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swag

(26,487 posts)
Fri Mar 13, 2020, 03:37 AM Mar 2020

No, the Fed Did Not Just Give Stock Traders $1.5 Trillion

https://slate.com/business/2020/03/federal-reserve-bond-market-wall-street-trillion.html

. . .

By JORDAN WEISSMANN
MARCH 12, 202010:46 PM

Excerpt:

. . .

The key thing to realize is that if the repo market seizes up for some reason, much of the financial system ceases to function, since banks and others can’t get their daily funding. The 2008 financial crisis has sometimes been described as a “run on the repo market.”

If you want to picture it all, imagine a pawn shop, but instead of some guy handing over his Fender for a wad of cash, it’s Jamie Dimon walking in with his arms full of Treasuries and a contract that says he’ll buy them all back a day later. Sometimes, the pawnshop owner is Jerome Powell. And if the pawnshop shuts down, then everything goes to hell because Mr. Dimon can’t pay his bills. That’s the repo market, in a nutshell.

As the coronavirus panic has worn on, however, it has become increasingly difficult to buy and sell U.S. Treasuries like normal—in Wall Street speak, the market has become less liquid. The exact reasons why seem to be a bit complicated, but as the New York Times’ Neil Irwin has written, all signs point to a shortage of cash in the market. This has led to dramatic and bizarre swings in bond values that have spooked just about everyone—because if the Treasury market stops working, so will the rest of the financial system. And lately, there have indeed been increasing signs of distress in the repo market, which also had liquidity problems through much of 2019.

Like a plumber pouring Drano into a clog, the Fed is now trying to fix these liquidity issues by raining down some cash. It plans to do this by increasing its regular repo operations. It offered an extra $500 billion of them on Thursday, and said it would conduct an extra $1 trillion on Friday.

Again, this is all short-term lending against the safest collateral in the world, U.S. government securities. Nobody is just being given money for keeps. This is why the rhetoric we’re seeing—about how if the Fed can lend to the banks then surely Congress can pay for free college or forgive student loan debt—doesn’t much sense. Stirring up populist outrage at the Fed for doing its part to keep the financial system running is just misguided. We should want our central bank to keep the financial system afloat. If you want to yell about health care or college, keep focused on Congress.

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No, the Fed Did Not Just Give Stock Traders $1.5 Trillion (Original Post) swag Mar 2020 OP
govt interference whether done by an indirect entity or not is still playing with market forces beachbumbob Mar 2020 #1
I wonder if Chainfire Mar 2020 #2
Your 95 pickup isn't as high quality collateral as US Treasuries. Lucky Luciano Mar 2020 #3
 

beachbumbob

(9,263 posts)
1. govt interference whether done by an indirect entity or not is still playing with market forces
Fri Mar 13, 2020, 06:56 AM
Mar 2020

this stuff is done in many other ways via PPT executive order issued by reagan 40 years ago and has no oversight.

cll what you want but it aint free market capitalism under any definition

Chainfire

(17,532 posts)
2. I wonder if
Fri Mar 13, 2020, 08:16 AM
Mar 2020

I can put my '95 pickup truck for collateral, I could get them to loan me a billion for a week? I may not be able to pay it all back, but I would be able to wipe out my personal debt.

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