An economics, investment, trading and policy blog with a focus on Modern Monetary Theory (MMT). We seek the truth, avoid the mainstream and are virulently anti-neoliberalism.
Wednesday, March 25, 2009
Fed may face headwinds if banks start repaying TARP funds
Goldman Sachs, JP Morgan and Bank of America are among a growing list of banks that are looking to repay TARP funds. Those three institutions alone received $60 billion in TARP money. Repaying that money would constitute a reserve drain of that magnitude.
Yet the Fed is currently expanding reserves as a result of its new policy of targeting long-term rates lower. Moreover, ongoing sales of securities by the Treasury might mean that the Fed will have to increase the size of its planned, $300 billion purchase of Treasuries.
Rather than state an amount, the Fed simply should have said, "We want long-term rates at X%."
Once again, it's a function of price, not quantity. You'd think they'd know.
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2 comments:
yo mike
what is the general effect of taking that money "out of the system" with respect to the credit-on-accounts format of monetary policy ?
what does it do to the interest rates, the dollar, the real market, liquidity overall, etc ?
Perhaps the Fed is stating the amount for market psychological reasons?
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