Tuesday, November 4, 2008

"I still see inflation as the bigger risk. "

Excellent post on News N Economics:

"The Fed’s liquidity measures have become an obsession of mine; I am simply befuddled about the the massive liquidity injections that the Fed has undertaken to try and unclog a stopped-up banking system. Banks are sitting on the new funds and holding them as excess reserves; however, interbank lending has not come to a grinding halt because the Fed has injected $1 trillion into the banking system over the last year. But that's not the only reason: the re-distribution of funds across the regional Federal reserve banks indicates that there will always be a positive demand for interbank (overnight) funds."

Please read the whole post. Here's where I really agree:

"The Fed is smashed between a rock and a hard place; its massive liquidity injections still have not penetrated the brick wall of term lending. Overnight lending is flowing, but in order for the real economy to function, term lending must flow as well. Its various funding facilities for money market and commercial paper are a good start, but until these funds flow to the real economy, the credit crisis will continue. And each week that the credit crisis continues, the risks to the real economy grow.

I still see inflation as the bigger risk. Eventually the banking system will unclog, and the funds will flow. I believe that a signal that lending is clearing up again will be when markets price in the risk of inflation."

I see inflation as the looming problem as well.

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