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Business/Finance
See other Business/Finance Articles

Title: Whats the Fed Up To With the Money Supply?
Source: Safe Haven
URL Source: http://www.safehaven.com/showarticle.cfm?id=4331&pv=1
Published: Dec 23, 2005
Author: by Robert McHugh
Post Date: 2005-12-23 13:05:23 by Horse
Keywords: Supply?, Whats, Money
Views: 159
Comments: 108

Over the past two days, December 21st - when our first Hindenburg Omen (of whatever cluster is coming) - and Thursday December 22nd, the Federal Reserve has conducted one of the largest two-day Repo injections of money into the system since back in September 2001. On Wednesday they added $18.0 billion in reserves and on Thursday they added another $20.0 billion. Is this a coincidence, coming right as we get another Hindenburg Omen? Probably not. Is something high-risk going on behind the scenes here? Let's review some facts at the Fed. On November 10th, 2005, shortly after appointing Bernanke to replace Greenbackspan, the Fed mysteriously announced with little comment and no palatable justification that they will hide M-3 effective March 2006. M-3 has been the main staple of money supply measurement and transparent disclosure since the Fed was founded back in 1913. It is the key monetary aggregate that includes Fed Repo transactions, that mechanism whereby the Fed increases reserves. The date when M-3 will start being hidden also happens to be the exact month that Iran will declare economic war against the U.S. Dollar by trading its oil in Petro-Euros on its new bourse. But there is more. The Federal Reserve currently has three vacancies within the 19 top Regional Bank and Board of Governor spots. Why? Part of ongoing wholesale resignations.

The latest is from the Philly Fed. Fed President and Open Market Committee member Anthony Santomero has announced his resignation after only a brief year and a half tenure. Very unusual. Hey, Fed Presidents are treated like gods. They have enormous power, prestige, and presence. Why quit? He is far from alone. Over the past few years no less than six Federal Reserve Regional Bank Presidents have resigned. This is highly unusual.

An immediate impact is that we are about to have a largely inexperienced batch of individuals conducting monetary policy in the United States. So of course, the first thing they will do is hide the key money figures. Two positions for the Board of Governors (there are 7)have been open for quite a while. Plus six of the 12 Regional Head spots have turned over during the past few years.

If a substantial amount of oil transactions will suddenly be conducted in Euros instead of Dollars, this should put pressure on the Dollar as folks exchange Dollars for Euros, jeopardizing the Dollar's status as the world's reserve currency, making it more difficult to print all the dollars the Fed wants to without driving the Dollar into the ground. Iraq threatened to do what Iran has threatened to do just before we went in looking for weapons of mass disappearance. If the Dollar tanks, Treasuries might not be far behind. If Treasuries tank, kiss the Housing-driven boom goodbye. Could the Master Planners be hiding M-3 because they anticipate they may have to monetize the Federal debt, buy our own Treasury Bonds during the coming economic attack against the Dollar? That would require a ton of new fresh money creation - too much to disclose. Could it be some folks at the top of the Fed do not have the stomach to be part of what is about to go down?

M-3 has a direct but lagging impact on financial markets. Look at the chart at the top of the prior page. Whenever M-3 rises, the Dow Industrials rise. Whenever M-3 is flat or declines, the Dow Industrials decline. The Dow Industrials are a bellwether for the economy. If we can monitor M-3, we can better monitor the future path of equities and the economy. It is wrong for the Fed to stop its disclosure for this very reason. Investors need to know in a free market economy, because M-3 infusion is centrally planned intervention into a free market system. Investors need to know when the Master Planners have decided to intervene. Our buy/sell signals were designed to pick up the scent of Master Planner intervention by analyzing supply and demand forces underlying the markets. So with or without a fully disclosed M-3, we will be able to continue to identify coming multi-week trends.

So what about M-3 the past week? The latest figures show that on a seasonally adjusted basis, M-3 rose 27.3 billion last week, a 14.0 percent annualized clip, and is up $76 billion over the past month, a 9.8 percent growth rate. But those are the massaged numbers. For the raw figures, fasten your seat belt. Are you ready? M-3 was increased $58.7 billion last week (that does not include the huge Repo infusions noted above), a 30.0 percent annualized rate of growth. For the past two week, the Fed added $93.5 billion to the money supply, a 24.0 percent annual clip. Over the past 6 weeks it is up $192.9 billion, a 16.7 percent Banana Republic hyperinflationary pace. This is nuts, folks - unless there is an incredible risk out there we are not being told about. That is a lot of money for the Plunge Protection Team's arsenal to buy markets - stocks, bonds, currencies, whatever. This level of irresponsible money supply growth makes shorting markets hazardous, yet at the same time says markets are at huge risk of declining. Maybe M-3 growth doesn't stop the decline this time. Should be a fascinating storm in 2006.

The recent rise in Gold catalogued 74 points over about a month, a 16 percent rally from precisely the day the Fed announced it would hide M-3 from taxpayers and citizens of this great nation. That is no coincidence. Gold sees hyperinflation, monetization of debt, and intervention into free markets. Gold is telling us it expects Ben Bernanke to be an inflationist.


Poster Comment:

My apologies, but as usual with this computer I could not copy the chart. This article does tell us that the M3 money supply is growing at a fast clip. And as of April Fools Day 2006 the FED will no longer tell us how much money they are printing. I still believe that REPORTED INFLATION will be low during 2006,at least, until after the elections in November. But the real purpose is for Wall Street to unload their junk bonds, steal what has not yet been stolen and invest overseas so they can repatriate their funds after the dollar collapses buying America for pennies on the dollar.

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 14.

#2. To: Horse (#0)

Iraq threatened to do what Iran has threatened to do just before we went in looking for weapons of mass disappearance.

Iraq did more than threaten. http://www.ratical.org/ratville/CAH/RRiraqWar.html

"The Federal Reserve's greatest nightmare is that OPEC will switch its international transactions from a dollar standard to a euro standard. Iraq actually made this switch in Nov. 2000 (when the euro was worth around 82 cents), and has actually made off like a bandit considering the dollar's steady depreciation against the euro. (Note: the dollar declined 17% against the euro in 2002.)

"The real reason the Bush administration wants a puppet government in Iraq -- or more importantly, the reason why the corporate-military-industrial network conglomerate wants a puppet government in Iraq -- is so that it will revert back to a dollar standard and stay that way." (While also hoping to veto any wider OPEC momentum towards the euro, especially from Iran -- the 2nd largest OPEC producer who is actively discussing a switch to euros for its oil exports)."

Sam Houston  posted on  2005-12-23   13:19:18 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Sam Houston (#2)

Iran has been feeling pretty frisky lately now that they have us sinking in the swamp of Iraq.

Richard W.

Arete  posted on  2005-12-23   13:29:44 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Arete (#3)

It could very well be that Iran will go to selling oil for euros knowing full well it will trigger world war.

I note that on the radio they report that the US dollar will close the year higher against most major currencies than it started the year. With the massive trade deficit we have (the largest as a percentage of gdp sustained this long in world history) the dollar should drop. and yet it rises.

because it is an artificial currency, propped up artificially, given artificial strength.

so that the people of the world can pay a tribute. think about it. We can buy without exporting to cover our purchases. Nobody else can. It is a system of tribute.

Red Jones  posted on  2005-12-23   13:45:45 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Red Jones (#4)

It is a system of tribute

Of course it is. Our government acts exactly as you would exact any mafia street thug to act. Pay me protection and do what you are told, and nothing blows up. If you don't, well then maybe a train or something goes boom.

Richard W.

Arete  posted on  2005-12-23   13:53:40 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Arete (#5)

Pay me protection and do what you are told, and nothing blows up

that's the sad part - the more effectively we resist them, then the worse the 'terrorism' will get.

that's one reason I don't really advocate thinking that we can win. I do advocate informing people and educating them.

Red Jones  posted on  2005-12-23   14:01:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Red Jones (#6)

That's one reason I don't really advocate thinking that we can win. I do advocate informing people and educating them.

Old proverb goes something like this: "When your enemy is busy destroying themselves, get out of the way and let them continue doing what they're doing". We don't have to win, we just have to survive, because this system is doing a fine job of tearing itself to pieces. Our efforts are best spent in thinking about what we want to build in the vacuum created by the sudden implosion of this system. Because if we don't have a plan, I can assure you that they do, and they're ready to implement it.

Therefore I suggest that we spend less time talking about how bad things are, and instead talk about what we want to build once this nightmare passes.

One other thought: Blind worship of the Constitution is not the solution, the Constitution is a great but deeply flawed document, and we need to ponder these flaws and come up with something new that embodies the spirt of the Constitution while also having a chance of working and persisting in the real world.

Elliott Jackalope  posted on  2005-12-23   16:09:46 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: Elliott Jackalope (#9)

Blind worship of the Constitution is not the solution, the Constitution is a great but deeply flawed document, and we need to ponder these flaws and come up with something new that embodies the spirt of the Constitution while also having a chance of working and persisting in the real world.

No problem. Here is how to solve all problems very quickly:

Change the interstate commerce clause by adding this: ... but these powers are limited to regulating only the movement of goods and services across state borders.

That ought to fix 80% of the woes we face in terms of regulation. The rest of it is fine the way it is with one exception - limit voting to taxpayers only and also cut out anyone recieving public assistance.

mirage  posted on  2005-12-23   18:01:17 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: mirage (#11)

And this would end corporate dominace of our political system? This would end unlimited lobbying money? This would do something about our insane policies of unlimited free trade, unlimited immivasion and unlimited government power? By fixing the commerce clause? How?

Sorry, we need to do a whole lot more thinking than that. One thing we need to think about is the whole idea of politicians. Is it really a good idea to have people who go into and then out of public service? Is it really a good idea to have politicians be multi-millionaires? Or would something more like a priesthood model be more appropriate, a system where one takes a vow of poverty and service, and is then guaranteed a modest living for the rest of their days, whether or not they are re-elected? And that's just one thing that needs to be re-thought, I've got lots of other issues with the Constitution, believe me.

For example: It purports to be a great document for defining the government of a nation, but does absolutely nothing to acknowlege or even define what a nation is. Is a nation a polyglot assembly of every different tribe, race, color, creed and belief system shoved together into a work camp run by gangsters? Or is a nation more like an extended family, a larger reflection of the families that make it up? Because if that is the case, then we need to consider the issues of race, religion and culture. Oh, that's right, in the current system we can't even bring those issues up, can we?

Elliott Jackalope  posted on  2005-12-23   20:10:21 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: Elliott Jackalope, mirage (#13)

One thing we need to think about is the whole idea of politicians.

I agree with Elliott on this point. and I chastise you mirage for putting faith in man and the things of man.

We can't even follow the constitution as is. The constitution is just a piece of paper and nobody respects it other than in a token ceremonial way. That is fact, and if you want me to explain that to you I will.

So, what good would it do to change it? In theory you have a good idea mirage. But you under-estimate the failure of man. You put your faith in man, a fatal mistake.

The American nation has exposed the flaws of mankind for all to see. If evil has attacked our nation and we cannot prevail over it, then think how hopeless it is that other (lesser) nations can likewise prevail.

Trying to be positive though, our ancestors used to tar and feather leaders that were known to be their enemies. That would help.

Red Jones  posted on  2005-12-23   20:18:11 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


Replies to Comment # 14.

#22. To: Red Jones (#14)

I agree with Elliott on this point. and I chastise you mirage for putting faith in man and the things of man.

There is no hope? We should just stop trying to improve things?

Never. You are to be chastened for giving up and accepting things as is. There is always room for improvement. Perhaps we should try some.

mirage  posted on  2005-12-23 22:01:02 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


End Trace Mode for Comment # 14.

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