Quote from makloda:
Uhm thanks for the explaining the TED spread to me. As you correctly say it's a market rate and the market rate signals a tight credit market for the average bank. END OF MESSAGE.
So the Fed should do what yield hungry investors refuse to do? There's not a liquidity crisis. There's a credit worthy liquidity crisis. Good lenders and solvent securities have no trouble attracting capital. Take a look at Wells Fargo and Mellon.
These will once again disseminate credit into the economy once their balance sheets allow for it and they feel more confident in getting their loans paid back by consumers and corporations. Nobody in their right mind would expect banks to pass through lower Fed rates right now without the typical 18-24 months lag.
Sure. And that's why the inflation lag will be 18-24 months from now.
The matter of the fact is that a series of Fed rate hikes in order to 'decelerate debt-fueled consumer and corporate spending' are unnecessary at this time. Credit is tight, there is no need to make it tighter.
Credit's tight because asset prices are in flux. That's not an intrinsic negative. I've lost as much value on my home as anyone here on ET. If consumer prices also fell I'd be fine with the swap. Living in a million dollar home is no good if you can't afford to eat. This notion of protecting asset prices, debasing cash and savings, widening the gap between wage slave and equity holder is sure to cause a revolution. Ala' the strength of Obama. I've got enough hassles without needing to shoot jealous minorities on my front lawn.
Regarding your $10 hot dog metaphor... Who cares if the hot dog costs $10? I don't. All I care about is how long I have to work for it. Are you better off knowing a hot dog is $2 in 10 years just like it is today? Or are you better off knowing that the time you have to spend working in order to purchase a certain good becomes less and less in the future?
Unless productivity increases at a like rate then wages will NEVER keep pace with prices. Until your gardener finds a method to mow 3 times more lawns per day he'll make less in hot dogs than he does today or far less than he did in 1985. Have the paychecks of hourly wage earners kept pace with fuel prices?