"Asset purchase programs Update
Thursday, April 23, 2009
The Fed has been busy these last few weeks, acquiring its promised agency MBS in large quantities and jumpstarting its Treasury purchase program. By my calculations, total government asset accumulation totals $572 billion to date.
- The Fed purchased $381 billion in agency MBS at roughly $30 billion a week (since the announcement to purchase an extra $750 billion in agency-backed MBS on March 18). At this rate, the Fed will buy the announced $1.25 trillion by December 2009.
- The Fed acquired $65.2 billion in Treasuries bonds and notes, and $1.5 billion in TIPS since March. The Fed is buying the full length of the yield curve, maturity dates from 2009-2039. Interestingly, the Fed purchased TIPS last week. To me, further acquisition of TIPS would signal the Fed’s upward inflation bias – pulling out later than earlier.
- The Treasury continues its smaller but still active MBS purchase program, holding $124.3 billion as of March 2009. The Treasury’s flow of MBS is reported only monthly and at a lag, so it may be holding more.
In reality, the deflationary (disinflationary) scenario that is typical of a recession of this magnitude makes the > $1.55 trillion Fed and Treasury asset purchase programs (MBS and Treasuries) more like insurance against rising real rates than true stimulus in the housing market, and fiscal measures are key. It seems that the fiscal stimulus will provide a floor under the economy, so that with stable real mortgage rates and record price declines, home sales have a real chance of bottoming in a few months, if they have not already.
Rebecca Wilder"


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