: Those who get into trouble in the free market must suffer the consequences.” (emphasis mine)

Historic low interest rates forced investors to take undue risks, frantically looking for yield. Many private and government retirement plans are woefully underfunded today. The floor of 5-6% safe fixed-income investments disappeared.

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Who benefitted?

The bailout was followed by foreclosures, recession, and job losses. This LA Times graph shows us the rich got richer while the rest of America was stagnant or fell behind:

Income Gap Grows Chart

The Guardian interviewed an economics professor at the University of California-Berkley:

“…. While the 1% power ahead and continue to reclaim income lost during the recession, a full recovery for the bottom 99% remains elusive. “Six years after the end of the Great Recession, those families have recovered only about 60% of their income losses due to that severe economic downturn.”

These inequities are causing both economic and political concern.

“Most of the issues that we are dealing with today are induced by bad political choices.”

– FedEx CEO Fred Smith

Bill Bonner’s recent article, “The Billionaire Backlash Is Coming” cites a recent Oxfam report:

“…the wealth of more than 2,200 billionaires across the globe increased by $900bn in 2018 – or $2.5bn a day. The 12% increase in the wealth of the very richest contrasted with a fall of 11% in the wealth of the poorest half of the world’s population.

As a result, the report concluded, the number of billionaires owning as much wealth as half the world’s population fell from 43 in 2017 to 26 last year. In 2016 the number was 61.”

Bonner adds (emphasis mine):

“…. We do not begrudge them their good fortune. But it wasn’t “good fortune” alone. Instead, the fix was in. And whether the man on the street knows how it worked or not, he’s beginning to resent it.”

Politicos will pounce on this as an opportunity to raise taxes. I agree with Mr. Bonner’s remarks:

“What happens to the money the feds tax away from the elite? Where does it go? Back to its rightful owners? Does it boost working-class wages? Does it buy a round of drinks at their neighborhood taverns or help repair their pickup trucks? It doesn’t?

…. Taxing undeserved stock market gains wouldn’t upend the fake money system. …. All it would do is put more money in the hands of the people who caused it in the first place, who protect it and benefit from it – the political elite.”

Raising taxes to pay down debt never happens!

Raising taxes won’t do a damn thing but provide the politicos with more political donations as they confiscate wealth to buy votes.

The fear of political backlash is world-wide. The Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee (GATA) reports, “IMF fears political rage will block rescue by FED in next crisis”:

“The IMF has warned that the system of global cooperation that saved world finance in the 2008 crisis may break down if there is another major shock or a deep recession.

David Lipton, the IMF’s second-highest official, said “it is unclear whether the US Federal Reserve would again be able to extend $1 trillion of dollar “swap lines” to fellow central banks….

It is a polite way of saying that the Trump administration might ask why it should “bail out” the Europeans … and why they should rescue the rest of the world.

…. Only the Fed can act as the ultimate lender-of-last-resort to the globalized dollar economy.

(There is) deep residual anger from the 2008 crisis. “People are hurt….”

Isn’t Mr. Lipton really asking is if the US will be fool enough to bail them out again?

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How does this affect us today?

The average investor today may have mixed emotions about another round of QE.

Many investors, desperate for yield, now own a large percentage of stocks and bonds. Mike Maloney warns, many companies cannot afford to even pay the interest on their debt; which could cause a major crash in both the stock and bond market.

Don’t take this lightly. Economica warns what might happen:

“In my 30 years of following central banks, I don’t think I’ve ever seen such a U-Turn in policy in just six weeks!”

– Tony Daltorio, Premium Digest

“The Fed is communicating that they have shed less than $400 billion of perhaps a total $2 trillion “normalization”. Given the major market impacts during the relatively minor balance sheet reductions in 2007 and again at present, there is every reason to believe a 50%+ fall in the asset price is imminent absent a policy “U-turn” by the Fed.

Of course, that “U-turn” would (will) be an admission that the process of hyper-monetization that began in 2009 was, and still is, a one-way ticket.” (Emphasis mine)

It’s quite a dilemma. If the Fed raises rates too quickly, we will see the much-anticipated crash in stock and bond markets.

If the Fed reverses course and institutes another round of QE, will it include bailing out businesses directly? Shouldn’t the free market, not the government, pick the winners and losers? Are we just prolonging the inevitable?

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Are there other options?

Economist John Mauldin believes the Fed is making a mistake (with my emphasis):

“…. I think a Federal Reserve policy mistake is our top risk. …. The mistake is already happening. The Fed is raising rates and reversing its quantitative easing at the same time. They should be doing one or the other, not both. I think the global balance sheet reduction is especially harmful.

I think/hope Jerome Powell will realize this in early 2019. If he doesn’t, or the rest of the FOMC disagrees with him, the year could get very rocky, very quickly.”

This recent policy release indicates the Fed will hold current interest rates while continuing to reduce their treasury holdings and mortgage debt on their balance sheet. Maybe they read John’s newsletter.

Is the U-Turn starting?

Chuck Butler reports on the recent Fed announcement, “Powell Ties The Dollar To the RR Tracks!”:

“The Fed’s FOMC meeting ended with no rate hike and a short speech by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell. And it was this short speech that got the dollar tied to the railroad tracks, ala Snidely Whiplash, while the currencies and metals ran over it…the rate hikes might be on pause for a while and he sees the first rate cut in 2020….”

Seeking Alpha quotes Peter Schiff, “Fed Capitulation Is Just The First Piece Of The Puzzle”, painting a bleak picture:

“…. At this point, it doesn’t really matter. The bubble is pricked. The air is coming out no matter what the Fed does now. And he’s been saying all along that the Fed won’t be able to stop with ending its tightening program. That’s just a stop on the way back to zero percent interest rates and another round of QE.”

We have little control over the Fed, but we can let our representatives know how we feel. I need more information before I write my representatives, or make recommendations to our readers.

Last time most Americans got clobbered with QE. Former Fed Chair referred to us as “collateral damage”, do we really want more?

Stay tuned, next week I interview the best Fed guru I know, Chuck Butler, and see what he recommends.

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For more information, check out my website or follow me on FaceBook.

Until next time…

Dennis

www.MillerOnTheMoney.com

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5 Comments
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
Zulu Foxtrot Golf
February 28, 2019 10:59 am

Lets start the First TBP Galactic Bank and make a bunch of shit loans and make ourselves pay for it with our great great great grand kids’ taxes. Fuck it dudes! We did it to bring about the downfall of the country! Vive le QEinfinity.

Oldtimer505
Oldtimer505
February 28, 2019 11:31 am

When will folks understand that we must let them fail! We must stop rewarding poor performance and or theft by unprincipled people. In any other venue this behavior by the banks, industrial complex and governments at all levels would be in the very least equal to gross negligence. If they do another QE take your body armor out of the closet and put it over your butt. You will need it! This is no joke, where we are headed.

steve
steve
February 28, 2019 1:13 pm

Double-speak by the FED. They say they’re tightening but actually easing. Why do we pay for the FED to rescue insolvent institutions?
Quantitative Tightening Isn’t What Everybody Thinks!

Ned
Ned
February 28, 2019 1:20 pm

…. The bailouts defied a deeply held American principle: Those who get into trouble in the free market must suffer the consequences.

Shouldn’t the free market, not the government, pick the winners and losers?

If the “Too Big To Fail” institutions make mistakes, miscalculations, or outright fraud and they are not made to eat their losses on their actions, how is it that the working class have to not only be responsible for their personal financial decisions without a bailout from taxpayers but they have to be responsible for paying the oligarchs for their financial failings also?

If “free markets” and capitalism means that you succeed or fail based on your own merits and performance then how come these same TBTF, self-proclaimed champions of free markets can’t handle free markets when they fail?

Doug Casey was here on TBP the other day stating that “There are no truly capitalist countries on earth…….capitalism means no government involvement, because the government should not be involved in the economy at all”.

Did the “Too Big To Fail’ institutions from the last great recession complain at all when the U.S. government got involved in the economy and the congress passed the T.A.R.P bailout? So why aren’t capitalists institutions held to the capitalist standards that they espouse and tell everyone else to do? Because they are not really capitalists. They are socialists.

Socialism is getting something for nothing. T.A.R.P., bailouts, is a taxpayer funded handout. Like a welfare check. This current paradigm calls for socialism for the rich, capitalism for everyone else. And yet, hypocritically you hear article after article of these same vermin denouncing socialism by the masses.

Sorry assholes. You can’t have it both ways. Make up your minds, you’re either capitalists or socialist. You failed, now take responsibility for your failures like you tell everyone else to.

P2
P2
  Ned
February 28, 2019 2:07 pm

Good rant!