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Some politicians and regulators appear determined to shrink big banks. But doing so could hurt Americans who appreciate big banks' geographical reach and wide range of services, according to financial markets scholar Stephen Matteo Miller.
August 21 -
Under its aggressive quantitative easing program, the Fed is borrowing short-term and investing long-term, exposing itself to severe interest rate risk when short-term rates rise, writes former Fed economist Scott Hein.
April 17 -
The 2008 financial crisis forced the Fed and Treasury into a too-cozy relationship and the Dodd-Frank law cemented it. Janet Yellen should use her confirmation hearing this week to reassert the central banks independence from the administration, argues editor-at-large Barbara Rehm
November 12
Large markets for standardized goods tend to be impersonal. The market's ability to function depends more on the quantity and quality of goods for sale than on who buys the goods. This applies to markets for financial assets too and it's important to keep in mind when weighing the potential effects of the current volume of U.S. Treasury debt against the impact of the Federal Reserve's decision to
Under the Fed's historic bond-buying program, the central bank purchased longer-term Treasury debt and Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac mortgage-backed securities from
Some critics worried that quantitative easing could cause severe price inflation, possibly even a hyperinflation, since increasing bank reserves also means boosting traditional measures of the money supply. That doesn't seem to have happened. Banks have earned interest on reserves similar to the interest they would earn on
It's also interesting to note that the effect of quantitative easing may have been mitigated by the fact that the Federal Reserve operates like a private, regulated monopoly banking corporation that pays a very high tax rate. It has a monopoly on issuing U.S. dollars, and earns income in the form of the interest it receives from asset holdings like Treasuries. The Fed then pays its expenses and dividends to member banks and turns the rest back over to the Treasury. As an active participant in the market for Treasuries, the Fed through quantitative easing simply changed who holds the debt.
Going forward, a bigger concern is the quantity of Treasury debt, which as of Oct. 28 was just shy of $18 trillion, and whether the market will want to hold that amount in the future. For now Treasuries are in high global demand: foreign central banks and investors here and abroad want them. (Fed economist Carol Bertaut and co-authors show in a
Should the Treasury signal that it
As Alexander Hamilton once