Showing posts with label Federal Reserve. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Federal Reserve. Show all posts

2019-03-20

Federal Reserve Chairman's Press Conference LIVE Wednesday, March 20

FOMC Press Conference LIVE March 20, 2019, 2:30pm EDT

FOMC Press Conference LIVE March 20, 2019, at 2:30 pm EDT, with the Fed Chair, following FOMC Meeting associated with a Summary of Economic Projections. Summary: no rate-hikes in 2019, one rate-hike in 2020, and balance sheet normalization ends in September.

See also March 20, 2019 Balance Sheet Normalization Principles and Plans.

Domain: federalreserve.gov
Effective Federal Funds Rate--Above: Jul 1954 - Feb 2019
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) consists of twelve members--the seven members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; and four of the remaining eleven Reserve Bank presidents, who serve one-year terms on a rotating basis. The rotating seats are filled from the following four groups of Banks, one Bank president from each group: Boston, Philadelphia, and Richmond; Cleveland and Chicago; Atlanta, St. Louis, and Dallas; and Minneapolis, Kansas City, and San Francisco. Nonvoting Reserve Bank presidents attend the meetings of the Committee, participate in the discussions, and contribute to the Committee's assessment of the economy and policy options.
The FOMC holds eight regularly scheduled meetings per year. At these meetings, the Committee reviews economic and financial conditions, determines the appropriate stance of monetary policy, and assesses the risks to its long-run goals of price stability and sustainable economic growth.
2019 FOMC Members:
Alternate Members:

Fed Chairman Powell at FOMC Press Conference January 30, 2019

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2019-03-06

'Free Money' | Modern Monetary Theory a/k/a MMT Explained (video)

Bernie Sanders' 2016 Advisor On Trump's Economy And Modern Monetary Theory

CNBC video above published Mar 4, 2019: Modern Monetary Theory (MMT) is gaining traction in American politics, energizing the progressive left and roiling deficit hawks. Stephanie Kelton, who advised Bernie Sanders' 2016 presidential campaign, explains the basics.

2020 Election: She says Democrat presidential hopefuls are swinging for the fences with ambitious policy proposals while Trump appears to have changed his thinking on the deficit and debt since his 2016 run. On headwinds facing the economy, Kelton says she sees an "extraordinarily resilient" U.S. economy despite a "real" global slowdown and a small chance of additional rate hikes from the Fed.

Stephanie Kelton is a proponent of Modern Monetary Theory (MMT), the economic rational cited by rising political stars like Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez D-N.Y. She is currently a professor of public policy and economics at Stony Brook University. Previously, she served as chief economist for the Democrats on the U.S. Senate Budget Committee and was a senior economic advisor to Bernie Sanders ' 2016 presidential campaign.

Editor's note: key questions: what is your definition of "full employment"? What political system has the necessary discipline to apply the constraints required for an effective long-term MMT policy?

See also:
  • Paul Krugman Asked Me About Modern Monetary Theory. Here Are 4 Answers. Deficit levels, interest rates and the tradeoff between fiscal and monetary policy, by Stephanie Kelton, March 1, 2019--bloomberg.com
  • The left’s embrace of modern monetary theory is a recipe for disaster by Larry Summers--WashingtonPost.com.
  • Modern Monetary Nonsense, Mar 4, 2019, by Kenneth Rogoff: "... Contrary to widespread opinion, the US central bank is not an independent financial entity: the [U.S.] government owns it lock, stock, and barrel. Unfortunately, the Fed itself is responsible for a good deal of the confusion surrounding the use of its balance sheet. In the years following the 2008 financial crisis, the Fed engaged in massive “quantitative easing” (QE), whereby it bought up very long-term government debt in exchange for bank reserves, and tried to convince the American public that this magically stimulated the economy. QE, when it consists simply of buying government bonds, is smoke and mirrors ..."--project-syndicate.org.
  • Running on MMT (Wonkish)--Trying to get this debate beyond Calvinball by Paul Krugman--NYTimes.com.


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2018-12-19

Federal Reserve Chairman's Press Conference LIVE Wednesday, Dec 19

FOMC Press Conference LIVE December 19, 2018

"In view of realized and expected labor market conditions and inflation, the Committee decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate to 2-1/4 to 2-1/2 percent."--FOMC Press Release, Dec 19, 2018 (pdf). Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were: Jerome H. Powell, Chairman; John C. Williams, Vice Chairman; Thomas I. Barkin; Raphael W. Bostic; Michelle W. Bowman; Lael Brainard; Richard H. Clarida; Mary C. Daly; Loretta J. Mester; and Randal K. Quarles. See also Implementation Note issued December 19, 2018.

FOMC Meeting December 18-19. 2018The Federal Reserve's highly-anticipated December Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, Tuesday-Wednesday, December 18-19, 2018. Consensus of economists is that the Fed will raise interest rates by a quarter-point to a range of between 2.25% and 2.50% and that the Fed's closely-watched dot plot will indicate two rate hikes in 2019. Any indication of the Fed's plans for the future may have an even greater impact on markets and many analysts will closely follow the LIVE press conference of Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, at 2:30 p.m. EST, Dec 19, 2018. Fed drift” is a known market anomaly, where the S&P 500 often generates most of its annual return in the 3 days around Federal Reserve meetings.
On Monday, DoubleLine Capital CEO Jeff Gundlach told CNBC-TV that the Federal Reserve should not hike its benchmark overnight lending rate in December. "I think they shouldn't raise them this week. The bond market is basically saying, 'Fed you've got no way you should be raising interest rates,"  said Gundlach.
The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) consists of twelve members--the seven members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System; the president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York; and four of the remaining eleven Reserve Bank presidents, who serve one-year terms on a rotating basis. The rotating seats are filled from the following four groups of Banks, one Bank president from each group: Boston, Philadelphia, and Richmond; Cleveland and Chicago; Atlanta, St. Louis, and Dallas; and Minneapolis, Kansas City, and San Francisco. Nonvoting Reserve Bank presidents attend the meetings of the Committee, participate in the discussions, and contribute to the Committee's assessment of the economy and policy options.

The FOMC holds eight regularly scheduled meetings per year. At these meetings, the Committee reviews economic and financial conditions, determines the appropriate stance of monetary policy, and assesses the risks to its long-run goals of price stability and sustainable economic growth.

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell at his FOMC Press Conference September 26, 2018
2018 FOMC Committee Members:
Alternate Members:


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2018-11-29

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell's Full Speech Nov 28 on the US Economy

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell's Full Speech on the US Economy

Video above published Nov 28, 2018: Fed Chairman Jerome Powell spoke Nov 28, 2018, at the Economic Club of New York  (domain: econclubny.org) on the state of the U.S. economy and the pace of interest rates.

Jerome H. Powell took office as Chairman of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System on February 5, 2018, for a four-year term. Mr. Powell also serves as Chairman of the Federal Open Market Committee, the System's principal monetary policymaking body.

The stock market reacted very favorably to Chairman Powell's speech:


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2018-06-13

Federal Reserve FOMC Policy Meeting June 12-13, Interest Rate Hike

FOMC Press Conference

LIVE June 13, 2018, at 2:30pm EDT.

The Federal Reserve (federalreserve.gov) FOMC started its two-day policy meeting on Tuesday, and as expected announced another increase in near-term interest rates of 25 basis points [0.25%] on Wednesday, as well as release a Summary of Economic Projections. A press conference by the Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome H. Powell scheduled for Wednesday afternoon at approximately 2:30 pm EDT, LIVE here embed above.
The Fed - Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) | federalreserve.gov: 2018 Committee Members Jerome H. Powell, Board of Governors, Chairman; William C. Dudley, New York, Vice Chairman; Thomas I. Barkin, Richmond; Raphael W. Bostic, Atlanta; Lael Brainard, Board of Governors; Loretta J. Mester, Cleveland; Randal K. Quarles, Board of Governors; John C. Williams, San Francisco.

Compare the above rates with the European Central Bank(ECB) rates:

@FederalReserve


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2018-06-06

MacroView: US Trade Policy and US Interest Rates Impact Global Markets

US may prefer separate trade deals with Canada and Mexico

Financial Times (ft.com) video above published Jun 4, 2018: US President Donald Trump says he may prefer separate trade deals with Canada and Mexico rather than the North America Free Trade Agreement.

Editor's note: various factors may be differentiating the U.S. from global markets affected  by the Trump trade policy and Federal Reserve rate hikes--“The economic effect of a global trade war may be worse on Europe, Japan and China than they are on the U.S., and global equity investors have to put their money somewhere”--Why tech stocks give ‘an insulating force field’ to this market | MarketWatch.com: "The trade uncertainty also has helped squelch the 10-year Treasury yield supporting equities [U.S. stocks], according to Colas. And his fourth factor is that we [U.S.] might weather whatever comes better than other countries do."

Raghuram Rajan Says The U.S. Federal Reserve Will Stick To Its Pace Of Rate Of Hikes

BloombergQuint video published Jun 4, 2018: Former Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Raghuram Rajan* on emerging markets, U.S. Fed Reserve hikes and more: "unfortunately accidents can happen ... my worry is what you may think of as bargaining employees working out the art of the deal soon becomes hardened positions which become very difficult to back off and then you enter actual conflagration and that combined with the high degree of leverage and asset prices which are you know price to perfection that's the potent volatile combination."

*Dr. Rajan is currently the Katherine Dusak Miller Distinguished Service Professor of Finance at the University of Chicago Booth School of Business. He received his PhD from the MIT Sloan School of Management (1991).

He was the 23rd Governor of the Reserve Bank of India between September 2013 and September 2016. Between 2003 and 2006, Rajan was the Chief Economist and Director of Research at the International Monetary Fund. In 2015, during his tenure at the Indian Reserve Bank he also became Vice-Chairman of the Bank for International Settlements.

At the Federal Reserve annual Jackson Hole conference in 2005, Rajan warned about the growing risks in the financial system and proposed policies that would reduce such risks. Former U.S. Treasury Secretary Lawrence Summers called the warnings "misguided" and Rajan himself a "luddite". However, following the 2008 economic crisis, Rajan's views came to be seen as prescient and he was extensively interviewed for the Oscar-winning documentary Inside Job (2010).

Transcript (auto-generated)
00:00 [higher US interest rates] is my guess
00:03 unless something really untoward happens
00:05 in the global economy or in the US
00:08 economy which in the U.S. certainly
00:10 there's no sign that something is bad is
00:12 going to happen we will have a couple
00:15 more rate hikes after which the Fed will
00:18 look around and see well are we getting
00:20 close so round two point seven five [2.75] --
00:22 three [3.0] is approximately where it will
00:24 stop maybe one more next year and and
00:26 perhaps pause at that point say we're
00:28 closer to neutral than before and maybe
00:31 we have to see the consequences because
00:32 monetary policy has lags we've seen
00:36 around recently in emerging markets and
00:39 your successor Dr. Patel has come out
00:42 to say that you know the tapering pace
00:44 of the Fed is to blame for what receive
00:47 recently do you agree with the view well
00:49 I don't know that
00:53 these the liquidity in the financial
00:56 markets has disappeared as of now I
00:59 think Dr. Patel is raising a question
01:03 about going forward if there is a
01:04 substantial withdrawal of liquidity
01:06 whether in fact it causes markets to
01:09 tighten overly but my guess at this
01:11 point is the U.S. is focused on growth
01:15 of itse domestic economy and thinks that
01:18 inflation is pretty much where it wants
01:20 it to be and with labor markets below
01:23 what it thinks is consistent with full
01:25 employment that is at three point seven
01:28 this is a historic low [unemployment] that really
01:31 they're focused inwardly and unless
01:33 there's something big outside that
01:35 happens to knock them knock their sense
01:38 of what is going to happen in the US you
01:52 know you know in a world where countries
01:55 take full cognizance of the
01:56 international responsibilities one of
01:59 the things that I have been pressing for
02:01 is really the sense that the big central
02:04 banks should look at the consequences of
02:06 their actions also on other countries
02:08 that said I think emerging markets are
02:11in a much better situation today with a
02:14 few exceptions where you know finances
02:16 as well as politics or creating some
02:19 uncertainty amongst international
02:21 investors but I think broadly they're in
02:23 a much better situation than they were
02:25 say around
02:26 time of the people tantrum that is not
02:28 to say accidents cannot happen that's
02:30 agreed with a view of Jerome Powell who
02:32 said that emerging markets are in a good
02:35 position to navigate the shifts in US
02:37 policy when you talk about they are
02:39 exceptions which countries I would say
02:43 they're in a better position I think
02:45 there will be still stress for the
02:47 emerging markets and they will have to
02:48 cope with the rising dollar as well as
02:50 rising international interest rates as
02:52 well as the flow back of capital flows
02:55 which always happens at times like this
02:57 so there will be stresses of course if
03:00 you look around the world and you ask
03:01 which countries are already stressed you
03:03 would say Argentina is stressed and of
03:06 course Turkey is undergoing some stress
03:08 the central bank has raised interest
03:10 rates considerably as well as simplified
03:12 the interest rate structure I think in
03:15 countries looking forward because Italy
03:18 depending on what the government does
03:20 and how much it wants to break the
03:22 fiscal constraints that the [European] Union puts
03:26 on it and the euro area that's going to
03:29 be a place to watch Brazil where
03:31 elections are coming up and of course
03:34 Brazil has a medium-term fiscal problem
03:36 which needs to resolve by dealing
03:39 primarily with the pensions of public
03:42 sector employees that is going to face
03:44 the next presidents not going to happen
03:45 before there's going to be something the
03:47 next president will have to opine on
03:48 very quickly and that's something to
03:50 watch out for so there are countries
03:53 issues that they have to deal with as we
03:56 go forward
03:56 you didn't mention any of the emerging
03:58 markets in Asia well I think Asian
04:00 emerging markets are in a healthier
04:03 situation than in the past because of
04:06 fairly narrow current account deficits
04:10 very small fiscal deficits as well as
04:13 moderate inflation so there is more
04:16 confidence their currencies many of them
04:18 have moved to inflation targeting
04:19 regimes and there is a sense that you
04:22 know they're not gonna let inflation get
04:24 out of control so they are in a
04:26 different position again I would say
04:28 that Southen can get stressed at this
04:31 point I would say you know amongst the
04:34 big ones no clear and present danger you
04:37 talked about Italy and we saw the fall
04:39 out of Italy throughout the world
04:41 two months ago I met chief Christine
04:44 Lagarde did say that she was confident
04:46 the eurozone was on a sustainable path
04:48 of growth does Italy changed prospects
04:51 for eurozone well I think certainly the
04:54 advent of a populist government in Italy
04:57 we'll raise the questions that have been
04:59 raised and have been sort of have quiet
05:01 down which is what is the periphery
05:03 getting now in truth the periphery has
05:06 got a lot in terms of inheriting
05:09 credible monetary policy much lower
05:12 interest rates than they were used to
05:13 but at this point in a relative sense
05:16 when they look at the past they feel
05:20 that the exchange rate is stronger than
05:22 they would like and the benefits of low
05:25 interest rates are being subverted to
05:27 some extent by fears about the these
05:31 countries and the spreads are widening
05:34 so on the one hand we don't have as
05:36 flexible and exchange rate as we would
05:38 want on the other hand interest rates
05:40 are higher for us than we would like
05:42 relative to what they were in the past
05:45 and so our [Italian] firms are paying these higher
05:47 interest rates are not being able to
05:49 match competition from say Germany or
05:52 the Netherlands and so the core
05:54 periphery sort of divide is growing
05:57 again
05:57 I mean there is a dialogue to be had but
06:01 it is going to be a tough one
06:02 Italy is one challenge the other
06:04 challenge is trade US and after US and
06:08 China and of course US and its US steel
06:12 and aluminium tariffs is Asia most at
06:16 risk when it comes to concern about
06:18 protectionism well unfortunately
06:20 accidents can happen
06:22 and the world is not well prepared for
06:25 the entity at the center of the global
06:28 financial and monetary order and trade
06:31 order turning around and saying I don't
06:33 believe in all this I want to change
06:35 things now the system has been built by
06:38 the U.S. around the U.S.. and now the
06:40 U.S. actually doesn't believe in using
06:43 the multilateral system this is a very
06:46 big change and we're not prepared for it
06:48 now you would hope that good sense
06:51 prevails and some of what we see are
06:53 bargaining tactics rather than actual
06:57 threats which should be carried out the
06:59 problem of course is positions hardened
07:01 you make a threat somebody else makes
07:04 the counter threat soon you find you
07:06 cannot back off and then we get into
07:08 this is true of war it's true of trade
07:11 war and one of the big worries is that
07:13 threat something made left right and
07:15 center by so strong I would say largely
07:20 been strong men who want to be seen as
07:23 strong and the rule to back off is far
07:28 more limited
07:29 and every country with a democratic or
07:31 authoritarian essentially the
07:34 governments want to look strong so my
07:36 worry is what you may think of as
07:40 bargaining employees working out the art
07:43 of the deal soon becomes hardened
07:46 positions which become very difficult to
07:49 back off and then you enter actual
07:52 conflagration and that combined with the
07:55 high degree of leverage and asset prices
07:59 which are you know price to perfection
08:01 that's the potent volatile combination


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2018-03-21

Charles Schwab: The Fed Still A Long Way From Normalizing Interest Rates

UPDATE: FOMC Live Press Conference March 21, 2018
LIVE 2:30 pm EDT March 21, 2018

Federal Reserve Monetary Policy:

3/21/2018 Federal Reserve Board and Federal Open Market Committee release economic projections from the March 20-21 FOMC meeting

3/21/2018 Federal Reserve issues FOMC statement (0.25 increase), excerpt:
"In view of realized and expected labor market conditions and inflation, the Committee decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate to 1-1/2 to 1-3/4 percent. The stance of monetary policy remains accommodative, thereby supporting strong labor market conditions and a sustained return to 2 percent inflation."
The Fed is still a long way from normalizing interest rates says Charles Schwab:

FoxBusiness.com video above published Mar 16, 2018:  Charles Schwab Corporation founder Charles Schwab discusses the Fed, President Trump’s tariffs plan and the impact on the U.S. labor force.

NASDAQ Composite UP +6.68% this year (since close of trading in 2017).
The Fed | 2018 Meeting calendars and information:
March 20-21* -- March 21 at 2:30 p.m. EDT:  FOMC Meeting Press Conference
May 1-2
June 12-13*
Jul/Aug 31-1
September 25-26*
November 7-8
December 18-19*
*Meeting associated with a Summary of Economic Projections and a press conference by the Chair.

Chairman Powell Introduction Video

Federal Reserve Board video above published Feb 5, 2018. Chairman Powell's bio.


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2018-02-27

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell Testifies Before Congress Tuesday

Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will testify before the House Financial Services Committee on Tuesday, February 27 at 10:00 a.m. ET to deliver the Federal Reserve’s semi-annual Monetary Policy Report to Congress and to discuss the state of the economy.

"Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy"

Hearing entitled “Monetary Policy and the State of the Economy” | House Committee on Financial Services: Tuesday, February 27, 2018 10:00 am ET in 2128 Rayburn HOB (Full Committee)--Witness List: The Honorable Jerome H. Powell, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System.

Committee Memorandum (pdf) embed below:

Report embed below:

On Thursday March 1, 2018, 10:00 a.m. ET Fed Chair Powell testifies before Senate Banking Committee--The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress - Hearings - U.S. Senate Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban Affairs: "March 1, 2018 10:00 AM 538 Dirksen Senate Office Building,  hearing on “The Semiannual Monetary Policy Report to the Congress.” The witness will be: The Honorable Jerome H. Powell, Chairman, Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System."
See also:

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2018-01-04

Blackstone's Byron Wien's 10 Surprises for 2018 (video)

Blackstone's Byron Wien's 10 Surprises for 2018

Bloomberg.com video above published Jan 3, 2018: Blackstone (domain: blackstone.com) Vice Chairman of Private Wealth Solutions Byron Wien discusses the market, economic, and political surprises he sees coming in 2018. He speaks on "Bloomberg Markets."

 S&P 500
 Euro to USD


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2017-12-28

A Lesson in Money: Venezuelans Want U.S. Dollars NOT Cryptocurrency

The collapse of Venezuela, explained

Vox video above published Aug 25, 2017: Venezuela is in chaos, but its leaders aren't going anywhere. Discussion of currency issues begins about 4:30. [Correction at 1:58: the Supreme Court tried to strip the country’s National Assembly of its powers in March 2017 (not 2016)].

After a decade and a half of strict exchange controls in Venezuela, access to U.S. dollars has been severely limited. Nonetheless, a black market in the world's foremost hard currency has spread in response. Venezuela's oil revenues have declined due to mismanagement and the decline in the price of oil on the world markets. Venezuela’s economy is now in free-fall, a living laboratory of whether Bitcoin or any other cryptocurrency could fulfill the needs of the market and economy. In fact, Venezuela has a plan to introduce its own cryptocurrency.

Unfortunately for cryptocurrency fanatics, so far, Venezuelans are not seeking any cryptocurrency. Instead, the practice first adopted by gourmet and design stores in Caracas over the last couple of years to charge in U.S. dollars to a select group of expatriates or Venezuelans with access to the greenbacks, is fast spreading--Venezuelans scramble to survive as merchants demand dollars | reuters.com Dec 26, 2017: “There’s no point keeping bolivars.”

In fact, several countries use the U.S. dollar as their official currency, and in many others it is the de facto currency.

Definitions:
Cryptocurrency: "a digital currency in which encryption techniques are used to regulate the generation of units of currency and verify the transfer of funds, operating independently of a central bank."

Hard currency: "currency that is not likely to depreciate suddenly or to fluctuate greatly in value." Bitcoin and other "cryptocurrencies" are not "hard currency." The U.S. dollar is the world's foremost "hard currency."

Fiat money: "inconvertible paper money made legal tender by a government decree." Fiat (by government decree) currency was introduced as an alternative to commodity money and representative money.

Commodity money is "created from a good, often a precious metal such as gold or silver, which has uses other than as a medium of exchange (such a good is called a commodity). Representative money is similar to fiat money, but it represents a claim on a commodity (which can be redeemed to a greater or lesser extent)."

The circulating paper money of the U.S. consists of Federal Reserve Notes that are denominated only in United States dollars (12 U.S.C. § 418). Federal Reserve Notes are the only type of U.S. banknote currently produced. Federal Reserve Notes are authorized by Section 16 of the Federal Reserve Act of 1913 and are issued to the Federal Reserve Banks at the discretion of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System. The notes are then put into circulation by the Federal Reserve Banks, at which point they become liabilities of the Federal Reserve Banks and obligations of the United States. Federal Reserve Notes are legal tender, with the words "this note is legal tender for all debts, public and private" printed on each note. They have replaced United States Notes, which were once issued by the Treasury Department. Federal Reserve notes are backed by the assets of the Federal Reserve Banks, which serve as collateral under Section 16. Total assets of the U.S. Federal Reserve Banks as of Dec 20, 2017, were almost $4.5 trillion. There were approximately $1.55 trillion in Federal Reserve notes in circulation as of November 15, 2017.

If you've got it, flaunt it:
Why is the U.S. dollar in such demand in Venezuela?
  • The U.S. dollar (traded in paper money form solely by Federal Reserve Notes) is a "hard currency" and the world's most dominant reserve currency;
  • Unlike many other countries, the U.S. dollar has "never been devalued, and its notes have never been invalidated"--The US [Dollar] Will Remain the World's Reserve Currency | Investopedia.com;
  • U.S. dollars are easily exchanged for any other foreign currency and the U.S. dollar does not fluctuate greatly in value against a basket of other hard currencies.
  • U.S. is still the world's largest economy, with the world's largest military.
Also note the differences between hard currencies, like the U.S. dollar, and any cryptocurrency:
  • Cryptocurrency scams, frauds, and theft are rampant: 
Lesson: if you want to speculate or "gamble" in Bitcoin or other cryptocurrencies, do not do so under the delusion that any cryptocurrency outside the world's central banking system, will replace the U.S. dollar, or any other "hard currency," in the foreseeable future.
How To Protect Your Bitcoin From Hackers

CNBC.com video above published Dec 26, 2017:  CNBC's Seema Mody reports on bitcoin.

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DISCLAIMER

2017-12-13

Federal Reserve FOMC Interest Rates Announcement & Press Conference

FOMC Press Conference December 13, 2017:

LIVE Wednesday, Dec 13, 2017: Fed Chair Janet Yellen's FOMC press conference scheduled for 2:30 pm EST. Her previous FOMC Press Conference was September 20, 2017 (pdf), video available here.

UPDATE: The U.S. central bank--the Federal Reserve (domain: federalreserve.gov) or "the Fed"--started its two-day monetary policy meeting on Tuesday and its FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) and on Wednesday made its announcement on interest rates:
"The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System voted unanimously to raise the interest rate paid on required and excess reserve balances to 1.50 percent, effective December 14, 2017 ... Effective December 14, 2017, the Federal Open Market Committee directs the Desk to undertake open market operations as necessary to maintain the federal funds rate in a target range of 1-1/4 to 1-1/2 percent, including overnight reverse repurchase operations (and reverse repurchase operations with maturities of more than one day when necessary to accommodate weekend, holiday, or similar trading conventions) at an offering rate of 1.25 percent, in amounts limited only by the value of Treasury securities held outright in the System Open Market Account that are available for such operations and by a per-counterparty limit of $30 billion per day."--source: Dec 13 Implementation Note
Voting for the FOMC monetary policy action were Janet L. Yellen, Chair; William C. Dudley, Vice Chairman; Lael Brainard; Patrick Harker; Robert S. Kaplan; Jerome H. Powell; and Randal K. Quarles. Voting against the action were Charles L. Evans and Neel Kashkari, who preferred at this meeting to maintain the existing target range for the federal funds rate. Read more:
FOMC Statement: PDF | HTMLImplementation Note; Projection Materials PDF | HTML

Note: The Fed was expected to hike near-term interest rates, especially after last Friday's strong jobs report.

Roach: Fed Should Move Aggressively to Normalize Rates

Bloomberg.com video above published Dec 11, 2017: Stephen Roach, senior fellow at Yale University, discusses debt levels in Asia, including China, and his outlook for interest rate hikes from the Fed. He speaks on "Bloomberg Daybreak: Asia."

President Trump's nominee, Jerome Powell, will take over as Chair of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System at the end of Janet Yellen's term, subject to confirmation by vote of the full U.S. Senate. On December 5, 2017, the Senate Banking Committee approved Powell's nomination to be Fed Chair in a 22-1 vote, with Senator Elizabeth Warren casting the lone dissenting vote, and therefore his nomination is expected to be confirmed before the next meeting of the FOMC.

See also:
Fed Policy, Interest Rates and the FOMC:
"The term "monetary policy" refers to the actions undertaken by a central bank, such as the Federal Reserve, to influence the availability and cost of money and credit to help promote national economic goals. The Federal Reserve Act of 1913 gave the Federal Reserve responsibility for setting monetary policy.
"The Federal Reserve controls the three tools of monetary policy--open market operations, the discount rate, and reserve requirements. The Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System is responsible for the discount rate and reserve requirements, and the Federal Open Market Committee is responsible for open market operations. Using the three tools, the Federal Reserve influences the demand for, and supply of, balances that depository institutions hold at Federal Reserve Banks and in this way alters the federal funds rate. The federal funds rate is the interest rate at which depository institutions lend balances at the Federal Reserve to other depository institutions overnight.
"Changes in the federal funds rate trigger a chain of events that affect other short-term interest rates, foreign exchange rates, long-term interest rates, the amount of money and credit, and, ultimately, a range of economic variables, including employment, output, and prices of goods and services."--source: federalreserve.gov.

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2017-10-24

Political Economics: Technocracy, President Trump, and the Next Fed Chair

The MacroView from Three Perspectives:
Hawks and Doves: The Five Fed Chair Candidates. On Oct 23, 2017, President Trump said he was 
"very very close" to a decision on who would be the next Chair of The Federal Reserve.
1. Next Fed Chair (videos)
Powell Is a Force at the Federal Reserve, Says Wallace

Bloomberg.com video published Oct 23, 2017: Kim Wallace, head of Washington policy at Renaissance Macro Research (domain: renmac.com), examines the leading contenders to be Federal Reserve Chairman and the warning from Billionaire Ray Dalio for the Fed to watch a U.S. economic divide. He speaks on "Bloomberg Markets" on October 23rd.

DomainMondo.com's prediction: Trump will pick Powell to be Fed Chair. Trump's Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin has reportedly recommended Powell privately to Trump.

A Powell, Taylor Fed Hawkish to Markets, Says Zentner

Bloomberg.com video above published Oct 23, 2017: Ellen Zentner, chief U.S. economist at Morgan Stanley and Steve Barrow, head of FX strategy at Standard Bank, examine what a combination of John Taylor and Jerome Powell on the Federal Reserve could mean to markets. They speak on "Bloomberg Daybreak: Americas."

What's at stake?
"Whereas Janet Yellen, Bernanke’s successor, ended the Fed’s Q.E. program in 2014, the European Central Bank Chairman Mario Draghi’s version of it is still going, which has led to the “manipulation” that so concerns Jeffrey Gundlach. European interest rates “should be much higher than they are today,” Gundlach has said, “. . . [and] once Draghi realizes this, the order of the financial system will be turned upside down and it won’t be a good thing. It will mean the liquidity that has been pumping up the markets will be drying up in 2018 . . . Things go down. We’ve been in an artificially inflated market for stocks and bonds largely around the world.”"
2. Political Economics by Jeffrey P. Snider | AlhambraPartners.com 20 Oct 2017, excerpt: "Who President Trump ultimately picks as the next Federal Reserve Chairman doesn’t really matter. Unless he goes really far afield to someone totally unexpected, whoever that person will be will be largely more of the same .... Trump’s candidacy, as Bernie Sanders’, as an ideal was a grave threat to the status quo because it started with the premise that, no, this isn’t as good as it can be and that we need to look for real solutions. Whether he forwards that ideal as President is and has been another matter, and who he picks as Fed Chair might be some small indication of where he currently stands consistent with that idea, or perhaps having second thoughts about it. The technocracy doesn’t work because it isn’t technically competent (thus 2008).

"That’s the real political debate in 2017 and going forward; technical incompetence where the defense of the technocracy refuses to even allow the suggestion that this might be true. I go back to Weimar Germany not because I expect a global hyperinflationary breakdown, but in how that one particular form of systemic breakdown exposed timeless flaws inherent in all economic and financial systems. They all run to some extent on trust and (good) faith:
"In other words, German monetary officials, particularly Reichsbank head Rudolf von Havenstein and Minister of Finance Karl Helfferich, denied that Germany had an inflation problem at all – right up until the end. Minister Helfferich declared that Germany had better gold coverage after the war than before it, despite that more than quadrupling of currency volume. One economics professor, Julius Wolf, wrote in 1922 that, “in proportion to the need, less money circulates in Germany now than before the war.”
"As much as the easy-to-see Versailles excuse played a part, there can be no doubt that beyond 1921 the German people themselves began to recognize that authorities had no idea what they were doing; worse, they came to see that even though policymakers were inept and incompetent, officials themselves would never admit as much and thus nothing would prevent Germany from its fate. That awakening meant an increase in danger that French occupation could never have unleashed on its own."
Hat Tip: ZeroHedge.com

3. QT: Quantitative Tightening and the Fed:
Investors Ignore What May Be The Biggest Policy Error In History | Mauldin Economics (excerpt):
"... The chart ... shows the growing uncertainty over the future direction of monetary policy, is both terrifying and enlightening. The Federal Reserve, and indeed the ECB and the Bank of Japan, went to great lengths to assure us that the massive amounts of QE that they pushed into the market would help turn the markets and the economy around. Now they are telling us that as they take that money back off the table, they will have no effect on the markets. And all the data that I just presented above tells us that investors are simply shrugging their shoulders at what is roughly called “quantitative tightening,” or QT. I simply don't buy the notion that QE could have had such an effect on the markets and housing prices while QT will have no impact at all. In the 1930s, the Federal Reserve grew its balance sheet significantly. Then they simply left it alone, the economy grew, and the balance sheet became a nonfactor in the following decades. I don’t know why today’s Fed couldn’t do the same thing. There really is no inflation to speak of, except asset price inflation, and nobody really worries about that. We all want our stocks and home prices to go up, so there’s no real reason for the central bank to lean against inflationary fears; and raising rates and doing QT at the same time seems to me to be taking a little more risk than necessary. And they’re doing it in the midst of the greatest bull market in complacency to emerge in my lifetime. Do they think that taking literally trillions of dollars off their balance sheet over the next few years is not going to have a reverse effect on asset prices? Or at least some effect? Is it really worth the risk?..."

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2017-03-15

LIVE Video Replay: March 15 Federal Reserve FOMC Press Conference

FOMC Press Conference March 15, 2017, 2:30pm ET

Video above published March 15, 2017, by the U.S. Federal Reserve. Chair of the Federal Reserve Board of Governors is Janet Yellen.

On March 15th, the FOMC raised the interest rate by 25 BPS as expected. Federal Open Market Committee statement--excerpt: "In view of realized and expected labor market conditions and inflation, the Committee decided to raise the target range for the federal funds rate to 3/4 to 1 percent. The stance of monetary policy remains accommodative, thereby supporting some further strengthening in labor market conditions and a sustained return to 2 percent inflation."
Graphic: DJIA and S&P500 closed UP Wednesday after FOMC Rate Hike
DJIA and S&P500 closed UP Wednesday after FOMC Rate Hike
FRB: Monetary Policy"Federal Open Market Committee Monetary policy is made by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC), which consists of the members of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System and five Reserve Bank presidents. The FOMC holds eight regularly scheduled meetings during the year, and other meetings as needed."
Fed Statement Tracker | WSJ.com: The Federal Reserve releases a statement at the conclusion of each of its policy-setting meetings, outlining the central bank’s economic outlook and the actions it plans to take. Pundits and traders parse the changes between statements closely to see how policy makers’ views are evolving. Use the tool at the link above to compare any two statements since 2007.
@FederalReserve #FOMC:


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