The Federal Reserve Bank,
with a capitalization of $62 billion, has recently lost $192 billion, as interest
rates have risen, according to ETF Guide and Scott Minerd, the Global Chief
Investment Officer at Guggenheim Partners. This, despite attempts by the
central bank of the United States to keep interest rates much, much lower
"Our estimate shows
that the spike in bond yields since the first quarter of this year,” writes Minerd,
“has caused a mark-to-market loss of $192 billion on the Fed’s holding assets,
equivalent to approximately all of the unrealized gains that the Fed had
accumulated since it began to implement quantitative easing in late 2008.”
As bonds interest rates rise,
the value of all of the bonds that the Federal Reserve has been purchasing and
holding as a result of their quantitative easing program, has gone down, just
like every other bond value.
Added to this is the
bond crisis going on amongst state and municipal governments, the most obvious
of which is the Detroit bankruptcy, and the fiscal outlook for government is
not good.
So, I’m not saying that
the next crash will happen in October.
But it could.
There is a more
significant risk of several market-rattling confluences in October that could
lead to a Chernobyl-sized market meltdown rather than just the Three Mile
Island-sized market meltdown we had 2008.
Both from a monetary and
fiscal policy point of view, United States cannot weather another financial
storm of the magnitude of 2008’s financial storm or maybe even smaller.
Fiscally and monetarily,
the United States is in a much weaker position today that it has been at any
time since World War II, as a result of fiscal profligacy and monetary easing.
Thus, even a smaller liquidity crisis than the one we faced in 2008 could
precipitate a deflationary spiral in assets that, once started, would be
difficult to stop.
Several developments
over the last several years, which have accelerated recently, have severely
weakened our position financially.
Interest rates have
continued to rise, despite the Feds easy money policies and zero-interest-rate
policy. While the Fed ideally would like to keep interest rates from rising,
the rate on the ten-year Treasury bond has risen from a low of 1.51% to a
52-week high of 2.74% printed recently.
Generally when interest
rates go up, it’s the markets way of trying to tell us something, like,
perhaps, risk has increased. While many observers say that interest rates have a
way to go before becoming a drag on the economy, I look it more like a fever
that is at 101 degrees Fahrenheit. It may not get worse, but something is
definitely wrong here.
In part, this is because
the weakened capital of the central bank makes it less likely that the Federal
Reserve System would be able to react to a liquidity crisis.
“If interest rates
continue to head higher,” writes Ron DeLegge, editor of ETFGuide.com, “the
value of the Fed’s liquid assets that it could sell would decline and further
undermine its capital cushion. And if the velocity of [interest] rate increases
intensifies, the Fed, with only $62 billion in capital, could see its entire
capital base completely wiped out.”
That means that the U.S.
would have to rely on a fiscal solution to the country’s economic plight. That
means Congress and the White House would have to get together and pass a law,
or perhaps a 101 of them.
And in a crisis the only
alternative then would be for the Treasury to literally start printing
greenbacks. This would cause the value of the dollar to plunge, which would
cause interest rates to rise, which would lead to lower asset values in stock,
bonds and commodity markets.
It would also widen the
deficit significantly.
And there is on the
horizon, right now, just a speck of a storm that could intensify by October. By
October the United States will once again bump up against its statutory debt
ceiling, precipitating another and perhaps final, debt ceiling negotiation of
Obama’s term.
“I hope Republicans
realize that debt ceilings are like nuclear weapons -- you don’t want to have
to use them,” Steve Forbes told Yahoo Finance recently.
That may be true, but
Obama’s no Khrushchev, willing to compromise at the last minute. Obama thinks--
perhaps correctly-- that he can do just about anything and not be held
responsible for the consequences. His recklessness seems to be growing, not
mellowing as his presidency ages.
Even more, ask yourself:
Who would benefit most from a crisis that required massive federal
intervention?
I’m not saying that the
crisis will happen.
But, with rising
interest rates and a weakened Fed, events are stacking up to make it more and
more likely that a market crash could rebound to the benefit of someone.
And people generally do
what they think will benefit them.
Source: Town Hall, John Ransom, 8/5/13
Comments:
It looks like the Fed
and Treasury have orchestrated another crash.
Before the Fed was established in 1913 ( and bread was 4 cents a loaf ),
the free market reacted to natural and orchestrated crises and the dollar
appreciated. When the Fed was
established, inflation became systemic and directly related to Federal government
overspending.
Selective defunding,
like defunding Obamacare should be expanded to include defunding Agenda 21
implementation. Overall business confidence would increase. Let the Fed save
itself; it needs nothing from Congress.
Norb Leahy, Dunwoody GA
Tea Party Leader
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