Deficits
Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2018 12:16 pm
Je m'en doutais, filstroyguitar wrote: ↑Fri Nov 30, 2018 12:15 pmC'était une blague, frère.wap wrote: I'm sure he was, but if he was aware of the ROW date convention. Methinks he does,
Thankfully the progressives got rid of indoor smoking over there something like 15 years ago.KYGTIGuy wrote:You two should go have a cigarette and a baguette together
The Tax Cut and Jobs Act promised to, well, cut taxes. For many, it does. But a new limit on the amount of state and local levies that can be deducted has costly and confounding implications for some, especially in high-income-tax, high-property-tax places like the New York City area. Deadline Dread Nearly 11 million taxpayers will be affected by the new cap on so-called SALT deductions on the ta
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Mon Troytroyguitar wrote: ↑Fri Nov 30, 2018 12:15 pmC'était une blague, frère.wap wrote: I'm sure he was, but if he was aware of the ROW date convention. Methinks he does,
banker bros! (pex and )The Federal Reserve Bank of New York injected $99.9 billion in temporary liquidity and $7.5 billion in permanent reserves into financial markets Tuesday.
The short-term intervention came via $64.90 billion in overnight repurchase agreements with eligible banks, and with a $35 billion repo operation that will run through Nov. 5.
The banks didn’t take all the liquidity offered by the Fed in the overnight repo operation, but they offered more than the Fed would take for the term operation, with $52.2 billion submitted to the Fed.
It’s a different spin on Quantitative Easing. Fed is injecting cash into the markets to stimulate cash flow. The Fed is doing this to keep the overnight borrowings in their targeted 1.75-2.0% range, to attempt to prevent/diffuse any liquidity crisis the markets are sensing.dubshow wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 1:36 pm https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-inject ... 1571751192
wooooo doggy.
banker bros! (pex and )The Federal Reserve Bank of New York injected $99.9 billion in temporary liquidity and $7.5 billion in permanent reserves into financial markets Tuesday.
The short-term intervention came via $64.90 billion in overnight repurchase agreements with eligible banks, and with a $35 billion repo operation that will run through Nov. 5.
The banks didn’t take all the liquidity offered by the Fed in the overnight repo operation, but they offered more than the Fed would take for the term operation, with $52.2 billion submitted to the Fed.
why ?
Apex wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 1:45 pmIt’s a different spin on Quantitative Easing. Fed is injecting cash into the markets to stimulate cash flow. The Fed is doing this to keep the overnight borrowings in their targeted 1.75-2.0% range, to attempt to prevent/diffuse any liquidity crisis the markets are sensing.dubshow wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 1:36 pm https://www.wsj.com/articles/fed-inject ... 1571751192
wooooo doggy.
banker bros! (pex and )
why ?
It looks like the Fed is also looking at keeping their repo window open indefinitely, so banks can sell assets to the Fed in return for cash.
That were in uncharted territory, people are used to historically low rates and they shouldn’t stay this low forever; and the Fed is trying to figure out what to do to prevent an upcoming recession.dubshow wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 1:46 pmApex wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2019 1:45 pm
It’s a different spin on Quantitative Easing. Fed is injecting cash into the markets to stimulate cash flow. The Fed is doing this to keep the overnight borrowings in their targeted 1.75-2.0% range, to attempt to prevent/diffuse any liquidity crisis the markets are sensing.
It looks like the Fed is also looking at keeping their repo window open indefinitely, so banks can sell assets to the Fed in return for cash.
and how does this make you feel?
so can I buy a used Huracan for $20k cash in the great recession?
buckleupbuckeroos.Tuesday’s intervention is part of an effort to help tame volatility in short-term rate markets with temporary and permanent injections of liquidity.
The Fed’s repo operations take in Treasury and mortgage securities from eligible banks in what is effectively a loan of central bank cash, collateralized by dealer-owned bonds. The Fed’s bill buying permanently increases the size of the Fed’s holdings and further ensures money markets operate smoothly.
The Fed injected $58.15 billion in overnight liquidity into financial markets on Monday.