Federal Reserve Bank
Overnight Sentiment Down On Chinese Growth Concerns, Crude Down As Saudi Promises More Oil
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/20/2012 06:52 -0500
There are two main news updates dominating early newsflow: the first comes from BHP Billiton, after the world's largest miner raised concerns about the possibility of a sharp slowdown in demand from top metals consumer China. Per Reuters: "There is a slowing trend in China ... moving increasingly away from the growth model that they have had, which may be a little less metals intensive. This is not new, but recognition by big mining companies would have had an effect." Australian iron ore miners, key beneficiaries of China's modern-day industrial revolution, signaled on Tuesday demand growth was finally slowing in response to Beijing's moves to cool its economy. BHP Billiton said it was seeing signs of "flattening" iron ore demand from China, though for now it was pushing ahead with ambitious plans to expand production." That this comes just on the tail of JP Morgan warning of a hard landing in China is curious, and one wonder if the Federal Reserve Bank of JP Morgan is not fully intent on telegraphing that the next big center of QE will be the PBOC. The other news is that the perpetual crude "upside capacity" strawman Saudi Arabia 'has pledged to take action to lower the high price of oil, which has risen to around $125 a barrel, with laden supertankers set to arrive in the US in the coming weeks. ... Saudi Arabia said yesterday it will work "individually" and with the other petrol-rich Gulf states to return prices to "fair" levels. The country indicated earlier this year that $100 a barrel was the ideal oil price." There is one problem with this as expected Saudi attempt to help Obama's reelection campaign: as pointed out yesterday, it is very unlikely that Saudi Arabia has any realistic ability to do much if anything to push the price of crude lower, especially if and when the middle east hostilities flare up.
News That Matters
Submitted by thetrader on 03/16/2012 07:58 -0500- American International Group
- Apple
- Australia
- Bank of New York
- Barack Obama
- Borrowing Costs
- Brazil
- Budget Deficit
- China
- Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Consumer Sentiment
- Corruption
- Countrywide
- Crude
- Crude Oil
- Dow Jones Industrial Average
- European Central Bank
- European Union
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Fitch
- France
- Global Economy
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Gross Domestic Product
- Hong Kong
- India
- Initial Jobless Claims
- Iran
- Iraq
- Ireland
- Jamie Dimon
- Japan
- Joe Biden
- National Debt
- Natural Gas
- New York State
- New York Times
- Nikkei
- Quantitative Easing
- Rating Agency
- Real estate
- recovery
- Reuters
- Royal Bank of Scotland
- SWIFT
- Switzerland
- Unemployment
- Unemployment Benefits
- Vladimir Putin
- Wen Jiabao
- Yuan
All you need to read.
America's Student Loan To Reach $1.4 Trillion by 2020
Submitted by EconMatters on 03/13/2012 21:54 -0500The added weight on the gross national debt as well as the dis-incentive for people to seek better education would prove to be one of the greatest risk for America as a whole.
Guest Post: Money from Nothing - A Primer On Fake Wealth Creation And Its Implications (Part 1)
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/12/2012 09:48 -0500- AIG
- Collateralized Debt Obligations
- Corruption
- Credit Default Swaps
- default
- European Central Bank
- Eurozone
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Greece
- Guest Post
- HFT
- High Frequency Trading
- High Frequency Trading
- Lloyd Blankfein
- MF Global
- Naked Short Selling
- None
- OTC
- OTC Derivatives
- Private Equity
- Reality
- Shadow Banking
What is fraud except creating “value” from nothing and passing it off as something? Frauds interlink and grow upon each other. Our debt-based money system serves as the fraud foundation. In our debt-based money system, debt must grow in order to create money. Therefore, there is no way to pay off aggregate debt with available money. More money must be lent into the system to make the payments for old debts. This causes overall debt to expand as new money for actual people (vs. banks) always arrives at interest and compounds exponentially. This process is called financialization. Financialization: The process of making money from nothing in which debt (i.e. poverty, lack) is paradoxically considered an asset (i.e. wealth, gain). In current financialized economies “wealth expansion” comes from the parasitic taxation of productivity in the form of interest on fiat lending. This interest over time consumes a greater and greater share of resources, assets, labor, and livelihood until nothing is left.
Guest Post: Our "Let's Pretend" Economy: Let's Pretend Student Loans Are About Education
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/07/2012 12:34 -0500We have a "let's pretend" economy: let's pretend the unemployment rate actually reflects the number of people with full-time jobs and the number of people seeking jobs, let's pretend the Federal government borrowing 10% of the GDP every year is sustainable without any consequences, let's pretend the stock market actually reflects the economy rather than Federal Reserve monetary intervention, and so on. We also have a "let's pretend" education/student-loan game running: let's pretend college is "worth" the investment, and let's pretend student loans are about education. There are three dirty little secrets buried under the education/student-loan complex's high-gloss sheen: 1. Student loans have little to do with education and everything to do with creating a new profit center for subprime-type lenders guaranteed by the Savior State. 2. A college diploma's value in the real world of getting a job and earning a good salary in a post-financialization economy has been grossly oversold. 3. Many people are taking out student loans just to live; the loans are essentially a form of "State funding" a.k.a. welfare that must be paid back. We've got a lot of charts that reflect reality rather than hype, so let's get started. Despite all the bleating rationalizations issued by the Education Complex, higher education costs have outstripped the rest of the economy's cost structure. Funny how nobody ever asks if there is any real competitive pressure in the Education Complex; there isn't, and why should there be when students can borrow $30,000 a year?
Germany to Review Bundesbank Gold Reserves in Frankfurt, Paris, London and New York Fed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/07/2012 08:29 -0500

German lawmakers are to review Bundesbank controls of and management of Germany’s gold reserves. Parliament’s Budget Committee will assess how the central bank manages its inventory of Germany’s gold bullion bars that are believed to be stored in Frankfurt, Paris, London and the Federal Reserve Bank of New York, according to German newspaper Bild. The German Federal Audit Office has criticised the Bundesbank’s lax auditing and inventory controls regarding Germany’s sizeable gold reserves – 3,396.3 tonnes of gold or some 73.7% of Germany’s national foreign exchange reserves. There is increasing nervousness amongst the German public, German politicians and indeed the Bundesbank itself regarding the gigantic risk on the balance sheet of Germany's central bank and this is leading some in Germany to voice concerns about the location and exact amount of Germany’s gold reserves. The eurozone's central bank system is massively imbalanced after the ECB’s balance sheet surged to a record 3.02 trillion euros ($3.96 trillion) last week, 31% bigger than the German economy, after a second tranche of three-year loans. The concern is that were the eurozone to collapse, Bundesbank's losses could be half a trillion euros - more than one-and-a-half times the size of the Germany's annual budget. In that scenario, Germany’s national patrimony of gold bullion reserves would be needed to support the currency – whether that be a new euro or a return to the Deutsche mark. The German lawmakers are following in the footsteps of US Presidential candidate Ron Paul who has long called for an audit of the US’ gold reserves. It is believed that some 60% of Germany’s gold is stored outside of Germany and much of it in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York.
Dallas Fed's Fisher "Perplexed" By Wall Street "Fetish" With QE3 And Disgusted With The Addiction To "Monetary Morphine"
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/05/2012 13:36 -0500- Australia
- B+
- Budget Deficit
- China
- Dallas Fed
- Excess Reserves
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Fisher
- France
- Free Money
- Germany
- Gross Domestic Product
- headlines
- Lone Star
- Mexico
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- National Debt
- Natural Gas
- Nomination
- Norway
- Personal Consumption
- Quantitative Easing
- Recession
- recovery
- Unemployment
And now for some pure irony, we have a member of the Fed, granted a gold bug, but a Fed member nonetheless, one of the same people who not only enacted ZIRP, but encourage easy money every time there is a downtick in the market, complaining about, get this, Wall Street's "continued preoccupation, bordering upon fetish" with QE3. The irony continues: "Trillions of dollars are lying fallow, not being employed in the real economy. Yet financial market operators keep looking and hoping for more. Why? I think it may be because they have become hooked on the monetary morphine we provided when we performed massive reconstructive surgery, rescuing the economy from the Financial Panic of 2008–09, and then kept the medication in the financial bloodstream to ensure recovery....I believe adding to the accommodative doses we have applied rather than beginning to wean the patient might be the equivalent of medical malpractice." So let's get this straight: these academic titans, who for one reason or another, are given free rein to determine the fate of the once free world with their secret decisions every two or three months, are completely unaware of classical conditioning, discovered by Pavlov nearly 90 years ago, also known as a salivation response. The same Fed is shocked, shocked, that every time the market dips, the red light goes off, and the "balls to the wall" crowd scream for more, more, more free money. Really Fisher? Really? Oh, and let us guess what happens the next time the S&P slides into the tripple digits: will the Fed a) do nothing, thereby letting the market slide to its fair value in the 400 point range, or b) print. Our money, in the form of hard yellow metal, is on the latter, just like we predicted, correctly, back in March 2009 in " Bailoutspotting (Or The Search For The Great Financial Methadone Clinic" that nothing will ever change vis-a-vis the great market junkie until it all comes crashing down.
Geithner Pens Another Ridiculous Op-Ed
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/02/2012 09:01 -0500- AIG
- Bank of New York
- Barney Frank
- Bear Stearns
- Chris Dodd
- Consumer protection
- Fannie Mae
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Foreclosures
- Freddie Mac
- Great Depression
- Gross Domestic Product
- Housing Market
- Insurance Companies
- National Debt
- New York Fed
- Newspaper
- President Obama
- Recession
- recovery
- Shadow Banking
- Transparency
Nearly two years after his catastrophic foray into Op-Ed writing, here is Tim Geithner's latest, this time making the hypocritical case to "not forget the lesson from the financial crisis"... which he himself ushered on America as head of the New York Fed. Frankly we are quite sure it is not even worth reading this drivel: the unemployed man walking has been a total disaster during his entire tenure (at both the New York Fed where he supervised all the banks that subsequently fell, and the Treasury), and we are fairly confident that reading anything written by this pathological failure will cost collective IQs to drop by 10 points at a minimum. Hey Tim: is there a risk the US can get downgraded? Any risk?
UK Parliament Member Lord James of Blackheath Alleges 15 Trillion Dollar Fraud Involving the Fed and Imaginary Gold
Submitted by George Washington on 02/29/2012 19:55 -0500$15 Trillion Dollar Fraud … Or Nigerian Style Scam?
2012 - The Year Of Living Dangerously
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/28/2012 17:15 -0500...European banks are three times larger than the European sovereigns, the ECB is not the Federal Reserve Bank of the United States, the leading economy in Europe, Germany, is 22% of the economy of America, that there are ever and always consequences for providing free money, that Europe is in a recession and it will be much deeper than thought by many in my view, that the demanded austerity measures are unquestionably worsening the recession and increasing unemployment, that nations become much more self-centered when their economies are contracting and that the more protracted all of this is; the more pronounced Newton’s reaction will be when the pendulum reverses course.
New York Fed Buys Building Housing Plunge Protection Team
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/28/2012 15:17 -0500Since nobody else has any interest in downtown NY real estate, Goldman's Bill Dudley, currently incidentally in charge of the New York Fed, has decided to step up. "The Federal Reserve Bank of New York (New York Fed) today announced that it has acquired the building at 33 Maiden Lane for $207.5 million from Merit US Real Estate Fund III, L.P. and established a new, wholly owned limited liability company called Maiden & Nassau LLC to serve as owner of the building. The acquisition provides a cost-effective, long-term alternative to the current practice of leasing space in this and other buildings and allows for greater control over maintenance, operation and security of the building." As a reminder, the 9th floor of 33 Liberty is where the ever elusive, but always present Plunge Protection Team, pardon the "markets group" at the Federal Reserve is housed (more here). And although in recent days it is no secret that the bulk of Fed open market stock order are routed via that one certain HFT powerhouse out of Chicago, it is always a good idea to keep all the market manipulating facilities under one roof. And so, the Fed now will have full domain over everything that transpires under its own roof. And since the building likely has an extended basement, it provides Dudley, and his muppet Ben Bernanke with a convenient location where to store the soon to be confiscated 107 tons of Greek gold.
Proof that War Is Bad for the Economy
Submitted by George Washington on 02/24/2012 12:26 -0500- Afghanistan
- Alan Greenspan
- Barney Frank
- China
- Chris Martenson
- Congressional Budget Office
- Crude
- Dean Baker
- Deficit Spending
- Department Of Commerce
- ETC
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Global Economy
- Global Warming
- Iran
- Iraq
- James Galbraith
- Japan
- Joint Economic Committee
- Joseph Stiglitz
- Larry Summers
- Ludwig von Mises
- Main Street
- Middle East
- Monetary Policy
- national security
- New York Times
- Nouriel
- Nouriel Roubini
- Purchasing Power
- Recession
- Robert Gates
- Ron Paul
- Treasury Department
- Unemployment
Anyone Who Thinks that War Is Good For the Economy Has One Eye Covered ... And Is Only Looking At Half the Picture ...
The ECB Has Opened Pandora’s Box
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/19/2012 12:45 -0500The European Central Bank, in a very misguided attempt to protect itself, has now opened Pandora’s Box. I doubt if they even realize what they have done; but they will, most assuredly they will. The consequences of their horrendous mistake will soon be upon them as institutions not coerced or forced into buying European sovereign debt will be leaving the playing field en masse as the realization dawns upon investors of just what has taken place. You cannot fool all of the people all of the time and the people that manage money for a living are not a forgiving group when governments try to supersede their lawful rights.
The Triumvirate of Wall Street/ the Fed/ and US Politicians is Crumbling Pt 2
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 02/17/2012 13:41 -0500One thing is for certain, the litigation is beginning to shift from minor players to major players at the core of the Financial Crisis. Investors take note, this is a major shift and needs to be monitored as it will have major implications for market dynamics going forward.
Frontrunning: February 9
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/09/2012 07:23 -0500- American International Group
- Bank of New York
- Bond
- China
- Consumer Confidence
- European Central Bank
- Federal Reserve
- Federal Reserve Bank
- Federal Reserve Bank of New York
- Foreclosures
- goldman sachs
- Goldman Sachs
- Housing Bubble
- Italy
- Japan
- News Corp
- Newspaper
- Reuters
- Switzerland
- Three Mile Island
- Trade Balance
- Unemployment
- Yuan
- New Greek demands threaten debt deal (FT)
- Greek Finance Minister Heads to Brussels; Loan Talks Stall (WSJ)
- Talks Stalled on Greek Bailout as Venizelos Heads to Brussels (Bloomberg)
- US banks near historic deal on foreclosures (FT)
- Obama: Europe needs "absolute commitment" on debt crisis (Reuters)
- Fed's Lacker sees no need for more easing for now (Reuters)
- Europe compromise urged at summit (China Daily)
- China to Punish Illicit Bank Lending, Shanghai Securities Says (Bloomberg)
- Monti Meets Obama Amid ’Spectacular Progress’ (Bloomberg)
- Draghi’s First 100 Days Presage Greek Help (Bloomberg)






