ââ¦I had a conversation with a very worried Fed official
back on Sept. 17, the day the stock markets reopened in
the U.S. following the Trade Center attacks. He was
bothered by the market's apparent lack of interest in
the Fed's rate cut that morning.
Our discussion moved on to the fact that the Fed could
easily intervene in the market by purchasing stock index
futures contracts. That's an inexpensive and apparently
foolproof way of rigging the market without leaving a
traceâ¦â
http://members.rogers.com/fallstreet1/plungeprotection/apr202p/apr202p.html
ââ¦Even so, there is reason to believe that the U.S. government may be loosely in
cahoots with some top Wall Street firms to ensure that the stock market does not
spook investors too badly, or too often. Now this does not necessarily mean, as
some market-watchers now assert matter-of-factly, that there is a Plunge
Protection Team which snaps into action whenever some crisis manager
monitoring the market's vital signs on CNBC lifts a red phone at the White House.
To begin with, who could run an operation like that? â¦â
http://members.rogers.com/fallstreet1/plungeprotection/oct3101p/oct3101p.html
ââ¦A few analysts believe that this form of market rigging is already going on in America, quietly, using a $40 billion (£24 billion) slush fund, known as the Exchange Stabilisation Fund, under the direct control of the Treasury Secretary. It was this fund that was used to bail out Mexico in 1995 when the US Congress was refusing to appropriate enough moneyâ¦â
http://members.rogers.com/fallstreet1/plungeprotection/sept298/sept298.html
Remarks by Chairman Alan Greenspan
At the Catholic University Leuven, Leuven, Belgium
January 14, 1997
ââ¦Only a central bank, with its unlimited power to create money, can with a high probability thwart such a process before it becomes destructive. Hence, central banks will of necessity be drawn into becoming lenders of last resort. But implicit in the existence of such a role is that there will be some sort of allocation between the public and private sectors of the burden of risk of extreme outcomes. Thus, central banks are led to provide what essentially amounts to catastrophic financial insurance coverage. Such a public subsidy should be reserved for only the rarest of disasters. If the owners or managers of private financial institutions were to anticipate being propped up frequently by government support, it would only encourage reckless and irresponsible practicesâ¦â
http://www.federalreserve.gov/boarddocs/speeches/1997/19970114.htm