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Author Topic: Did the Fed Just (Surreptitiously) Bail out all of Europe???  (Read 3180 times)
Sheepleprod
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« on: April 12, 2010, 01:15:58 PM »

http://market-ticker.denninger.net/archives/2186-Did-The-Fed-Just-Surreptitiously-Bail-Out-Europe.html

No, not just Greece - all of Europe.  Without Congressional authorization or notice, of course.

Hattip to a nice emailer....



Or if you prefer it on a one-year time scale...



That nice little vertical line is a gain of $421.8 billion dollars of outstanding loans and leases in one week's time.

WHERE THE HELL DID THAT MONEY GO AND WHAT COLLATERAL WAS TAKEN AGAINST A FOUR HUNDRED BILLION DOLLAR INCREASE IN OUTSTANDING LOANS?

You won't find anything like that in the records - because it's never happened before.  That's beyond unprecedented, it's ridiculous, and assuming it's also accurate, someone has some 'splaining to do on what clearly appears to be some sort of back-door game being run.

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flaming_red_pill
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« Reply #1 on: April 12, 2010, 01:56:08 PM »

Are we building the Nabucco pipeline for them too??

 Angry
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Its preparations are concealed, not published. Its mistakes are buried, not headlined. Its dissenters are silenced, not praised. No expenditure is questioned, no rumor is printed, no secret is revealed.

-President John F. Kennedy on the Global Conspiracy
ekimdrachir
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METATRON ON


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« Reply #2 on: April 12, 2010, 07:12:13 PM »

Me next! Me next! I need uh 600 trillion for renewable technologies and another 80 quadrillion for economic development. I take cash, credit card or debit, no cheques please.
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jofortruth
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« Reply #3 on: April 12, 2010, 07:15:06 PM »

1st Federal Reserve Board and Council 1914-1956:
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=166521.0
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Don't believe me. Look it up yourself!

The Great Deception - Forum/Library - My Research
http://z4.invisionfree.com/The_Great_Deception/index.php?showforum=110
Sheepleprod
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« Reply #4 on: April 13, 2010, 06:03:25 AM »

follow up

Some more digging around FRED has found additional disturbing data.  Specifically:



WHAT?

An $84.2 billion increase in one month, or annualized, a significantly more than 100% run rate?

Something's not right here folks. I can't find the rest of the one-week ramp yet, as the data is not current enough for me to do so, but that's an insane increase.

C&I loans picked up a bit (614 .vs. 591.Cool which is a significant move as well, but then again it also dropped a lot between 3-17 and 3-24 (605 to 591.Cool, so in context it's not nearly as material.

Where did the more than $400 billion go that was "borrowed"?


Update: It has been suggested that this may be related to the FASB changes and securitized loans coming back on the balance sheet.  If so, where’s the alleged memorandum items on the other side and the footnote on FRED?  The latter is missing, but the necessary data on FRED to confirm that is not yet updated.

Nonetheless, if this is the case, it’s still bad (just not catastrophic) as this will directly hit capital ratios.  Or, put another way, where’s the additional capital that “should” be there to support what is now on balance sheet and was previously off (never mind that it was crooked as hell to have it off in the first place!)
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Dig
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« Reply #5 on: April 13, 2010, 06:37:21 AM »

is that a graph of monetary outlays or a seismology report before a tsunami?
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #6 on: April 13, 2010, 06:41:02 AM »

Congressman: "So you gave $500 Billion to foreign countries in one day."

Bernanke: "I believe so."

Congressman: "Who did you give it to."

Bernanke: "I am not telling you, you are lucky I am even sitting here. You congressman act like they are supposed to put the bankers in check? Hey pal, we own you, we own your children, we own your grandmother's pharmaceuticals and medical equipment. We own the acceleration on your Toyota. We own the thermostat in your house. We own the RFID in your dog. We own the cameras watching you on the streets. We own the Disney MK Ultra puppets that your 8 year old daughter begs you to get tickets for. We own the implants in your mistress' chest. We own your water supply. We own the virus detections software on your computer. We own your TiVO. We own your cell phone and each millisecond of sound passing through it. We own your education and the education of the next 10 generations. Back off buster or I will get my NATO friends to assist!"
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
Sheepleprod
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« Reply #7 on: April 13, 2010, 09:34:01 AM »

Seismic waves oh yes!

"They'll Just Inflate Out of this Mess"

This is the most humorous thing I keep reading on the internet. Now, if someone had magical powers what are the waiting for if they can just inflate the system out of this mess? Why didn't they use this in ancient Rome? Heck, you would have thought Hilter with all his scientists could have figured out how to inflate out of the mess.

There is no inflating out of the mess, as you inflate you are actually getting closer to your ultimate doom. The current global financial credit system has been inflating for 66+ years, now it's not inflating. Now if you believe Helicopter Ben or Benny and the Jets can just endlessly drop money from the sky and produce credit, please have him send me over a pizza and 99 virgins oh and a 6 pack of beer.

Humans have no ability to supply exponential growth, there is no avoiding what is coming down the pike. Benny and the Jets do have enough power to effect the rate of decline, Benny does not have unlimited power to sustain the equation long-term.

If all it takes is putting a few digits in a computer, everyone go home and wait on all the virgins and pizzas to show up at your door and please send me a note as to how this all worked out for you.
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AlphaM
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« Reply #8 on: April 13, 2010, 11:44:36 AM »

http://www.zerohedge.com/article/imf-prepares-global-cataclysm-expands-backup-rescue-facility-half-trillion-contribution-glob

Here's your answer.

Quote
IMF Prepares For Global Cataclysm, Expands Backup Rescue Facility By Half A Trillion For "Contribution To Global Financial Stability"
Tyler Durden's picture
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 04/12/2010 22:14 -0500

    * Central Banks
    * Fail
    * Global Economy
    * Greece
    * International Monetary Fund



And all the pundits thought that the IMF would be on the hook for just €10 billion... The IMF has just announced that it is expanding its New Arrangement to Borrow (NAB) multilateral facility from its existing $50 billion by a whopping $500 billion (SDR333.5 billion), to $550 billion. The current lending participant group of 26 entities will be increased by 13 new members all of whom will contribute token amount of capital to the NAB. The one country most on the hook in the new and revised NAB - the United States of America, will provide over $105 billion in total commitments, or 20% of the total facility. The US is currently on the hook for just $10 billion, meaning its participation in global bail outs just increased by $95 billion. And the bulk of these bailouts will certainly be located across the Atlantic. What is most troublesome is the massive expansion of the NAR. If the IMF believes that over half a trillion in short-term funding is needed imminently, is all hell about to break loose.

Never one to present a realistic picture Dominique (or is that Mrs, Pisani?) Strauss-Khan said: "The expansion and enlargement of the NAB borrowing arrangements provides a very strong multilateral foundation for the Fund’s efforts in crisis prevention and resolution, as an essential back-stop to the Fund’s quota resources. This will help ensure that the Fund has access to adequate resources to help members that are vulnerable to financial crises."

If memory serves us right, the Fund's current resources give it acces to about a third of a trillion, so as of today the IMF has recourse funding to just under a trillion. Something big must be coming.

Some more details on the NAB from the just released PR:

Quote

    The NAB is a standing set of credit arrangements under which participants commit resources to IMF lending when these are needed to supplement quota resources. The expanded NAB will become operational when it receives formal acceptances from the required proportion of current and potential participants, which will require legislative backing in some cases.1

    “The expansion of the NAB will make an important contribution to global financial stability, but it is not a substitute for a general increase in the Fund’s quota resources. The Fund is, and shall remain, a quota-based institution. It is important now that member countries rapidly take the necessary steps to make the increased resources available,” Mr. Strauss-Kahn underscored.

    Background

    The NAB is a credit arrangement between the IMF and a group of members and institutions to provide supplementary resources to the IMF when these are needed to forestall or cope with an impairment of the international monetary system. The NAB is supplementary to quota resources, which are made up of the quota subscriptions each country pays upon joining the Fund, broadly based on its relative size in the world economy. IMF members’ quotas currently total SDR 217.4 billion (about US$330 billion). Like quota allocations, the NAB is reviewed on a regular basis.

    The recent unprecedented shock confronting the global economy has led to a sharp increase in the demand for IMF financing. To ensure that the IMF continues to have sufficient resources to meet demand, leaders of the G-20 agreed in April 2009 that immediate financing from members of US$250 billion would subsequently be folded into an expanded and more flexible NAB, increased by up to $500 billion. This call was endorsed by the IMFC. The G-20 leaders reaffirmed their commitment on September 25, 2009 to a tripling of the resources available to the IMF, from a pre-crisis level of about US$250 billion. At its meeting in October 2009, the IMFC welcomed the expected agreement to expand and enhance the NAB. Pending the entering into force of the expanded NAB, member countries have pledged more than $300 billion in immediate bilateral financing should the Fund require additional resources for lending.

We have a few questions:

1) Just where will central banks suddenly find access to over three hundred billion in SDRs (which is what this facility is based on)? Also, we are curious just how this SDR expansion will impact dollar levels. As the dollar is the primary component in the SDR basket (17%), banks will have to sell more dollars than other currencies on a pro rata basis to increase their SDR holdings. What will happen to the DXY when $85 billion new dollars flood the market via assorted CBs but mostly the FRBNY?

2) Who came up with the expansion factor? Why is Japan's allocation increasing by 18.7x, that of the US by 10.4x, while that of the Bundesbank only by 7.2x? We thought the IMF is more of a eurocentric bailout facility? Why does it fall upon the US taxpayers to disproprtionately bailout Greece?

3) What is the joke with having Greece join the group of new participants? The IMF sure has a sick sense of humor.

4) Curious how this comes the day before Greece is supposed to auction off some ultra-short term debt. If this facility is enacted, watch for socereign credit curves to hit 60 degrees, with near-term risk disappearing, once again courtesy of Joe Sixpack. We hope you pay your taxes by the April 15 deadline.

5) Funny money will galore. At this point nobody will allow anyone or anything to fail.

Here is the full table of old and existing contributors. Congrats US - you are once again leading the charge in the world bailout.



h/t Fueks_Me
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