tyb
WING44 C-560 ne from Dobbins ARB
_09-0017 C-32A back in the air from Eastern West Virginia Regional Airport sw
SAM647 G5 ne from Tampa Executive Airport and hugging the coast
Fed’s Powell Tells Reporters Fed Has Only “Lending Powers” – So How Does It Own $5.5 Trillion of Securities?
Fed Chairman Jerome Powell had one focus and one focus only at yesterday’s press conference. That was to come across as the epitome of prudence and law-abiding virtue. Unfortunately, the cold, hard facts on the ground keep getting in the way of that narrative.
Powell first read an opening statement which included this rather remarkable statement about the trillions of dollars in emergency funding facilities that the Fed has already rolled out, or plans to roll out, to bail out Wall Street’s excesses:
“Many of these programs rely on emergency lending powers that are available only in unusual circumstances such as those we find ourselves in today. We are deploying these lending powers to an unprecedented extent, enabled in large part by the financial backing and support from Congress and the Treasury…I would stress that these are lending powers and not spending powers. The Fed cannot grant money to particular beneficiaries. We can only make loans to solvent entities, with the expectation that the loans will be repaid.”
The truth of the matter is that the Fed has adopted the mindset of Wall Street: it’s legal if you can get away with it. The Fed didn’t start its emergency programs as a result of the coronavirus COVID-19 pandemic as Powell suggests in the statement above. It started these programs on September 17, 2019 – three months before the first case of the virus had been announced anywhere in the world. That emergency action occurred when Wall Street banks refused to lend to each other in the repo loan market – just as they had in the financial panic of 2008.
The Fed didn’t officially invoke the emergency lending section of the Federal Reserve Act known as 13(3) for its repo loans, it simply made more than $9 trillion in super cheap loans to the trading houses of Wall Street over the next six months and refused to provide the names of the firms to whom the money went, leaving the public and shareholders in the dark as to what firm(s) was in trouble and getting a bailout.
Powell next told reporters yesterday that the Fed has only “lending powers and not spending powers.” Powell was attempting to appease academics, think tank scholars and media critics who believe it is violating the Federal Reserve Act and usurping the spending role of an elected Congress by buying up trillions of dollars in bonds.
It’s pretty silly for Powell to attempt to float the illusion that the Fed is adhering to its mandated role as just a lender-of-last-resort when its own balance sheet shows that, as of last Wednesday, it owns the following: $3.9 trillion in Treasury securities and $1.6 trillion in Mortgage-Backed Securities which it has purchased outright with money it creates out of thin air.
Securities owned outright by the Fed now make up 83 percent of its $6.6 trillion balance sheet. That doesn’t sound like a central bank that understands that it is just a lender-of-last-resort and has no spending powers.
In addition, since the Fed’s Commercial Paper Funding Facility (CPFF) was announced on March 23, it has purchased $2.7 billion of commercial paper, according to its latest balance sheet.
And really making waves are the Fed’s imminent plans to purchase outright upwards of $500 billion in corporate bonds, including junk bonds and junk bond ETFs (Exchange Traded Funds), under new facilities known as the Primary Market Corporate Credit Facility and the Secondary Market Corporate Credit Facility.
The sleight of hand that the Fed is using to pretend that it’s only lending money under its emergency 13(3) powers is its creation, via the New York Fed, of Special Purpose Vehicles (SPVs) as Limited Liability Corporations (LLCs). The New York Fed loans the money to the SPV it created and then that entity does the actual buying of the bonds or commercial paper.
Powell also inferred in his statement yesterday that the Fed’s massive Wall Street bailout programs had the “financial backing and support from Congress and the Treasury.” They may have the support of the former foreclosure king and Goldman Sachs banker Steve Mnuchin who failed up to become President Trump’s U.S. Treasury Secretary, but there is nothing in the CARES Act legislation to suggest that Congress has given the green light to the Fed becoming a junk bond market maker on Wall Street.
https://wallstreetonparade.com/2020/04/feds-powell-tells-reporters-fed-has-only-lending-powers-so-how-does-it-own-5-5-trillion-of-securities/
moar here and a history lesson on the FRBNY's Maiden Lane programs that bailed out : Bear Stearns, AIG, and the counter-parties that held the issues connected to it.
and see this from the FRBNY
Maiden Lane Transactions
https://www.newyorkfed.org/markets/maidenlane.html
Brazilian AF PAAF011 C-130 Hercules ne from Baltimore Int'l BWI