- This topic has 210 replies, 19 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 5 months ago by scaredyclassic.
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May 20, 2009 at 4:15 PM #403930May 20, 2009 at 4:20 PM #403237sdnerdParticipant
[quote=sdrealtor]sdnerd
give it a couple days or even weeks for the changes to take hold. The inventory should drop by more than 20% rather quickly if its implemented properly.[/quote]Yeah I believe you.
I was trying to make a joke about how the foreclosures haven’t really hit the areas I’m looking yet. The only “inventory” there is delusional sellers thinking their houses are worth more now vs. 2-3 years ago.
Unless of course they are all being sold at firesale prices behind the scenes. I’ll check again later to see if I notice fewer listings.
May 20, 2009 at 4:20 PM #403490sdnerdParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]sdnerd
give it a couple days or even weeks for the changes to take hold. The inventory should drop by more than 20% rather quickly if its implemented properly.[/quote]Yeah I believe you.
I was trying to make a joke about how the foreclosures haven’t really hit the areas I’m looking yet. The only “inventory” there is delusional sellers thinking their houses are worth more now vs. 2-3 years ago.
Unless of course they are all being sold at firesale prices behind the scenes. I’ll check again later to see if I notice fewer listings.
May 20, 2009 at 4:20 PM #403727sdnerdParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]sdnerd
give it a couple days or even weeks for the changes to take hold. The inventory should drop by more than 20% rather quickly if its implemented properly.[/quote]Yeah I believe you.
I was trying to make a joke about how the foreclosures haven’t really hit the areas I’m looking yet. The only “inventory” there is delusional sellers thinking their houses are worth more now vs. 2-3 years ago.
Unless of course they are all being sold at firesale prices behind the scenes. I’ll check again later to see if I notice fewer listings.
May 20, 2009 at 4:20 PM #403787sdnerdParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]sdnerd
give it a couple days or even weeks for the changes to take hold. The inventory should drop by more than 20% rather quickly if its implemented properly.[/quote]Yeah I believe you.
I was trying to make a joke about how the foreclosures haven’t really hit the areas I’m looking yet. The only “inventory” there is delusional sellers thinking their houses are worth more now vs. 2-3 years ago.
Unless of course they are all being sold at firesale prices behind the scenes. I’ll check again later to see if I notice fewer listings.
May 20, 2009 at 4:20 PM #403935sdnerdParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]sdnerd
give it a couple days or even weeks for the changes to take hold. The inventory should drop by more than 20% rather quickly if its implemented properly.[/quote]Yeah I believe you.
I was trying to make a joke about how the foreclosures haven’t really hit the areas I’m looking yet. The only “inventory” there is delusional sellers thinking their houses are worth more now vs. 2-3 years ago.
Unless of course they are all being sold at firesale prices behind the scenes. I’ll check again later to see if I notice fewer listings.
May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM #403242BobParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Nice Job Bob calling out the BS! You just proved my point[/quote]
The only thing you are proving is that your ego is getting the better of you. I have no problem with your posts which detail your analysis of current local real estate trends. In fact, I read them to see if they differ from mine. But please stop acting as if you are the expert on future economic trends…as its clear that you are no more qualified to make such predictions as any other poster on this forum.
May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM #403495BobParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Nice Job Bob calling out the BS! You just proved my point[/quote]
The only thing you are proving is that your ego is getting the better of you. I have no problem with your posts which detail your analysis of current local real estate trends. In fact, I read them to see if they differ from mine. But please stop acting as if you are the expert on future economic trends…as its clear that you are no more qualified to make such predictions as any other poster on this forum.
May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM #403732BobParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Nice Job Bob calling out the BS! You just proved my point[/quote]
The only thing you are proving is that your ego is getting the better of you. I have no problem with your posts which detail your analysis of current local real estate trends. In fact, I read them to see if they differ from mine. But please stop acting as if you are the expert on future economic trends…as its clear that you are no more qualified to make such predictions as any other poster on this forum.
May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM #403792BobParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Nice Job Bob calling out the BS! You just proved my point[/quote]
The only thing you are proving is that your ego is getting the better of you. I have no problem with your posts which detail your analysis of current local real estate trends. In fact, I read them to see if they differ from mine. But please stop acting as if you are the expert on future economic trends…as its clear that you are no more qualified to make such predictions as any other poster on this forum.
May 20, 2009 at 4:24 PM #403940BobParticipant[quote=sdrealtor]Nice Job Bob calling out the BS! You just proved my point[/quote]
The only thing you are proving is that your ego is getting the better of you. I have no problem with your posts which detail your analysis of current local real estate trends. In fact, I read them to see if they differ from mine. But please stop acting as if you are the expert on future economic trends…as its clear that you are no more qualified to make such predictions as any other poster on this forum.
May 20, 2009 at 4:30 PM #403207BobParticipant[quote=Fearful]
If you had considerable knowledge of the bond market and fed policy you would not have made that statement. To the extent that the Fed has affected mortgage rates, it has done so by buying mortgage backed securities, not treasurys.[/quote]Really ?
Here’s an education for you on the terminology used. Sorry, but I prefer to use the language similar to that from Bloomberg rather than from an anonymous poster on the internet. But thats me.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aebp6vKYqto4&refer=home
By Scott Lanman
March 19 (Bloomberg) — By committing to buy Treasuries and double his purchases of mortgage debt, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled his determination to avoid a repeat of the Great Depression and his willingness to pump as much cash into the economy as needed to end the current crisis.
U.S. central bankers decided yesterday to buy as much as $300 billion of long-term Treasuries and more than double mortgage-debt purchases to $1.45 trillion, aiming to lower home- loan and other interest rates. The Fed kept its main rate at almost zero and may keep it there for an “extended” time.
The moves sparked the biggest drop in 10-year Treasury yields since 1962, rallies in the stock market and gold and a plunge in the dollar against the euro. Economist Richard Hoey said Bernanke has created the “Rambo Fed,” referring to the Sylvester Stallone character skilled with weapons.
“This is a very powerful and aggressive move,” Hoey, chief economist at Bank of New York Mellon Corp., said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “One of the reasons I’ve been arguing we won’t have a depression is we’ve got a Fed chairman who understands the problem and is going to come with the right diagnosis and the right medicine.”
With the purchases of Treasuries and housing debt, Bernanke is effectively using the Fed’s powers to print money and aim it where he and other officials believe it will have the greatest impact in lowering borrowing costs.
Bond Reaction
The 10-year note yield fell as much as 54 basis points yesterday, the most since daily records began in 1962. It was at 2.59 percent at 1:14 p.m. in New York, compared with 3.01 percent at the close two days ago. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The Federal Open Market Committee’s decision was unanimous, indicating the agreement to start buying Treasuries quelled disputes over how the central bank should expand its balance sheet. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker and others favored government-debt purchases instead of intervening in credit markets, as Bernanke has pioneered in the past six months.
Bernanke has studied the Great Depression extensively and published a book of his papers on the subject in 2000. In 1929, the Fed was “essentially leaderless and lacking in expertise,” Bernanke said in a November 2002 speech. The situation led to decisions that were associated with a “massive collapse of money, prices, and output,” he said.
Fed Purchases
Yesterday’s decisions will add $750 billion in purchases this year of mortgage-backed securities issued by government- sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, for a total of $1.25 trillion. The Fed has already announced $217.1 billion in net purchases out of $500 billion planned through June, under a program unveiled in November.
The central bank will also double to as much as $200 billion this year its planned purchases of debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Federal Home Loan Banks. The Fed bought $44.4 billion of the so-called agency debt as of March 11.
Policy makers acted after the economy worsened since they met in January. Reports today added evidence of a deepening recession. The Conference Board’s index of leading indicators, a measure of the economy’s future performance, fell 0.4 percent in February. The Labor Department said the number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits surged to a record 5.47 million.
TALF Program
The $1 trillion Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which is opening this week to jumpstart consumer and business lending, “is likely to be expanded to include other financial assets,” the FOMC statement said, without elaborating.
The Obama administration is considering melding the Treasury’s plan to set up private investment funds to buy frozen assets with the Fed program, known as the TALF, people familiar with the matter said. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may make an announcement as soon as this week, after his first unveiling of the strategy caused a sell-off in financial stocks.
“This is not really a victory for Lacker,” said James O’Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “Lacker seems to be arguing for Treasury purchases instead of targeted programs. They are instead supplementing the targeted programs. They are just using all tools.”
The New York Fed will concentrate Treasury purchases among two- and 10-year securities. The transactions will take place two to three times a week, and the Fed may also buy other maturity Treasuries and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, according to a New York Fed statement.
Balance Sheet
The moves may more than double the Fed’s balance-sheet assets by September to $4.5 trillion from $1.9 trillion, said John Ryding, founder of RDQ Economics LLC in New York.
At the same time, the changes increase the danger, once the economy recovers, that the Fed won’t be able to unload the securities quickly enough to raise interest rates and counter inflation, said Ryding, a former Fed economist.
Bernanke floated the idea of buying Treasuries in a Dec. 1 speech. Then the FOMC said in its last statement on Jan. 28 that the Fed would be “prepared” for the purchases if “evolving circumstances” indicated their effectiveness.
The option gained ground after the Bank of England succeeded in lowering long-term rates by buying U.K. government bonds known as gilts in a program announced this month, said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed governor. The 10-year gilt yield slid to the lowest level in at least 20 years after the purchases began.
Bernanke Remarks
“Our objective is to improve the functioning of private credit markets so that people can borrow for all kinds of purposes,” Bernanke said at a Feb. 24 Senate hearing. “We are prepared, and we want to keep the option open to buy Treasury securities if we think that is the best way to improve the functioning or reduce interest rates in private markets.”
While Treasury yields fell, the strategy isn’t guaranteed to work in reducing other rates.
May 20, 2009 at 4:30 PM #403460BobParticipant[quote=Fearful]
If you had considerable knowledge of the bond market and fed policy you would not have made that statement. To the extent that the Fed has affected mortgage rates, it has done so by buying mortgage backed securities, not treasurys.[/quote]Really ?
Here’s an education for you on the terminology used. Sorry, but I prefer to use the language similar to that from Bloomberg rather than from an anonymous poster on the internet. But thats me.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aebp6vKYqto4&refer=home
By Scott Lanman
March 19 (Bloomberg) — By committing to buy Treasuries and double his purchases of mortgage debt, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled his determination to avoid a repeat of the Great Depression and his willingness to pump as much cash into the economy as needed to end the current crisis.
U.S. central bankers decided yesterday to buy as much as $300 billion of long-term Treasuries and more than double mortgage-debt purchases to $1.45 trillion, aiming to lower home- loan and other interest rates. The Fed kept its main rate at almost zero and may keep it there for an “extended” time.
The moves sparked the biggest drop in 10-year Treasury yields since 1962, rallies in the stock market and gold and a plunge in the dollar against the euro. Economist Richard Hoey said Bernanke has created the “Rambo Fed,” referring to the Sylvester Stallone character skilled with weapons.
“This is a very powerful and aggressive move,” Hoey, chief economist at Bank of New York Mellon Corp., said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “One of the reasons I’ve been arguing we won’t have a depression is we’ve got a Fed chairman who understands the problem and is going to come with the right diagnosis and the right medicine.”
With the purchases of Treasuries and housing debt, Bernanke is effectively using the Fed’s powers to print money and aim it where he and other officials believe it will have the greatest impact in lowering borrowing costs.
Bond Reaction
The 10-year note yield fell as much as 54 basis points yesterday, the most since daily records began in 1962. It was at 2.59 percent at 1:14 p.m. in New York, compared with 3.01 percent at the close two days ago. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The Federal Open Market Committee’s decision was unanimous, indicating the agreement to start buying Treasuries quelled disputes over how the central bank should expand its balance sheet. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker and others favored government-debt purchases instead of intervening in credit markets, as Bernanke has pioneered in the past six months.
Bernanke has studied the Great Depression extensively and published a book of his papers on the subject in 2000. In 1929, the Fed was “essentially leaderless and lacking in expertise,” Bernanke said in a November 2002 speech. The situation led to decisions that were associated with a “massive collapse of money, prices, and output,” he said.
Fed Purchases
Yesterday’s decisions will add $750 billion in purchases this year of mortgage-backed securities issued by government- sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, for a total of $1.25 trillion. The Fed has already announced $217.1 billion in net purchases out of $500 billion planned through June, under a program unveiled in November.
The central bank will also double to as much as $200 billion this year its planned purchases of debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Federal Home Loan Banks. The Fed bought $44.4 billion of the so-called agency debt as of March 11.
Policy makers acted after the economy worsened since they met in January. Reports today added evidence of a deepening recession. The Conference Board’s index of leading indicators, a measure of the economy’s future performance, fell 0.4 percent in February. The Labor Department said the number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits surged to a record 5.47 million.
TALF Program
The $1 trillion Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which is opening this week to jumpstart consumer and business lending, “is likely to be expanded to include other financial assets,” the FOMC statement said, without elaborating.
The Obama administration is considering melding the Treasury’s plan to set up private investment funds to buy frozen assets with the Fed program, known as the TALF, people familiar with the matter said. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may make an announcement as soon as this week, after his first unveiling of the strategy caused a sell-off in financial stocks.
“This is not really a victory for Lacker,” said James O’Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “Lacker seems to be arguing for Treasury purchases instead of targeted programs. They are instead supplementing the targeted programs. They are just using all tools.”
The New York Fed will concentrate Treasury purchases among two- and 10-year securities. The transactions will take place two to three times a week, and the Fed may also buy other maturity Treasuries and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, according to a New York Fed statement.
Balance Sheet
The moves may more than double the Fed’s balance-sheet assets by September to $4.5 trillion from $1.9 trillion, said John Ryding, founder of RDQ Economics LLC in New York.
At the same time, the changes increase the danger, once the economy recovers, that the Fed won’t be able to unload the securities quickly enough to raise interest rates and counter inflation, said Ryding, a former Fed economist.
Bernanke floated the idea of buying Treasuries in a Dec. 1 speech. Then the FOMC said in its last statement on Jan. 28 that the Fed would be “prepared” for the purchases if “evolving circumstances” indicated their effectiveness.
The option gained ground after the Bank of England succeeded in lowering long-term rates by buying U.K. government bonds known as gilts in a program announced this month, said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed governor. The 10-year gilt yield slid to the lowest level in at least 20 years after the purchases began.
Bernanke Remarks
“Our objective is to improve the functioning of private credit markets so that people can borrow for all kinds of purposes,” Bernanke said at a Feb. 24 Senate hearing. “We are prepared, and we want to keep the option open to buy Treasury securities if we think that is the best way to improve the functioning or reduce interest rates in private markets.”
While Treasury yields fell, the strategy isn’t guaranteed to work in reducing other rates.
May 20, 2009 at 4:30 PM #403697BobParticipant[quote=Fearful]
If you had considerable knowledge of the bond market and fed policy you would not have made that statement. To the extent that the Fed has affected mortgage rates, it has done so by buying mortgage backed securities, not treasurys.[/quote]Really ?
Here’s an education for you on the terminology used. Sorry, but I prefer to use the language similar to that from Bloomberg rather than from an anonymous poster on the internet. But thats me.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aebp6vKYqto4&refer=home
By Scott Lanman
March 19 (Bloomberg) — By committing to buy Treasuries and double his purchases of mortgage debt, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled his determination to avoid a repeat of the Great Depression and his willingness to pump as much cash into the economy as needed to end the current crisis.
U.S. central bankers decided yesterday to buy as much as $300 billion of long-term Treasuries and more than double mortgage-debt purchases to $1.45 trillion, aiming to lower home- loan and other interest rates. The Fed kept its main rate at almost zero and may keep it there for an “extended” time.
The moves sparked the biggest drop in 10-year Treasury yields since 1962, rallies in the stock market and gold and a plunge in the dollar against the euro. Economist Richard Hoey said Bernanke has created the “Rambo Fed,” referring to the Sylvester Stallone character skilled with weapons.
“This is a very powerful and aggressive move,” Hoey, chief economist at Bank of New York Mellon Corp., said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “One of the reasons I’ve been arguing we won’t have a depression is we’ve got a Fed chairman who understands the problem and is going to come with the right diagnosis and the right medicine.”
With the purchases of Treasuries and housing debt, Bernanke is effectively using the Fed’s powers to print money and aim it where he and other officials believe it will have the greatest impact in lowering borrowing costs.
Bond Reaction
The 10-year note yield fell as much as 54 basis points yesterday, the most since daily records began in 1962. It was at 2.59 percent at 1:14 p.m. in New York, compared with 3.01 percent at the close two days ago. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The Federal Open Market Committee’s decision was unanimous, indicating the agreement to start buying Treasuries quelled disputes over how the central bank should expand its balance sheet. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker and others favored government-debt purchases instead of intervening in credit markets, as Bernanke has pioneered in the past six months.
Bernanke has studied the Great Depression extensively and published a book of his papers on the subject in 2000. In 1929, the Fed was “essentially leaderless and lacking in expertise,” Bernanke said in a November 2002 speech. The situation led to decisions that were associated with a “massive collapse of money, prices, and output,” he said.
Fed Purchases
Yesterday’s decisions will add $750 billion in purchases this year of mortgage-backed securities issued by government- sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, for a total of $1.25 trillion. The Fed has already announced $217.1 billion in net purchases out of $500 billion planned through June, under a program unveiled in November.
The central bank will also double to as much as $200 billion this year its planned purchases of debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Federal Home Loan Banks. The Fed bought $44.4 billion of the so-called agency debt as of March 11.
Policy makers acted after the economy worsened since they met in January. Reports today added evidence of a deepening recession. The Conference Board’s index of leading indicators, a measure of the economy’s future performance, fell 0.4 percent in February. The Labor Department said the number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits surged to a record 5.47 million.
TALF Program
The $1 trillion Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which is opening this week to jumpstart consumer and business lending, “is likely to be expanded to include other financial assets,” the FOMC statement said, without elaborating.
The Obama administration is considering melding the Treasury’s plan to set up private investment funds to buy frozen assets with the Fed program, known as the TALF, people familiar with the matter said. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may make an announcement as soon as this week, after his first unveiling of the strategy caused a sell-off in financial stocks.
“This is not really a victory for Lacker,” said James O’Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “Lacker seems to be arguing for Treasury purchases instead of targeted programs. They are instead supplementing the targeted programs. They are just using all tools.”
The New York Fed will concentrate Treasury purchases among two- and 10-year securities. The transactions will take place two to three times a week, and the Fed may also buy other maturity Treasuries and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, according to a New York Fed statement.
Balance Sheet
The moves may more than double the Fed’s balance-sheet assets by September to $4.5 trillion from $1.9 trillion, said John Ryding, founder of RDQ Economics LLC in New York.
At the same time, the changes increase the danger, once the economy recovers, that the Fed won’t be able to unload the securities quickly enough to raise interest rates and counter inflation, said Ryding, a former Fed economist.
Bernanke floated the idea of buying Treasuries in a Dec. 1 speech. Then the FOMC said in its last statement on Jan. 28 that the Fed would be “prepared” for the purchases if “evolving circumstances” indicated their effectiveness.
The option gained ground after the Bank of England succeeded in lowering long-term rates by buying U.K. government bonds known as gilts in a program announced this month, said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed governor. The 10-year gilt yield slid to the lowest level in at least 20 years after the purchases began.
Bernanke Remarks
“Our objective is to improve the functioning of private credit markets so that people can borrow for all kinds of purposes,” Bernanke said at a Feb. 24 Senate hearing. “We are prepared, and we want to keep the option open to buy Treasury securities if we think that is the best way to improve the functioning or reduce interest rates in private markets.”
While Treasury yields fell, the strategy isn’t guaranteed to work in reducing other rates.
May 20, 2009 at 4:30 PM #403755BobParticipant[quote=Fearful]
If you had considerable knowledge of the bond market and fed policy you would not have made that statement. To the extent that the Fed has affected mortgage rates, it has done so by buying mortgage backed securities, not treasurys.[/quote]Really ?
Here’s an education for you on the terminology used. Sorry, but I prefer to use the language similar to that from Bloomberg rather than from an anonymous poster on the internet. But thats me.
http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=aebp6vKYqto4&refer=home
By Scott Lanman
March 19 (Bloomberg) — By committing to buy Treasuries and double his purchases of mortgage debt, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke signaled his determination to avoid a repeat of the Great Depression and his willingness to pump as much cash into the economy as needed to end the current crisis.
U.S. central bankers decided yesterday to buy as much as $300 billion of long-term Treasuries and more than double mortgage-debt purchases to $1.45 trillion, aiming to lower home- loan and other interest rates. The Fed kept its main rate at almost zero and may keep it there for an “extended” time.
The moves sparked the biggest drop in 10-year Treasury yields since 1962, rallies in the stock market and gold and a plunge in the dollar against the euro. Economist Richard Hoey said Bernanke has created the “Rambo Fed,” referring to the Sylvester Stallone character skilled with weapons.
“This is a very powerful and aggressive move,” Hoey, chief economist at Bank of New York Mellon Corp., said in an interview with Bloomberg Television. “One of the reasons I’ve been arguing we won’t have a depression is we’ve got a Fed chairman who understands the problem and is going to come with the right diagnosis and the right medicine.”
With the purchases of Treasuries and housing debt, Bernanke is effectively using the Fed’s powers to print money and aim it where he and other officials believe it will have the greatest impact in lowering borrowing costs.
Bond Reaction
The 10-year note yield fell as much as 54 basis points yesterday, the most since daily records began in 1962. It was at 2.59 percent at 1:14 p.m. in New York, compared with 3.01 percent at the close two days ago. A basis point is 0.01 percentage point.
The Federal Open Market Committee’s decision was unanimous, indicating the agreement to start buying Treasuries quelled disputes over how the central bank should expand its balance sheet. Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker and others favored government-debt purchases instead of intervening in credit markets, as Bernanke has pioneered in the past six months.
Bernanke has studied the Great Depression extensively and published a book of his papers on the subject in 2000. In 1929, the Fed was “essentially leaderless and lacking in expertise,” Bernanke said in a November 2002 speech. The situation led to decisions that were associated with a “massive collapse of money, prices, and output,” he said.
Fed Purchases
Yesterday’s decisions will add $750 billion in purchases this year of mortgage-backed securities issued by government- sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae, for a total of $1.25 trillion. The Fed has already announced $217.1 billion in net purchases out of $500 billion planned through June, under a program unveiled in November.
The central bank will also double to as much as $200 billion this year its planned purchases of debt issued by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Federal Home Loan Banks. The Fed bought $44.4 billion of the so-called agency debt as of March 11.
Policy makers acted after the economy worsened since they met in January. Reports today added evidence of a deepening recession. The Conference Board’s index of leading indicators, a measure of the economy’s future performance, fell 0.4 percent in February. The Labor Department said the number of Americans receiving unemployment benefits surged to a record 5.47 million.
TALF Program
The $1 trillion Term Asset-Backed Securities Loan Facility, which is opening this week to jumpstart consumer and business lending, “is likely to be expanded to include other financial assets,” the FOMC statement said, without elaborating.
The Obama administration is considering melding the Treasury’s plan to set up private investment funds to buy frozen assets with the Fed program, known as the TALF, people familiar with the matter said. Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner may make an announcement as soon as this week, after his first unveiling of the strategy caused a sell-off in financial stocks.
“This is not really a victory for Lacker,” said James O’Sullivan, a senior economist at UBS Securities LLC in Stamford, Connecticut. “Lacker seems to be arguing for Treasury purchases instead of targeted programs. They are instead supplementing the targeted programs. They are just using all tools.”
The New York Fed will concentrate Treasury purchases among two- and 10-year securities. The transactions will take place two to three times a week, and the Fed may also buy other maturity Treasuries and Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, according to a New York Fed statement.
Balance Sheet
The moves may more than double the Fed’s balance-sheet assets by September to $4.5 trillion from $1.9 trillion, said John Ryding, founder of RDQ Economics LLC in New York.
At the same time, the changes increase the danger, once the economy recovers, that the Fed won’t be able to unload the securities quickly enough to raise interest rates and counter inflation, said Ryding, a former Fed economist.
Bernanke floated the idea of buying Treasuries in a Dec. 1 speech. Then the FOMC said in its last statement on Jan. 28 that the Fed would be “prepared” for the purchases if “evolving circumstances” indicated their effectiveness.
The option gained ground after the Bank of England succeeded in lowering long-term rates by buying U.K. government bonds known as gilts in a program announced this month, said Lyle Gramley, a former Fed governor. The 10-year gilt yield slid to the lowest level in at least 20 years after the purchases began.
Bernanke Remarks
“Our objective is to improve the functioning of private credit markets so that people can borrow for all kinds of purposes,” Bernanke said at a Feb. 24 Senate hearing. “We are prepared, and we want to keep the option open to buy Treasury securities if we think that is the best way to improve the functioning or reduce interest rates in private markets.”
While Treasury yields fell, the strategy isn’t guaranteed to work in reducing other rates.
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