Author Topic: Federal Reserve bailing out Europe's debt?  (Read 570 times)

Soul Crusher

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Federal Reserve bailing out Europe's debt?
« on: September 16, 2011, 10:46:25 AM »
Federal Reserve boosts flow of dollars to European Central Bank (Hey, What could go wrong?)
Washington Post ^ | 09/16/2011 | By Neil Irwin and Michael Birnbaum




Worried that a mounting debt crisis in Europe could trip up the global economy, the Federal Reserve opened its vault Thursday to the central banks of other countries in an effort to head off a crippling shortage of dollars.

The main recipient of the Fed’s money is the European Central Bank, which will in turn extend dollar loans to banks in the nations that use the euro currency. Those banks do significant business in dollars, for instance making loans to customers operating around the world, and have been finding it harder to raise dollars from anxious investors.

The initiative, which entails temporarily swapping dollars for foreign currencies, also involves the central banks of Britain, Switzerland and Japan, underlining the extent of international concern about Europe’s deteriorating financial system. By tapping the Fed for dollars, the other central banks are taking advantage of long-standing arrangements, first put in place four years ago at the outset of the global financial crisis to prevent bank lending from freezing up.

Global stock markets surged on the news of this coordinated response by some of the world’s leading central banks. The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index in the United States rose 1.7 percent Thursday, and the German stock market closed up 3.2 percent. Asian markets rose in early Friday trading, with Japan’s Nikkei 225 index up 1.7 percent at midday. The value of the euro currency rose on greater optimism that the European debt crisis can be resolved.

At the heart of Europe’s financial problems are the hundreds of billions of dollars in risky government bonds held by the banks. Those bonds were issued by cash-strapped governments, like those of Greece and Portugal, and if they default, the banks could face massive losses.


(Excerpt) Read more at washingtonpost.com ...


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Soul Crusher

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Re: Federal Reserve bailing out Europe's debt?
« Reply #1 on: September 16, 2011, 12:43:35 PM »

Unelected, Unaccountable, Unrepentant: The Federal Reserve To Bail Out European Banks
The Economic Collapse ^ | 9-16-11 | Staff


For a moment, imagine that there is a privately-owned organization in the United States that can create U.S. dollars out of thin air whenever it wants and can loan that money to whoever it wants to. Imagine that this organization is able to act with the full power of the U.S. government behind it, but that nobody in the organization is ever elected by the American people, and that for all practical purposes the organization is not accountable to the president or to Congress. Imagine that the organization is able to make trillions of dollars of secret loans to banks, to foreign governments and even to their close friends without ever having to face a comprehensive audit. Does that sound preposterous? Well, such an organization actually exists. It is called the Federal Reserve, and today we found out that once again the Fed is going to be taking huge piles of your money and loaning it to commercial banks in Europe. The Congress cannot overrule this decision. Neither can Barack Obama. Because it has so much power, many refer to the Federal Reserve as "the fourth branch of government", but unlike the other three branches of government, there are basically no significant "checks and balances" on the Federal Reserve. If you don't like the fact that the Federal Reserve is racing in to help big foreign banks survive the European debt crisis that is just too bad. The Federal Reserve pretty much gets to do whatever it wants to do, and the folks over at the Fed simply do not care whether you like that or not.

So what in the world just happened today? The following is how an article on CNBC explained it....


(Excerpt) Read more at theeconomiccollapseblog. com ...


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Soul Crusher

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Re: Federal Reserve bailing out Europe's debt?
« Reply #2 on: September 16, 2011, 02:41:39 PM »
US taxpayers could be on hook for Europe bailoutBy John W. Schoen, Senior Producer
The U.S. is coming to Europe's financial rescue.




So far, America's role is fairly limited. But if the crisis continues to grow and the U.S. takes on a wider role, U.S. consumers and taxpayers could feel a bigger impact. The biggest exposure could come from America's status as the single largest source of money for the International Monetary Fund.

The latest round of American financial assistance came Thursday with a promise by the Federal Reserve to swap as many dollars for euros as European bankers need. In the short run, those transactions won't have much impact because the central banks are simply swapping currencies of equal value. If the move helps avert a wider crisis, it could help spare the global economy from another recession.

But over the long term, consumers could feel the impact of central bankers flooding the financial system with cash, according to John Ryding, chief economist at RDQ Economics.

"This is a lender of last resort function," he told CNBC. "With the dollar injections that the Fed has done, it's like giving a patient medicine with really bad side effects."  Ryding said the bad side effect in the U.S. has been inflation, which has picked up to 3.8 percent year over year.

Fed policymakers meet next week to decide whether the flagging U.S. economy needs another round of easy-money measures that could include buying more Treasury bonds to push more cash into the financial system.

So far, no one has floated publicly the idea of the U.S underwriting a broader bailout of the European financial system. But Senate Republicans have already voiced concerns over such a move.

"Our concern is that innocent American taxpayers will pay for yet another bailout -- this time to one or several countries whose spending and debt choices led them to financial calamity,” Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and seven other Republican senators wrote in a letter to Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner in June.

The source of the senators' concern is an emergency provision, approved by the Group of 20 industrialized nations in 2009, granting the IMF broad powers to expand its lending authority. That could leave American taxpayers on the hook for any IMF loans that later go bad.

In July, Geithner sought to reassure the senators that won't happen.

"The United States has never experienced a loss on its IMF commitments," Geithner wrote. "The IMF's claims are recognized by Europe to stand ahead of all others. This, along with the IMF's strong financial resources, provides further assurance that our claims on the fund are secure."

On Friday, Geithner made an unprecedented trip to meet with European officials who are wrestling with the creation of a bailout fund similar to the U.S. government response to the Panic of 2008. With European Union leaders deadlocked for over a year, Geithner, one of the architects of the U.S. financial bailout in 2008, urged the group to move more aggressively to solve a widening debt crisis that threatens to send the world back into recession.

advertisementInvestors have become increasingly worried that a $740 billion euro EU bailout fund isn't big enough to cope with potential losses if Greece and other countries default on their debts, wiping out those assets held by European banks. With richer countries like Germany and France unwilling to commit more funds, Geithner wants the Europeans to boost the existing bailout fund's firepower. One idea would be to use the money just to guarantee losses from bond defaults rather than buying up the bonds themselves.

European officials are running out of ideas. This week, German Chancellor Angela Merkel shot down the idea of a unified Euro bond that would be substituted for the debt issued by individual nations. 

After a year and half of failed attempts at a solution, the world economy has entered a “dangerous new phase” IMF Managing Director Christine Lagarde said in a Washington speech Thursday.

So far, the IMF has played a supporting role in a "troika" of agencies working to head off a Greek default that include the European Central Banks and the European Union. With Greece approaching a cash squeeze at the end of this month, those agencies are demanding deeper "austerity" measures - budget cuts of higher taxes - before releasing those funds.

As the largest shareholder, the United States provides the biggest single source of funding to the IMF. The ownership stake also gives the U.S. veto power over IMF funding decisions. Geithner is a member of the IMF board of governors. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is an alternate governor.

IMF funding requires congressional approval. But following the financial crisis of 2008, the Group of 20 countries approved a plan to give the IMF emergency borrowing authority, a program known as New Arrangements for Borrowing, which tripled the IMF's lending authority to $750 billion. The borrowing authority is set to expire in November.

Here is the latest on the crisis from CNBC's Michelle Caruso-Cabrera in Wroclaw, Poland:

http://bottomline.msnbc.msn.com/_news/2011/09/16/7795342-us-taxpayers-could-be-on-hook-for-europe-bailout


Fury

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Re: Federal Reserve bailing out Europe's debt?
« Reply #3 on: September 16, 2011, 04:14:54 PM »
All while getting scolded by the EU today. Funny how that works out. They talk shit to our face while at the same time they're all crawling up to the FED to get as many dollars as they can because the American firms stopped lending to them and their facing a massive liquidity freeze.

Fucking Eurotrash and their failed socialist states bringing everything down with them.

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Fury

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Re: Federal Reserve bailing out Europe's debt?
« Reply #5 on: September 18, 2011, 07:54:43 PM »
Lot of murmurs saying Greece finally defaults on Tuesday. Whether the EU pulls another rabbit out of its hat or lets it happen on Tuesday is the question.

These Eurotrash socialist shitholes amaze me. Not only do we pay for their defense costs while they still manage to bankrupt themselves but now we're sitting here taking on their debt because they're completely broke.

Time to kill the EU and let these countries fade back into irrelevancy.