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Post# of 42555
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Re: Capitalist post# 5987

Wednesday, 01/03/2007 11:22:44 PM

Wednesday, January 03, 2007 11:22:44 PM

Post# of 42555
In order to get the TOTAL picture of the money supply you absolutely need the M3 which is no longer available since March 23, 2006

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Money_supply
M3: M2 + all other CDs, deposits of eurodollars and repurchase agreements.

Also see this interesting article:
http://bigpicture.typepad.com/comments/2005/11/money_supply_an.html
Repurchase agreements (RPs or Repos) are not known value anymore!
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Repurchase_agreement

The band of crooks that the government is uses REPOS to create money out of thin air and thus diluting the money supply.

Sadly you will have a very important UNKNOWN variable in your formula that will basically make it worthless.

I will say it again! Bunch of fracking crooks!

"The Federal Reserve creates credit through its open market operations like REPOS and coupon passes. If the Fed wants to inject liquidity (credit) into the system, they simply call up large broker dealers and buy some of their bonds with credit they create out of thin air (this expands their balance sheet). The dealer then passes this credit on to "the market" by making loans to mortgage companies or margin accounts or whatever. Because each layer of lender is only required to keep marginal capital on hand, a $1 billion REPO done by the Fed eventually creates as much as $100 billion in new credit to the consumer.

"That credit creates the liquidity for additional consumption in the U.S., but these days we are buying our stuff from China (other countries too but we will just say China to make it easy). When a Chinese company receives dollars in trade, this normally would drive up U.S. interest rates: the company goes to the central bank of China to exchange Yuan for dollars; the central bank of China would normally sell those dollars into the currency market for Yuan thus driving up U.S. interest rates. But in our world of today these dollars are being sterilized: the central bank of China prints the Yuan to give to the company and takes the dollars and buys U.S. securities.

"It is not the excess savings of Chinese investors that are buying U.S. securities. It is central banks creating credit themselves to buy those securities. The tick data that measure foreign inflows of money does not distinguish between private investors and central banks going through brokers to buy U.S. securities. We believe that as much as 90% of foreign money buying U.S. securities (not just Treasury bonds, but corporate bonds, mortgages, and yes, stocks) is not private investment, but central banks.

"In order for other central banks like China's to print the Yuan necessary, they too must create credit. Public debt in Asian countries is expanding as a result and creating worries: this is why Thailand came out essentially raising margin requirements to reduce speculation that is occurring as a result. Notice how they were quickly slapped down by their trading partners who do not want to rock the boat at this time.

"This situation is very unstable in the long run. The Federal Reserves' balance sheet this year alone has expanded by $30 billion in this way and created $3.5 trillion of new credit in the U.S. Public debt around the world is growing exponentially and total debt in the U.S. now stands at nearly 3.6 times GDP (1929 was 2.8 times).


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