Morning Report – Retail Sales impress 05/13/13

Vital Statistics:

  Last Change Percent
S&P Futures  1627.3 -2.3 -0.14%
Eurostoxx Index 2776.9 -8.4 -0.30%
Oil (WTI) 95.43 -0.6 -0.64%
LIBOR 0.275 0.000 0.00%
US Dollar Index (DXY) 83.31 0.165 0.20%
10 Year Govt Bond Yield 1.94% 0.04%  
Current Coupon Ginnie Mae TBA 104.8 -0.4  
Current Coupon Fannie Mae TBA 102.8 -0.3  
RPX Composite Real Estate Index 196.3 0.5  
BankRate 30 Year Fixed Rate Mortgage 3.58    

Markets are slightly lower after vaulting to new heights last week. Earnings season is largely over; the only ones left are the retailers who start reporting this week. We will hear from Wal Mart and Kohls later this week. Bonds and MBS continue to sell off – the 30 year fixed rate mortgage closed the week at 3.58% after bottoming at 3.4% a week and a half ago.

Does the back up in bond yields mean the refi boom is over? Perhaps. At any rate, since we have been in this range of interest rates for so long, the people who have the ability to refinance already have. This is called prepayment burnout. Now, it will take home price appreciation to drive refinances. That said, there is talk of a HARP 3.0, which would allow late 2009 and 2010 vintage underwater mortgages to refinance, and there is talk that the government may allow people who have already refinanced under HARP to do so again.  New government initiatives may help keep the refi boom alive for a little bit longer.

Retail sales increased .1% in April, higher than the -.3% estimate. The movement of the Easter holiday played some role in the increase. Ex autos and gasoline, the increase was .6%. Gasoline is usually stripped out, because simple price changes can move the index. Joseph H Banks (JOSB) missed earnings estimates this morning. It is an old saw that in weak economic times, the only apparel that is purchased is children’s clothing. As the economy improves, women’s apparel starts to pick up, and when the economy really starts heating up, men’s suits start being purchased. We’ll get a read on women’s apparel when Nordstrom reports on Thursday. Bonds sold off on the retail sales number, although equities didn’t really react.

I said it on Friday and I’ll say it again. This Obama / IRS thing could be market negative in a lot of ways – first, if there is something there, it will inevitably cause marginal foreign investment money to flee the dollar, which is equity negative. Plus it will make the debt ceiling negotiations all that more acrimonious. With the S&P 500 at record highs, it is worth bearing this in mind. You could also see a serious snap-back rally in the bond market.

43 Responses

  1. Stiglitz jumps on the bandwagon:

    “Interest rates on federal Stafford loans were set to double in July, to 6.8 percent. Good news came on Friday: it appears that there is a temporary reprieve, as Republicans have come around. But the stay would be temporary and would not address a more fundamental issue: if the Federal Reserve is willing to lend to the banks that caused the crisis at just 0.75 percent, shouldn’t it be willing to lend to students, who will be crucial to our long-term recovery, at an appropriately low rate? The government shouldn’t be profiting from our poorest while subsidizing our richest. A proposal by Senator Elizabeth Warren, Democrat of Massachusetts, for lower student-loan interest rates is a step in the right direction.”

    http://opinionator.blogs.nytimes.com/2013/05/12/student-debt-and-the-crushing-of-the-american-dream/?ref=opinion

    This is what happens when the government gets into the loan business. Suddenly everyone is entitled to .75 percent interest rates.

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    • jnc:

      Stiglitz jumps on the bandwagon:

      WTF….now Stiglitz. Ironic that he accuses bankers of “preying especially on those who are financially unsophisticated” since that is precisely what he was doing throughout that column. The level of dishonesty is depressing.

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  2. The first part is decent, but he excludes various actors from the discussion for political reasons. Given the current structure of the student loans, blaming “bankers” and for profit colleges for the problem but omitting any mention of the Federal government’s and traditional universities’ roles in the increasing tuition and subsequent rise in student loan debt crosses the line into intellectual dishonesty.

    The Elizabeth Warren proposal and it’s growing list of adherents does show the moral hazard costs of TARP and the bailouts. Once you give free money to the Wall Street banks, regardless of it being repaid, it becomes harder to make the political argument against extending similar consideration for other politically attractive constituencies.

    The end result will be as Shelia Blair predicted: “$10 million loans for everyone!”

    http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2012-04-13/opinions/35450850_1_unemployment-benefits-bush-tax-cuts-income-inequality

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    • jnc:

      The Elizabeth Warren proposal and it’s growing list of adherents does show the moral hazard costs of TARP and the bailouts.

      I don’t think it makes a lot of sense to focus on TARP as the point at which moral hazard was introduced, nor to think that without TARP we wouldn’t be having these same conversations about these same topics Yes, advocates for increased government control of this or that aspect of the economy will point to TARP as justification for their latest scheme, but if it wasn’t TARP it would be something else. Progressives and progressive ideas long predate TARP. As do FDIC, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and federal housing policy. The Fed activity that precipitated Bair’s snark (in her own contribution to intellectual dishonesty) has been going on since 1913. It wasn’t invented by Ben Bernanke.

      Nor are federal government bailouts something new. Penn Central Railroad, Lockheed, Franklin National Bank, Chrysler, and New York City were each bailed out by the federal government 30 years before anyone had even conceived of TARP. The savings and loan industry was bailed out in 1989. The airline industry was bailed out in 2001.

      With regard to the specific topic at hand, the federal government has been guaranteeing student loans since 1965, and has been lending directly since 1993. We’ve been having discussions about the fed’s role in financing higher education for decades, but somehow today’s stupid ideas for lowering interest rates on student debt wouldn’t be happening but for TARP? I highly doubt that.

      We can certainly argue the merits of TARP, and you and I probably would agree on more than we would disagree, but TARP is not the bogeyman causing all new government interventions into the market since, even if demagogues try to use it as justification for those interventions. TARP represents just another data point on the long and storied path of government messing with markets, not an inflection point that somehow introduced a new principle that is only recently being acted upon.

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  3. Funny tweet from Iowahawk:

    “@iowahawkblog: The 3 most corrupt government agencies: the IRS, the State Dept, and the New York Times.”

    Like

  4. Other crazy news:

    “How Goldman Sachs Can Help Save the Safety Net
    A novel idea would make private investors in charge of funding social services. Will it catch on?

    By Sophie Quinton
    Updated: May 12, 2013 | 10:35 p.m.
    May 9, 2013 | 8:10 p.m.

    Nearly half of 16-to-18-year-olds released from New York City’s Rikers Island prison are back within a year—a trend the government doesn’t have the cash to reverse. So last fall, Mayor Michael Bloomberg inked an unusual contract with Goldman Sachs. The bank would put up a $9.6 million “investment” to teach 10,000 young offenders moral reasoning before August 2015. If these teens stay out of jail, the city saves money and Goldman Sachs will make a 22 percent profit. If not, the government pays Goldman nothing.”

    http://www.nationaljournal.com/magazine/how-goldman-sachs-can-help-save-the-safety-net-20130509

    Like

  5. OT: Meanwhile, back at the ranch…

    “Congress Poised to Move on Farm Bill
    Both the House and Senate seem anxious to get to other big issues.
    By Jerry Hagstrom
    Updated: May 13, 2013 | 9:22 a.m.
    May 12, 2013 | 12:00 p.m.

    The atmosphere on Capitol Hill for the farm bill suddenly seems to be full speed ahead.

    The Senate Agriculture Committee will mark up its bill on Tuesday, and the House Agriculture Committee will follow suit on Wednesday.

    Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid, D-Nev., has said he would like to finish the bill on the floor in May. House Majority Leader Eric Cantor, R-Va., who held up the bill last year—probably in hopes of electing a Republican-controlled Senate and a Republican president—suddenly declared this month that he wants to bring the bill to the House floor this summer. House Agriculture Committee Chairman Frank Lucas, R-Okla., has suggested that the leadership should bring it up in June.

    Why, after Congress missed the deadline to pass the bill last year and had to extend the 2008 bill for another year, and after negotiations have been going on behind the scenes for more than four months, is the bill finally moving? And could the bills still stall?

    The reason the bills are moving seems to be that each chamber has gotten tired of the farm bill hanging on and has something more interesting to move on to. ”

    http://www.nationaljournal.com/daily/congress-poised-to-move-on-farm-bill-20130512

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  6. GS teaching moral reasoning is slightly absurd but it was my first laugh of the day anyway.

    Someone put a link up yesterday at the PL about the ROI in college degrees and I was very happy to find that our daughter’s new Alma Mater (CSM) came in 14th over all and was actually the top public school. I’m not real sure where the figures came from but since she’s already making bank, I’ll assume she made a great decision going there. Graduation was boring, aren’t they all, but we were able to sit and chat with her new boyfriend and got to know him a little. He passed our test, hopefully we passed his…………………hahahaha.

    It sure was nice being away from all the news for a week and a half. I’m trying to ease my way back in but not finding anything that interesting yet. I did see a piece from OR that the initial test of the exchanges seems to be creating some competition between insurance companies……………………that would be awesome if it holds up.

    My report from AZ is inconsequential……………….I had fun meeting like minded people but am doubtful we had much of an impact on Jeff Flake………………you never know though.

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  7. TARP provides the convenient example for the masses.

    “If it’s good enough for Wall Street, why isn’t it good enough for the [insert x group here]”

    Regardless of the fact that it was paid back, it was fundamentally bad policy in terms of picking winners and losers and it set the stage for all the bad policy that followed starting with the auto bailout and continuing to the present day.

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    • jnc:

      “If it’s good enough for Wall Street, why isn’t it good enough for the [insert x group here]”

      The problem is that the “it” from the former clause is almost inevitably different from the “it” in the latter. Hence the intellectual dishonesty of the demagogues previously discussed.

      …and it set the stage…

      No, it didn’t. My point is that the stage was clearly set long before, and TARP was just a new prop that was added to it.

      Like

  8. Significant Supreme Court ruling

    “Supreme Court rules for Monsanto in genetically modified soybean case
    By Robert Barnes, Monday, May 13, 11:43 AM

    The Supreme Court agreed with Monsanto on Monday that an Indiana farmer’s un­or­tho­dox planting of the company’s genetically modified soybeans violated the agricultural giant’s patent.

    The court unanimously rejected farmer Vernon Hugh Bowman’s argument that he was not violating Monsanto’s patent because the company’s pesticide-resistent “Roundup Ready” soybeans replicate themselves. Justice Elena Kagan said there is no such “seeds-are-special” exception to the law.”

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/politics/supreme-court-rules-for-monsanto-in-genetically-modified-soybean-case/2013/05/13/c84d7710-bbdb-11e2-97d4-a479289a31f9_story.html?hpid=z3

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  9. Nope. TARP was a watershed. It substantively altered the conversation by saving private for profit businesses and leaving equity holders mostly untouched. By contrast the S&L crisis resulted in the RTC winding the seized banks down.

    Also:

    “The problem is that the “it” from the former clause is almost inevitably different from the “it” in the latter.”

    Not in this case. The “it” is the same, access to the Fed’s discount window and loans at .75 %.

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    • jnc:

      TARP was a watershed.

      With regard to equity holders, how did it differ from the loan guarantees given to, say, Lockheed or Chrysler?

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    • jnc:

      The “it” is the same, access to the Fed’s discount window and loans at .75 %.

      Nope. Banks who borrow from the discount window have to post collateral and borrow on a very short term basis, generally overnight. Student loans are long term, unsecured loans. They are not the same thing.

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  10. Some good news for Detroit

    “Chinese Creating New Auto Niche Within Detroit

    By BILL VLASIC
    Published: May 12, 2013

    DETROIT — Dozens of companies from China are putting down roots in Detroit, part of the country’s steady push into the American auto industry.

    Chinese-owned companies are investing in American businesses and new vehicle technology, selling everything from seat belts to shock absorbers in retail stores, and hiring experienced engineers and designers in an effort to soak up the talent and expertise of domestic automakers and their suppliers.

    While starting with batteries and auto parts, the spread of Chinese business is expected to result eventually in the sale of Chinese cars in the United States.

    “The Chinese are well behind the Japanese when they hit our shores 30 years ago,” said David E. Cole, a founder of the Center for Automotive Research in Ann Arbor, Mich. “They lack the know-how, and they’re coming here to get it.” ”

    http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/13/business/global/chinese-automakers-quietly-build-a-detroit-presence.html?hp

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  11. “TARP represents just another data point on the long and storied path of government messing with markets, not an inflection point that somehow introduced a new principle that is only recently being acted upon.”

    I think this is wrong. It is an inflection point. The previous examples from the 1970’s were one offs. TARP and Too Big Too Fail and the various other subsidies from the Federal Reserve to allow the banks to “earn” their way back to health (i.e. TALF, etc) is ongoing systematic policy.

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    • JNC, I pretty much agree that it was a major turn of events. Scott, in any business failure or bkcy, equity holders get in line behind creditors and/or the new money. The equity holders are poof.

      Are we talking about AIG? What?

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      • Mark:

        JNC, I pretty much agree that it was a major turn of events.

        As I have already pointed out with examples, this was not the first time the fed stepped in to save private companies from bankruptcy. It was unprecedented in terms of scale, but not in principle.

        Are we talking about AIG? What?

        jnc is talking about TARP in general.

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    • jnc:

      The previous examples from the 1970′s were one offs.

      There were 5 bailouts in the ’70s. At some point I think the number gets too big to be called “one-offs”.

      TARP and Too Big Too Fail and the various other subsidies from the Federal Reserve to allow the banks to “earn” their way back to health (i.e. TALF, etc) is ongoing systematic policy.

      Nope.

      According to propublica, there hasn’t been a disbursement of TARP funds since September 29, 2010. And according to the Treasury, it is winding down, not continuing to add to, its holdings under TARP. As of December of last year, the Treasury had eliminated its investment in 489 of the 707 recipients of TARP, either through repayments or sales of the investment in the private market. And it expects to be out of two-thirds of what remains by the end of this year. (I couldn’t find an update as of this moment.)

      Too Big To Fail is at best a political determination or at worst just a political slogan, not a policy or subsidy.

      I’m not sure exactly what other subsidies you have in mind, but you specifically mention TALF. According to this report from the New York Fed, TALF ceased making new loans on June 30, 2010. Note also that, according to this Treasury report from January, all of its outstanding TALF loans have been repaid. Also from the same report, of the 6 different TARP and credit relief programs created, only one remains an on-going program, and that is the Community Development Capital Initiative (CDCI). According to the Treasury, the investments under CDCI total just $533 million, and “These investments are in 77 community development financial institutions which serve lower and moderate-income communities that are underserved by traditional financial institutions.” Hardly the stuff of big Wall Street subsidies.

      Like

  12. Student loans are long term, unsecured loans.

    Student loans survive bankruptcy. That is as close to secure as you can get without a first born child as collateral.

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    • yello:

      Student loans survive bankruptcy. That is as close to secure as you can get without a first born child as collateral.

      No, it isn’t. The possession of real assets that can be sold in the event of default on the loan, ie collateral, is far more preferable to nothing but the legal ability to maintain the debt in perpetuity.

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  13. I’m w/Scott. A long and disgusting history of picking winners and losers. Plus, post SnL, we bailed out Mexico merely to save GS. The question is, when do we investigate Andrea Mitchel’s husband and Bernake’s? Moral Hazard, no?

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    • jnc:

      It seems to me that when you (or others) refer to a TBTF subsidy, you are talking about the effects on the market of a widespread belief that certain institutions would, in the final event, not be allowed to fail. While the effects are real, and the belief may be a reasonable one, it is still just that…a belief. And it is a belief in what politicians will do under certain circumstance, or, as I said in my original, it is a political determination. There is no law that was passed in the wake of 2008 that needs to be or can be repealed in order to end this subsidy. It can be ended only if the belief is dispelled, and that can only come with a change in politics, a politics of market intervention that long preceded the financial crisis of 2008.

      And lastly, the biggest subsidy of all, QE.

      The Fed has been manipulating interest rates and the money supply since 1913, not 2008. The crisis was hardly a watershed event in this respect, even if the fed is now using extraordinary means of accomplishing the task.

      Like

  14. And lastly the biggest subsidy of them all, QE.

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  15. Worth noting:

    “Govt obtains wide AP phone records in probe
    By MARK SHERMAN
    — May. 13 4:47 PM EDT

    WASHINGTON (AP) — The Justice Department secretly obtained two months of telephone records of reporters and editors for The Associated Press in what the news cooperative’s top executive called a “massive and unprecedented intrusion” into how news organizations gather the news.

    The records obtained by the Justice Department listed incoming and outgoing calls, and the duration of each call, for the work and personal phone numbers of individual reporters, general AP office numbers in New York, Washington and Hartford, Conn., and the main number for AP reporters in the House of Representatives press gallery, according to attorneys for the AP.

    In all, the government seized those records for more than 20 separate telephone lines assigned to AP and its journalists in April and May of 2012. The exact number of journalists who used the phone lines during that period is unknown but more than 100 journalists work in the offices whose phone records were targeted on a wide array of stories about government and other matters.

    The government would not say why it sought the records. U.S. officials have previously said in public testimony that the U.S. attorney in Washington is conducting a criminal investigation into who may have leaked information contained in a May 7, 2012, AP story about a foiled terror plot. The story disclosed details of a CIA operation in Yemen that stopped an al-Qaida plot in the spring of 2012 to detonate a bomb on an airplane bound for the United States.

    In testimony in February, CIA Director John Brennan noted that the FBI had questioned him about whether he was AP’s source, which he denied. He called the release of the information to the media about the terror plot an “unauthorized and dangerous disclosure of classified information.””

    http://bigstory.ap.org/article/govt-obtains-wide-ap-phone-records-probe

    Like

    • In all, the government seized those records for more than 20 separate telephone lines assigned to AP and its journalists in April and May of 2012.

      That has got to have a chilling effect on sources. Journalists are going to need better tradecraft.

      Like

  16. “My Administration is committed to creating an unprecedented level of openness in Government. We will work together to ensure the public trust and establish a system of transparency, public participation, and collaboration. Openness will strengthen our democracy and promote efficiency and effectiveness in Government.”

    http://www.whitehouse.gov/the_press_office/TransparencyandOpenGovernment

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  17. I am not a crook.

    -President Barak Milhouse Obama

    Like

  18. Plus, I’m sure us bagger wingnuts brought it out of him.

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  19. That’s the wrong quote to use. This one fits better:

    “When the President does it, that means it is not illegal.”

    http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/2013/mar/19/goodale-obama-press-freedoms-secrecy-nixon

    Like

  20. Alright, new best tweet of the day,

    “@JonahNRO: Government is just the word we use for things we do together, like audit political enemies and monitor journalists’ phone calls.”

    Like

  21. Wemple is pretty good too:

    “A word of caution to key government sources and whistleblowers: The most transparent administration ever “secretly obtained two months of telephone records of reporters and editors for The Associated Press,” according to a story in the Associated Press.”

    http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/wp/2013/05/13/ap-government-subpoenaed-journalists-phone-records/

    This is worse news for Obama than the IRS thing. Now the mainstream press institutional interests are threatened. No more benefit of the doubt.

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    • JNC, I think the AP story is worse, but it is not worse for the Admin. Think Of how little fuss was raised politically by revelations of GWB subpoenas and taps of journalists.

      The IRS thing must be fixed. I would rather it not be politicized in the way that it is, with the interim IRS guy’s head on the chopping block when he had nothing to do with it, it having been done under GWB’s appointee. Repeal (c)(4) and we solve this problem. For now.

      The AP story is MUCH worse, even if I think the political ramifications are not. I won’t be satisfied until BHO dumps Holder, or at the very least, the AG’s division head who authorized the subpoenas.

      Like

      • I liked this from Ezra Klein:

        A few questions on the IRS scandal.

        1) The core issue here is that the IRS was using the term “tea party” and its associated language as a flag for organizations that might be more political than the 501(c)4 designation permitted. As Juliet Eilperin writes, this kind of category-based approach to choosing which applications require more scrutiny is typical for the IRS. It’s even used in individual tax returns. The question was whether, when it came to the 501(c)4 groups, the only kind of political activity being rigorously screened was conservative political activity. Was tea party language the only red flag? Or did other kinds of politicized language set off alarm bells, too? If so, what was that language?

        2) Was the Cincinnati office the only one that used the tea-party test or was it more widely applied? The fact that some tea party groups received scrutiny from Washington-based IRS employees doesn’t answer that question. We should expect tea party groups to get scrutiny when they apply for non-political 501(c)4 designation. The question is whether their applications were flagged through a politically discriminatory test that existed in other agencies, too.

        3) Did the IRS higher-ups act appropriately? Right now, much of the reporting indicates that IRS higher-ups shut this down pretty much as soon as they heard about it. Their sin, if there was one, was that they didn’t disclose that anything had gone awry when asked whether the IRS was targeting conservative groups. But they may also have thought that this wasn’t targeting conservative groups — it was simply a reasonable, but ultimately unwise, way of filtering politicized applications for appropriate scrutiny. The IG report should tell us more on this score.

        4) In which direction does our outrage point? Do we think the tea party groups really are primarily non-political social welfare organizations and they should’ve received 501(c)4 designation more smoothly? Or do we think that they’re clearly political organizations and their applications should’ve been closely scrutinized and maybe even rejected – but so too should the applications from a host of other politicized groups on the left and the right?

        5) Do we want a personnel outcome, a political outcome, or a policy outcome? Is the right endgame simply that some IRS employees get fired? That the Obama administration gets embarrassed? Or is that Congress tightens the language governing who does and doesn’t qualify for 501(c)4 status so that the IRS doesn’t have so much discretion — and career employees don’t resort to these confused tactics — when reviewing applications? Note that if we go the legislative route, we could either widen the 501(c)4 designation, making it clear that political groups qualify, or we could narrow it, making it clear that they don’t.

        The answers to these questions would go a long way in clarifying whether we have a real scandal or simply a bad filtering process on our hands, and what we should do about it.

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  22. “The Fed has been manipulating interest rates and the money supply since 1913, not 2008. The crisis was hardly a watershed event in this respect, even if the fed is now using extraordinary means of accomplishing the task.”

    I’m sorry, but if QE isn’t considered a watershed, then the word has no meaning.

    Like

    • jnc:

      if QE isn’t considered a watershed, the word has no meaning.

      Clearly QE is an extraordinary action.  But I don’t see it as some kind of change or turning point in the relationship between banks and the Fed or the government more generally.  It is not as though the Fed is going to maintain QE even as it raises interest rates if/when the economy starts to recover, just so that it can keep giving a “subsidy” to banks.  

      One might argue that QE is either ineffective or ill-advised policy with regard to the economy.  But I don’t see any reason to view it as a sea change or a “watershed” event in terms of how banks will be treated by the Fed in the future. 

      Like

  23. Mark, There’s a good chance that the AP subpoena’s were authorized by the US Attorney’s that Holder put in place to investigate the White House leaks and that Holder and the White House are recused from decision making there.

    http://articles.washingtonpost.com/2013-01-26/world/36560799_1_stuxnet-computer-virus-cia-officer

    This mostly reminds me of Patrick Fitzgerald and the Valerie Plame leak investigation.

    Like

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