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The Almighty Buck United States

Fed Raises US Rates by a Quarter Point, Signaling Possible Pause (bloomberg.com) 114

The Federal Reserve raised interest rates by a quarter percentage point and hinted it may be the final move in the most aggressive tightening campaign since the 1980s as economic risks mount. From a report: "The committee will closely monitor incoming information and assess the implications for monetary policy," the Federal Open Market Committee said in a statement Wednesday. It omitted a line from its previous statement in March that said the committee "anticipates that some additional policy firming may be appropriate." Instead, the FOMC will take into account various factors "in determining the extent to which additional policy firming may be appropriate." The increase lifted the Fed's benchmark federal funds rate to a target range of 5% to 5.25%, the highest level since 2007, up from nearly zero early last year. The vote was unanimous. US equities maintained gains, while Treasury yields and the dollar declined.
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Fed Raises US Rates by a Quarter Point, Signaling Possible Pause

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  • Wrong direction (Score:1, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward

    The oligarchy in the US needs a cycle of unemployment to transfer wealth from the middle class to the ultra rich. They haven't done one in a while and they are getting impatient for their due.

  • Powel's choice is between massive bank failure or a stalled economy. A major list of banks got a 100% haircut this week [dtcc.com]. They lost nearly all their collateral and its not being widely reported in the media.

    What is a haircut in finance? [investopedia.com]
    • by Budenny ( 888916 )

      I'm not sure these are the alternatives. It may be that the bank failures and stalled economy are together one branch. The alternative branch may be galloping inflation and a very precarious situation with US Government debt.

      Muddle through is still a possibility, though I admit to not seeing how. Its getting serious though.

    • by linuxrocks123 ( 905424 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @03:57PM (#63495236) Homepage Journal

      The fact that a trade settlement company is not allowing borrowing banks to use a lending bank's equity as a collateral for a loan from the lending bank does not mean the banks "lost nearly all their collateral." In fact, the banks did not lose anything at all. Please do not spread misinformation.

      • by Revek ( 133289 )
        None of the securities they own have can be used for collateral. Pick a bank today and look at where its stock went. Up or down? Give you hint, its down. Even the ones not on the list the DTCC put out Monday.
        • You wrote:

          None of the securities they own have can be used for collateral.

          That is not true and actually doesn't even make sense to say since the banks whose securities are used as collateral are the lenders to and not borrowers from the applicable line of credit:

          Pursuant to the LOC Agreement, securities issued by an affiliate of any Lender (âoeLender Family Issued Securitiesâ or âoeLender FISâ) are excluded as eligible collateral for securing a draw on the facility.

          Banks lending money to a pool didn't want their own equity securities used as collateral by borrowers from that pool, so the lending banks set the collateral value of their own stock to zero. This isn't some indication that the banks lending money to the pool are not creditworthy; it's just how the lending bank

  • We could just muddle through, this is what usually happens. But there is also a much darker possible scenario. its entirely driven by the rise in interest rates.

    This one goes, you have lots of smaller banks with heavy exposure to commercial real estate in the form of loans issued to their owners. The owners are in trouble because of falling occupancy rates. They also are in trouble because they need to roll over their debt, and it will be at high enough interest rates that it will make them unprofitable

    • Can the fed bail everyone out? You bet! There is no limit on the fedâ(TM)s ability to create money to make investors whole. None. But if it keeps going it will cause insane inflation. When Germany couldnâ(TM)t pay its war reparations it just printed money so it could buy the gold required. The US is not as bad as that, but under a fiat currency system all road essentially lead to inflation if the government does not exercise fiscal prudence.
    • by DarkOx ( 621550 )

      At some point in this a government decides to abolish fossil fuels, and replace the electricity generating infrastructure with wind and solar, and to make all cars and trucks EVs. And try to phase out gas heating and cooking. What could possibly go wrong with that? It will just run a slightly large deficit, which will be funded by selling bonds. Always worked in the past, why not now?

      All the more reason why we the people should support rate increase AND hope the debt ceiling does not get raised. The full faith and credit of the united states shall not be questioned, so there will be no 'default' all payments and bonds will be honnored eventually because constitutionally they must be.

      However until they are nobody will lend Uncle Sam money. Its the surest way to stop the progressive agenda once and for all and prevent the theft of familiar wealth by the state to blow on bullshit social e

      • by ScienceBard ( 4995157 ) on Wednesday May 03, 2023 @05:59PM (#63495592)

        Not raising the debt ceiling is a bit like trying to balance your home budget by deciding one day out of the blue that you're just not going to pay your rent and child support bills. It's foolish.

        Ignoring for a second that thinking of the solvency of a nation state with a fiat currency as though it were kitchen table economics is a huge fallacy, the answer to reducing deficits has to be a structured approach. It cannot be a politically charged tantrum by a fringe minority holding a mostly incompetent house speaker hostage.

        If you ask me the clear answer to lowering inflation and reducing the deficit is raising taxes. Pull back some of the money dump that started with the feds QE a decade ago, and was made worse by the trump tax cut bonanza and the covid free money. I can think of no worse solution than allowing a default to permanently raise borrowing costs for the federal government. Because the debt limit will certainly get raised when grandma doesn't get her social security check, or farmers can't sell their crops because staff at the USDA got furloughed and they cant legally navigate the export process. And when the limit does get raised, if it was allowed to default first, you're still out the money you owe AND it'll be harder to dig yourself out in the future. It's somehow the dumbest of all options.

    • My own take is this is an emerging property of extreme wealth inequality (and for those who break out M1 charts, let's not forget where 70% of those funds went).

      I works like this: if you have so much capital you've already saturated most primary markets for investment, you start looking for secondary and even riskier vehicles for investment. It is literally capital competing against itself for investment vehicles, which looks very similar to but operates very differently from an inflated money supply.

      And yo

    • by Budenny ( 888916 )

      The latest news from the bank sector makes muddling through seem less likely.

      https://www.zerohedge.com/mark... [zerohedge.com]

      Yes, I know its ZH, but this is pretty straight reporting and the number of instances of trouble is getting too large for comfort. Also, the strength of the reaction to rumors is getting too strong for comfort.

      A genuine full on financial panic is getting to seem a real possibility. And I find it hard to see what exactly the Fed or the Administration is going to do. Any short term remedies have su

  • ...all the way down to 6.125%! (Looks at my 2.85% mortgage with lust in my eyes.)
  • that causes recessions.
  • What we are seeing isn't traditional inflation, it's price hikes caused by part and fuel shortages.
    • What we are seeing isn't traditional inflation, it's price hikes caused by part and fuel shortages.

      No shortages of fuel where I live. No lines at the gas station pumps. No signs of the Army escorting fuel tankers from the refineries to gas stations. It sure isn't 1973 here.

      There is a shortage of public EV chargers around here. Does that count?

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