The Banker
Diamond Member
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- Banned
- #161
And they are not selling the bonds back, they are:Here we go with your BS again.So you are ready to admit you are wrong when you said they are selling the bonds back, as they are clearly keeping them on their balance sheet!!!! Somehow I doubt it. Because you repeatedly, and stupidly, kept saying they sell them back they sell them back, not understanding that they were keeping the treasury bonds on their balance sheet. I can bring up you post and your exact words if I need to.
Again explain to us what the difference is between an OMO and QE, which you still haven't done.
And show us where QE is defined by where our interest rates are.
So you are ready to admit you are wrong when you said they are selling the bonds back,
Fed Pumps $70.1 Billion in One-Day Liquidity Into Financial Markets
Is the Fed selling back these $70.1 billion?
Again explain to us what the difference is between an OMO and QE, which you still haven't done.
Did you see a difference at the Fed link I provided?
And show us where QE is defined by where our interest rates are.
Sure. As soon as you show where rates were during any QE.
Debating you is like debating a child because when you get caught telling lies you try and change the subject.
No the fed is not selling back the $60B a month in treasuries that it is buying for the next 6 months. You stupidly tried to claim they were and are completely wrong, and now you can't admit it!!!
In early October, the Fed also said it would start expanding its balance sheet again via around $60 billion a month in Treasury bill purchases, hoping the addition of permanent liquidity would allow it to back away from large temporary interventions.
Thank you for proving my point.
And no it is not in your Fed link, explain to us the difference between an OMO and QE.
Fed Pumps $70.1 Billion in One-Day Liquidity Into Financial Markets
Is the Fed selling back these $70.1 billion?
The Fed is using temporary operations to tamp down any possible wild moves, while purchasing Treasury bills to build up reserves in the banking system. It hopes that by buying Treasury bills, the central bank will be able to cut back on repo interventions at the start of next year.
The FED is is expanding its balance sheet by more than $60B a month for 6 months, QE. So you are wrong when you say they are "selling the bonds back"
And no it is not in your Fed link, explain to us the difference between an OMO and QE.
you have yet to do this, because you can't.
And provide a link that says QE is defined by where our interest rates are, you are avoinding my questions.
So yes, one day liquidity is reversed when the Fed sells the bonds back?
In early October, the Fed also said it would start expanding its balance sheet again via around $60 billion a month in Treasury bill purchases, hoping the addition of permanent liquidity would allow it to back away from large temporary interventions.
So thank you for just proving my point and showing you are wrong. I have pointed this out to you 100 times and you keep ignoring it because you can't admit you are wrong.
Now explain to us the difference between an OMO and QE, which you can't seem to be able to do...
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