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View Full Version : Holy Monetization Batman - Fed to become U.S. largest creditor by next month.



Ares
30th September 2010, 05:49 PM
Federal Reserve Balance Sheet Update: Week Of September 29

Probably the most interesting thing in this week's Fed balance sheet update is that Treasurys held by the Fed are now $812 billion, an increase of $7 billion from the week before, which those who follow the FRBNY's almost daily POMO liquidity explosion know all too well. Indicatively, Japan owns $821 billion and China, $847 billion. We believe that within one week the Fed will surpass Japan as the second largest holder of Treasurys, and China, the current top holder, in just over a month. Another notable item: Fed excess reserves were at $981 billion, a decline from $1.01 trillion at the beginning of the month, but most notably, in the past month this number hit a year low of $932 billion on September 15. One wonders just what securities the banks were buying up with these reserves? Keep in mind the stock market closed essentially at the level it hit on September 20, making one wonder just how much of a factor the nearly $80 billion decline in bank excess reserves in the first two weeks of the month may have been.

* Securities held outright: $2,044 billion, a decline of $7 billion from the week prior.
o Total Treasury holdings increased from $805 billion to $812 billion, the reason for the increase being of course the continuing UST purchasing via QE Lite. The Fed has bought $25 billion in Treasuries in September
o MBS holdings declined by $13 billion to $1.08 trillion, meaning that as we expected the level of prepaying is accelerating, as this was the biggest one week decline in MBS notional outstanding on the Fed's balance sheet since QE1 began
o Agency holdings were also flat at $154 billion.
* Net borrowings: declined by $7 billion at $53 billion.
* Float, liquidity swaps, Maiden Lane and other assets: $187 billion, an increase of $1 billion. FX liquidity swaps are at $61 million as the same bank that is experiencing a USD funding crisis continues to have no EURIBOR/LIBOR acces. The "value" of Maiden Lane I was at $28.4 billion. Maiden Lane II was at $15.8 billion, Maiden Lane III at $23 billion while AIA Aurora was $25.7 billion.
* The monetary base was $1.958 trillion (more on M2 later)
* Reserve balances with banks: $982 billion, a slight increase of $2 billion from the prior week.
* Foreign holdings of USTs and MBS at a new all time high of $3.23 trillion, a slight increase of just under $2 billion W/W.

<img src="http://www.zerohedge.com/sites/default/files/images/user5/imageroot/shirakawa/Fed%20Balance%20Sheet%209.30_0.jpg"/>

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/federal-reserve-balance-sheet-update-week-september-29

palani
30th September 2010, 05:56 PM
As long as no one can precisely define what $1 (one dollar) actually is then why should I be impressed with billions or trillions of an unspecified item?

osoab
30th September 2010, 06:07 PM
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/_oTwEGiup_Wo/R5Yblgl7K-I/AAAAAAAABx0/T_oIFHEnPak/s1600/BenHelicopter.jpg

Glass
30th September 2010, 06:31 PM
The key is that the FED will become the largest "CREDITOR' or secured note holder of the US and will hold a secured position over the US and all it's assets. I've regularly wondered why people have seemed unconcered about the FED printing money or being the largest creditor and even more confused as to how people could think the FED could become bankrupt because it printed as much money as demanded. The US is not going to default on it's FED debt. Not going to happen come hell or high water. People think that countries default on their debts. They default on their debt repayment obligations. The debt does not vaporise simply because someone missed a payment.

The total debt may be renegotiated once a default has occured but it is never forgiven. Spain's austerity programs are not because the country can't borrow money cheap enough at the moment and has to cut back. It is because they have re-negotiated their debts and the austerity program is the "Administrators" of that debt taking control of the cash flows to ensure the debt they hold is paid.

It's like the ginormous, humungous mammoth elephant in the room that everyone ignores or simply skirts around the outside of. I haven't seen any commentary about it that says it bluntly. All I see is claims the FED is bankrupt or will go bankrupt because of all the bad debt they hold and that when the US defaults it will be game over for the FED and the debts will vaporise or something. Kind of like a tough luck to the FED attitude. They played, we played harder, we couldn't possibly pay it all back so we are going to zero it out, do a reset and start again.

Sorry but they don't hold any bad debt. All of their claims WILL BE PAID. You think things are bad now. The USofA is going 4th world -ve -ve and everyone is still in denial about it.

G2Rad
30th September 2010, 07:34 PM
just another reason why china bogeyman is bogus

if the FED absorbed 1 trillion in a month, why can't it absorb chinese 1.5 trillion?

vacuum
30th September 2010, 10:36 PM
Seems like the new rate is $1 billion/day.