Quantitative Easing Explained. Fed Announces End of QE, But Is It?

mudwhistle

Diamond Member
Gold Supporting Member
Jul 21, 2009
130,401
66,635
2,645
Headmaster's Office, Hogwarts


Quantitative easing (QE) is an unconventional monetary policy used by central banks to stimulate the economy when standard monetary policy has become ineffective.[1][2][3] A central bank implements quantitative easing by buying specified amounts of financial assets from commercial banks and other private institutions, thus raising the prices of those financial assets and lowering their yield, while simultaneously increasing the monetary base.[4][5] This is distinguished from the more usual policy of buying or selling short-term government bonds in order to keep interbank interest rates at a specified target value.[6][7][8][9]

Expansionary monetary policy to stimulate the economy typically involves the central bank buying short-term government bonds in order to lower short-term market interest rates.[10][11][12][13] However, when short-term interest rates have reached or are close to reaching zero, this method can no longer work.[14] Quantitative easing may then be used by monetary authorities to further stimulate the economy by purchasing assets of longer maturity than short-term government bonds, and thereby lowering longer-term interest rates further out on the yield curve.[15][16]

Quantitative easing can be used to help ensure that inflation does not fall below target.[9] Risks include the policy being more effective than intended in acting against deflation (leading to higher inflation in the longer term, due to increased money supply),[17] or not being effective enough if banks do not lend out the additional reserves.[18] According to the International Monetary Fund and various economists, quantitative easing undertaken since the global financial crisis of 2007–08 has mitigated some of the adverse effects of the crisis.

Quantitative easing - Wikipedia the free encyclopedia


The Hawaiian Tropic Effect: Why the Fed's Quantitative Easing Isn't Over
By Peter Coy October 29, 2014
Update: As expected, the Federal Reserve confirmed on Wednesday that it would end its bond-buying program, and that it would keep interest rates low for a “considerable time.”

Today the Federal Open Market Committee under Chair Janet Yellen is expected to end the third phase of quantitative easing, which is economist lingo for the Federal Reserve’s purchases of bonds to lower long-term interest rates. (The Fed’s official term is large-scale asset purchases.) In the chart below, note the sharp growth in the Fed’s total assets when its first round of quantitative easing began.

Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

But quantitative easing is the gift that keeps on giving. Even after the purchases end, its effects will persist. How could that be? The Fed will still own all those bonds it bought, and according to the agency itself, it’s the level of its holdings that affects the bond market, not the rate of addition to those holdings. Having reduced the supply of bonds available on the market, the Fed has raised their price. Yields (i.e. market interest rates) go down when prices go up. So the effect of quantitative easing is to lower interest rates for things Americans actually care about, such as 30-year fixed-rate mortgages.

Story: What the Heck Is Japan's 'QQE2'?
Imagine that the Federal Reserve wants to increase the price of suntan lotion. There are 10 bottles of Hawaiian Tropic for sale at the cabana. The Fed buys one per hour until it owns nine. Each time it acquires one, the price for the remaining bottles rises because people who don’t want to get sunburned are competing for the dwindling supply. Now that just one bottle is left, the Fed stops buying. Would you expect the price of the last bottle to fall suddenly? No—there’s still lots of demand and constricted supply. Same with bonds. The price of bonds should stay high—and yields stay low—as long as the Fed hangs onto its huge inventory.

To mix metaphors, ending QE isn’t putting on the brakes. It’s just easing off the accelerator. The Fed’s bond holdings will naturally shrink as bonds come due; as new debt comes onto the market, the Fed’s portfolio will have less impact. For now, the Fed will continue to reinvest the proceeds back into other bonds. It says it won’t allow the portfolio to start shrinking until after it starts raising the short-term interest rate it controls, the federal funds rate. That’s likely to happen sometime in 2015, most economists expect.

The Fed s Quantitative Easing Is Not Really Ending - Businessweek



 
We will see if the Fed stops QE Many experts claim as soon as they do, the economy will collapse and descend into a new Great Depression.

Love those videos.
 
Last edited:
.

Yellen and the Fed want desperately to end it so that there would be fewer problems on the back end, but I'll guarantee you her finger will be on the trigger if the economy can't handle it.

There's still too much conflicting economic data, and they know it.

.
 
QE was reduced by 10 billion last december..I wonder what this December will hold..And to add that the increased money supply to banks does allow banks to be more aggressive when lending because of the deposits to assets ratio..
 

Forum List

Back
Top