P3ter_Griffin
Member
- Joined
- Jan 4, 2012
- Messages
- 1,979
It is my understanding that the Fed, in setting a .25% interest rate target, will buy the bonds necessary to do so. And then QE is $85Bln a month on top of that for purchasing bonds and MBS from banks.
On a CCTV program today I heard QE described as what central banks do when manipulating bond rates to zero doesn't work.
So I asked John Kicklighter about this today and it seems like my understanding is incorrect.
Me:
If QE ends, fed will still buy bonds as needed to keep .25% interest rate, right? So fed balance sheet may not flat-line?
Him:
They don't need to purchase assets to manipulate the benchmark rate. They simply set it. QE and rate level are separate.
So, by keeping the benchmark rate low they will still provide arbitrage opportunities to institutions who can borrow from the fed, i.e. borrow at .25% and invest in Tbills at 2% (or whatever rate is prevailing), but I've come to see and agree with what you (devil21) are saying; that if the fed is no longer willing to purchase bonds from the banks, and the banks can get higher returns elsewhere, it would make sense that they'd move the money they are borrowing at .25% away from treasuries and into higher yielding investments.
I still can't see how they'd try to justify continuing QE (not that our politicians make them), but at the same time I realize they will do anything to keep Tbill rates from rising. I'm intrigued to see what happens next.