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The chart above has tremendous implications for everything from US and European monetary policy, to exhange rate and trade policy, to the current account on both sides of the Atlantic, to US fiscal policy, to borrowing and lending activity in the US, and, lastly, to QE 3.
What is the first notable thing about the above chart is that while cash levels in US and US-based foreign-banks correlate almost perfectly with the Fed's reserve balances, as they should, there is a notable divergence beginning around May of 2010, or the first Greek bailout, when Europe was in a state of turmoil, and when cash assets of foreign banks jumped by $200 billion, independent of the Fed and of cash holdings by US banks. About 6 months later, this jump in foreign bank cash balances had plunged to the lowest in years, due to repatriated fungible cash being used to plug undercapitalized local operations, with total cash just $265 billion as of November 17, just as QE2 was commencing. Incidentally, the last time foreign banks had this little cash was April 2009... Just as QE1 was beginning. As to what happens next, the first chart above says it all: cash held by foreign banks jumps from $308 billion on November 3, or the official start of QE2, to $940 billion as of June 1: an almost dollar for dollar increase with the increase in Fed reserve balances. In other words, while the Fed did nothing to rescue foreign banks in the aftermath of the first Greek crisis, aside from opening up FX swap lines, one can argue that the whole point of QE2 was not so much to spike equity markets, or the proverbial "third mandate" of Ben Bernanke, but solely to rescue European banks!
...
...what happened is that the $600 billion in cash was promptly repatriated and used by domestic branches of foreign banks to fill undercapitalization voids left by exposure to insolvent European PIIGS and for all other bankruptcy-related capital needs. And one wonders why suddenly German banks are so willing to take haircuts on Greek bonds: it is simply because courtesy of their US based branches which have been getting the bulk of the Fed's dollars in 1 and 0 format, they suddenly find themselves willing and ready to face the mark to market on Greek debt from par to 50 cents on the dollar. And not only Greek, but all other PIIGS, which will inevitably happen once Greece goes bankrupt, either voluntarily or otherwise.
Originally posted by Rockpuck
reply to post by Dbriefed
..Wow.. so much to be said. I think I could limit it to:
This is High Treason.
Originally posted by jude11
Originally posted by Rockpuck
reply to post by Dbriefed
..Wow.. so much to be said. I think I could limit it to:
This is High Treason.
Agreed,
But the frustrating part is that although all the evidence is there, why is no one up before a judge?
Not right.
Originally posted by UcDat
Originally posted by jude11
Originally posted by Rockpuck
reply to post by Dbriefed
..Wow.. so much to be said. I think I could limit it to:
This is High Treason.
Agreed,
But the frustrating part is that although all the evidence is there, why is no one up before a judge?
Not right.
Yep that be because your whole system is corrupt form the top down...
the only justice we'll ever see is at the end of a pitchfork.
Originally posted by Rockpuck
reply to post by Dbriefed
..Wow.. so much to be said. I think I could limit it to:
This is High Treason.
Originally posted by jude11
I want the pointy one!
I am actually excited to be existing at this point in history. Not just a spectator but soon as a contributor.