Bernanke Wants To Shrink Fed Balance Sheet To $1 Trillion Or Less
by Zero Hedge - March 25th, 2010 10:53 am
Courtesy of Tyler Durden
Disclosure from Bernanke in cross by Ron Paul. We are now at $2.3 trillion. The withdrawal of excess $1.3 trillion in reserves will kill the pursuit of risky assets.
GOLD REPRESENTS THE MASSIVE RISKS IN THIS MARKET
by ilene - December 2nd, 2009 7:51 pm
Is gold risky? At least Pragcap thinks so, in contrast to many other’s predicting much higher prices. Here’s why. – Ilene
GOLD REPRESENTS THE MASSIVE RISKS IN THIS MARKET
Courtesy of The Pragmatic Capitalist
There is no doubt a bubble forming in gold prices. In my opinion, the price of gold perfectly reflects the irrationality across many major markets, most notably, the equity markets. Despite no signs of inflation gold is up over 70% in the last year. As we’ve long opined, this is nothing more than the irrational money chasing that the Federal Reserve has once again created via their magically destructive printing press.
The Fed is effectively forcing investors into risky assets as they give investors no other choice to support their retirement/income needs via their ZIRP. The price of gold has gone nearly parabolic in recent weeks and I would now classify gold as the riskiest of risky assets to own. This move down in the dollar and up in gold has come to epitomize the failure of Fed policy to reflate markets back to normality. As we’ve said before, there are only two outcomes from the Fed printing policy: more bubbles or utter failure. For now, it looks like we’re in store for the former and that means there are more busts in our future. I think monetary and fiscal policy are currently making our macro problems even worse, but how bad these problems become has yet to be seen.
Observations On The US Government’s Escalating Near-Term Funding Mismatch
by ilene - November 1st, 2009 2:48 pm
Observations On The US Government’s Escalating Near-Term Funding Mismatch
Courtesy of Tyler Durden at Zero Hedge
When Lehman Brothers filed for bankruptcy, traditional money repositories, previously considered safe, were all promptly abandoned by investors unsure if they will have access to capital the next day. As a result, money markets, repos, even savings and deposit accounts were plundered in what has been the closest equivalent of a 21st century run on the bank. The only safe venue became US Treasury Bills, as almost overnight nearly half a trillion in very near maturities were invested in the US as the last perceived safe repository of investor capital.
The rush for near-term safety ended up creating a historic precedent of negative yields on near-term Bills: investors were willing to pay the government to hold their money for them.
So where do we stand a year later?
One would expect that as the financial situation improved, and credit was unlocked, that investors would abandon the safety of low-yielding Bills and pursue risk. Ironically, not only has this not happened, but in the 12 months since October 2008, over half a trillion more, $560 billion to be exact, has been parked in T-Bills. Looking at the entire treasury curve, over 40% of the $7 trillion in marketable treasury securities, matures within one year, a dramatic increase from the roughly 30% a year prior. The chart of the current T-Bill maturity schedule is presented below:
And here is how a Year-over-Year comparison from October 2008 to October 2009 and one year forward maturity data looks. As noted, the overall increase in near-term maturities has increased by a staggering $562 billion, or 25% from the $2.3 trillion in near-term (one year) maturities in 2008.
Practically every monthly period has seen an increase in T-Bill allocation by investors. This is a troubling trend.
But before we get into the details of what potential problems this may bring to the US, as the funding mismatch accelerates, this is how the entire curve of marketable securities looked like as of the most recent available data. As noted previously, over 40% of the entire $7 trillion in marketable securities matures essentially within one year.
Couple of observations here:
- The increased concentration in near-term UST maturities does not jive with repeated claims of a return to normal credit conditions. While last year’s

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Philip R. Davis is a founder Phil's Stock World, a stock and options trading site that teaches the art of options trading to newcomers and devises advanced strategies for expert traders...
Ilene is editor and affiliate program
coordinator for PSW. She manages the Favorites backup site
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