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Posted on 4/8/09 at 1:19 pm
Posted by Colonel Hapablap
Mostly Harmless
Member since Nov 2003
28791 posts
Posted on 4/8/09 at 1:19 pm
Posted by Rivers
Florida
Member since Nov 2008
3256 posts
Posted on 4/8/09 at 5:00 pm to
March FOMC Minutes: Outlook Revised Down

A reading of the second block quote advises that more treasuries will be purchased near term and that this action will lower the possiblity of inflation, among other things... :)

quote:

Staff Economic Outlook

In the forecast prepared for the meeting, the staff revised down its outlook for economic activity. The deterioration in labor market conditions was rapid in recent months, with steep job losses across nearly all sectors. Industrial production continued to contract rapidly as firms responded to the falloff in demand and the buildup of some inventory overhangs. The incoming data on business spending suggested that business investment in equipment and structures continued to decline. Single-family housing starts had fallen to a post-World War II low in January, and demand for new homes remained weak. Both exports and imports retreated significantly in the fourth quarter of last year and appeared headed for comparable declines this quarter. Consumer outlays showed some signs of stabilizing at a low level, with real outlays for goods outside of motor vehicles recording gains in January and February. .... The staff's projections for real GDP in the second half of 2009 and in 2010 were revised down, with real GDP expected to flatten out gradually over the second half of this year and then to expand slowly next year as the stresses in financial markets ease, the effects of fiscal stimulus take hold, inventory adjustments are worked through, and the correction in housing activity comes to an end. The weaker trajectory of real output resulted in the projected path of the unemployment rate rising more steeply into early next year before flattening out at a high level over the rest of the year. The staff forecast for overall and core personal consumption expenditures (PCE) inflation over the next two years was revised down slightly. Both core and overall PCE price inflation were expected to be damped by low rates of resource utilization, falling import prices, and easing cost pressures as a result of the sharp net declines in oil and other raw materials prices since last summer.
...snip...

quote:

In the discussion of monetary policy for the intermeeting period, Committee members agreed that substantial additional purchases of longer-term assets eligible for open market operations would be appropriate. Such purchases would provide further monetary stimulus to help address the very weak economic outlook and reduce the risk that inflation could persist for a time below rates that best foster longer-term economic growth and price stability.


LINK /


Posted by Gridiron Guru
Lafayette
Member since Nov 2007
1441 posts
Posted on 4/8/09 at 11:11 pm to
I honestly didn't read any of the exerpts from the previous post or the link, just because it's too late at night to get my BP up. My question is why can't this nutty arse plan of the fed basically swallowing up all the debt & writing it off on their books actually work? It could possibly be financial suicide for them, but after all the hard times they have caused during their existance, shouldn't they be willing to take the hit for the rest of us for once.
Posted by C
Houston
Member since Dec 2007
27819 posts
Posted on 4/8/09 at 11:55 pm to
quote:

fed basically swallowing up all the debt & writing it off on their books actually work? It could possibly be financial suicide for them, but after all the hard times they have caused during their existance, shouldn't they be willing to take the hit for the rest of us for once.


How is the fed taking the hit saving us, The taxpayers?
Posted by Colonel Hapablap
Mostly Harmless
Member since Nov 2003
28791 posts
Posted on 4/9/09 at 7:55 am to
quote:

My question is why can't this nutty arse plan of the fed basically swallowing up all the debt & writing it off on their books actually work?

It's essentially raw printing. Thus far they have not printed enough to counterbalance all of the money that has been destroyed in the delevering/deflation process. And even if they do, it's a very fine line that they're trying to walk. Don't print enough - deflation. Print a little too much - severe inflation.
Posted by LSURussian
Member since Feb 2005
126962 posts
Posted on 4/9/09 at 8:15 am to
CNBC said this morning that the Fed's balance sheet shrinked by $400,000,000 since January 1. And no, I did not independently verify this.
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