The plan works in a fairly simple manner: In the UK's case, the BofE is lending short-term government bills to banks, which use the securities as collateral to borrow money from the central bank at a rock-bottom rate — about 0.25 percent — and then make loans.
Banks can borrow up to 5 percent of the value of their existing loan books, and the loans from the BofE are four years in duration.
The program is similar to something the Fed tried, with considerable success, during the financial crisis that exploded in 2008....Read it at CNBC
The Fed's program was called the Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility and allowed primary dealers to borrow Treasury bills from the Fed in exchange for depositing collateral.
Here's What Fed May Do Instead of More QE
Jeff Cox | Senior Writer
This is breaking my brain. Sounds like pure BS to me...
ReplyDeleteIs this just another way of giving free money to banks in the hope that they will make more private loans? This doesn't seem at all equitable or desirable, unless you're a bank shareholder...
ReplyDeleteDD: "Is this just another way of giving free money to banks in the hope that they will make more private loans?"
ReplyDeleteYep.
OK, I don't get it entirely. But banks can already borrow funds at "rock-bottom rates" right? But some of them are out of collateral? So you lend them the collateral so they can borrow from you???? At what rate do you lend the collateral?
ReplyDeleteAnd what is this business about stealth? Is the idea that the Fed thinks it has to hide further QE because it is worried about inflation expectations?
This is part of the shell-game where the Fed gives the financial system free money in the hope that they will increase private lending instead of just taking the money and running — like they did last time the Fed tried this. I don't know whether it would pass the smell test this time around.
ReplyDeleteOne, Two, Three, Four,
ReplyDeleteWe don't need QE 3 and 4
Five, Six, Seven, Eight,
Public spending is really great.
Fiscal!
Fiscal!
Fiscal!
Fiscal!
Five, Six, Seven, Eight,
ReplyDeleteThe bankers have won, we're all too late.
Nine, Ten, Eleven, Twelve,
ReplyDeleteBuy guns and gold, and save yourselves.
FDO15 must be happy. Bankers win again. More free money for banks, more debt for the 99%, if they are willing to take it.
ReplyDeleteBut this last bit is what is problematic with all this dumb central-bank-financial complex dumb solutions (like NGDP targeting).
These all presume the borrower will keep borrowing forever and 'at all costs'. to channel more income to corporations and wealthy individuals. Who in his right mind thinks this can work forever?
…"more debt for the 99%, if they are willing to take it."…
ReplyDeleteif they are willing AND ABLE to take it. I have doubts about the able part.
Treasury pulls a QE4 = $100 trillion platinum coin. Senioriage leaves the House with no leverage, and bond holders out in the cold.
ReplyDeleteWorth a try