Time To Warm Up The Helicopters? 8 comments
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The SEC is combing the books of Merrill Lynch (MER) and Goldman Sachs (GS), looking to see how accurately the CDOs are priced on their books.
Speaking of intervention, the ECB got the choppers out Thursday, airdropping 94.8 billion in Euros onto the continent. The Federal Reserve announced it's "providing liquidity to facilitate the orderly functioning of financial markets."
Overnight, the Fed Funds Rate had spiked towards 6%, and now after the 2 liquidity injections, is back to the 5.25% overnight lending rate that is the Fed's target. Rumor has it that the recent ECB & U.S. Fed injections are now bigger than GDP of Argentina!
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A survey from the WSJ found almost half -- 44% -- of respondents want a rate cut (So much for free market economics!).
Are people truly that naive? Do they not understand what rate cuts will do to the U.S. dollar?
Then there is the concept of Moral Hazard. I am in the camp of William Poole, who has stated that speculators in these markets need to absorb their losses themselves. A rate cut that causes inflation is essentially a "cruelest tax increase."
Sources:
Fed Issues Statement as It Moves To Reassure Jittery Markets
DAVID WESSEL, JOELLEN PERRY, MONICA HOUSTON-WAESCH AND GREG IP
WSJ, August 10, 2007 11:10 a.m.
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB118673195378094167.html
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Hopefully Bernanke draws the line on not just rates, but his integrity and credibility too...
I don't want to bail out the speculators with a rate cut. I also don't want a further plunge in the US$ since it will spur inflation. BUT with short and long term interest rates trading well below the Fed Funds rate already, are we really fooling the world by keeping the Fed Funds rate at 5.25% - or are world currency traders reacting to real interest rates in this country? I say the latter; and that a small rate cut doesn't matter.