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Business Title: We Are Nearing the End Game of Central Bank Intervention Because of a lack of foreign interest in long-term Treasuries, the Fed decided to step in to pick up the slack. As a result of this, the US Federal Reserve has accounted for 91% of all new debt issuance in the 20+years bracket. Put another way, the US Federal Reserve is now effectively the long-end of the US debt market. Operations Twist 2 has also allowed US commercial banks to unload their long-term Treasury holdings in exchange for new capital: something most of the Primary Dealers are in dire need of. This in turn helps to explain why the US stock market has advanced despite the fact that retail investors have been pulling out of the market in droves. Put another way, the markets have been ramped higher by more juice from the Fed (and corporate buybacks). However, the fact remains that this juice has come from the Fed reallocating its current portfolio holdings, NOT printing more money outright to monetize US debt via QE. So while the media and 99% of analysts believe the Fed is and can continue to act aggressively to prop up the markets, the fact is that the Fed has been reining in its monetary stimulus over the last nine months, largely relying on verbal intervention from Fed Presidents to push stocks higher. We at Phoenix Capital Research have known this for some time. But the general public and financial media are only just starting to realize that the Fed, in some ways, is at the end of its rope in terms of monetary intervention. This has become increasingly clear in the Fed FOMC statements. Consider the latest FOMC statement released last week... Fed Signals No Need for More Easing Unless Growth Falters The Federal Reserve is holding off on increasing monetary accommodation unless the U.S. economic expansion falters or prices rise at a rate slower than its 2 percent target. A couple of members indicated that the initiation of additional stimulus could become necessary if the economy lost momentum or if inflation seemed likely to remain below 2 percent, according to minutes of their March 13 meeting released today in Washington. That contrasts with the assessment at the FOMCs January meeting in which some Fed officials saw current conditions warranting additional action before long. Ignore the verbal obfuscation here. The Fed knows that inflation is higher than 2%. It also knows that US growth is faltering. The above announcement is the Fed essentially admitting its hands are tied regarding more easing due to: Again, we are in a process of slow awakening to the fact that the Fed has not solved the problems that caused 2008. Instead, the Fed has exacerbated these problems (excess leverage) and created new problems in the process (inflation). Fortunately for the Fed, the European Central Bank has picked up the intervention slack since the Fed began pulling back in mid-2011. Indeed, between July 2011 and today, the ECB has expanded its balance sheet by an incredible $1+ trillion: more than the Feds QE 2 and QE lite combined (and in just a nine month period). The two largest interventions were the ECBs LTRO 1 and LTRO 2, which saw the ECB handing out $645 billion and $712 billion to 523 and 800 banks respectively. As a result of this, the ECBs balance sheet exploded to nearly $4 trillion in size, larger than the GDPs of Germany, France, or the UK. This rapid and extreme expansion of the ECBs balance sheet (again it was greater than QE lite and QE2 combined... in nine months) indicates the severity of the banking crisis in Europe. You dont rush this much money out the door this fast unless youre facing something very, very bad. This rapid expansion has also resulted in the ECB obtaining a similar political toxicity to that of the US Federal Reserve. Indeed, those European banks that participated in the LTRO schemes have found their Credit Default Swaps exploding relative to their non-LTRO participating counterparts. The reason for this is obvious: any bank that participated in either LTRO implicitly announced that it was in dire need of capital. As a result of this the markets have stigmatized those banks that participated in the schemes, thereby: 1) Diminishing the impact of the ECBs moves. 2) Indicating that the ECB is now politically toxic in that those EU financial institutions that rely on it for help are punished by the markets. In simple terms, the Feds hands are tied and the ECB is out of ammo. The End Game for Central Bank intervention is approaching. And it wont be pretty...First Europe. Then Japan. Then the US. The Debt Implosion will spread throughout the global financial system. If youre not already taking steps to prepare for the coming collapse, you need to do so now.
Poster Comment: You leftist sheeple, propaganda pimps and loser parasites are all going to be in for a very rude awakening... And I don't feel an ounce of pity for you.
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