Global Macro Trading Journal

Quote from ralph00:
Cutting IOER may have all kinds of unforseen consequences, most of them ranging from bad to disastrous. I have a pretty low opinion of the Bernanke, Yellen, Dudley axis running things at the Fed, but even I do not believe they will be stupid enough to do this.
I would agree, although it's v hard to predict. At the zero bound, things get really funky.
 
Quote from dhpar:
sorry but i do not see that. we did not have IOER before 2008 and i don't see why it could not be dropped now.

if dropped it should translate into asset inflation - and actually in inflation of all kinds but isn't it what fed wants?
Why do you think it will translate into asset inflation?
 
Quote from Martinghoul:

Why do you think it will translate into asset inflation?

banks will have to park money somewhere, i.e. treasuries. lower yields should benefit asset prices and reduce cost-of-carry - at least in the medium term...
 
Quote from dhpar:

banks will have to park money somewhere, i.e. treasuries.

I very much doubt this. USTs should respond immediately to the announcement and reach an equilibrium level where it would be almost equivalent to Fed reserves. This is a fallacy that Scott Sumner seem to be falling to as well.

Its like if MSFT announced they are buying a stock that trades at $50 for $80, the stock would immediately rise to $78 or something even though very little trading might be occurring.

As USTs 'gap up', banks would have little or no incentive to make the switch
 
it is a joke i guess: "immediately reach equilibrium"

you know very well that it may take weeks for all cash making it into short term AND longer term treasuries...
 
Quote from dhpar:

it is a joke i guess: "immediately reach equilibrium"

you know very well that it may take weeks for all cash making it into short term AND longer term treasuries...

Look at the CHF. Huge market that responded immediately. The onus is on you to explain why risk free profits would stay out there for so long
 
Quote from Butterball:

I wonder who ever started this urban legend?

Can anyone explain to me why flattening the yield curve will help the economy? Has the Fed even tried to explain that or are they doing something just for the sake of doing something?
 
Quote from ralph00:

Can anyone explain to me why flattening the yield curve will help the economy? Has the Fed even tried to explain that or are they doing something just for the sake of doing something?

NGDP = M * V. Fed can boost both by doing these types of stimulus, to the extend that nominal fluctuations in cause real problems(And I believe the 1930's show that pretty clearly) these stimulus measures will dimish the real impact of sticky wages, prices and debt deflation
 
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