The Fed Twists, the Market Shouts
by
Ron Paul
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Last week the
Federal Reserve began the second incarnation of "Operation
Twist", an attempt to drive down interest rates by purchasing
long-term Treasury debt and selling short-term debt. This is just
the latest instance of the central bank desperately flailing around
doing something merely for the sake of doing something. Fed officials
still do not understand or admit that the Fed itself
caused the financial crisis by driving interest rates too low and
relentlessly expanding the money supply. Thus, this latest action
will just exacerbate the problem.
Markets, however,
understand that the Fed has failed and has no clue what it is doing.
This is why markets went into a tailspin after the Fed's new strategy
was announced. Stock, bonds, and commodities dropped in price while
the financial press wondered whether this worldwide sell-off meant
that the entire system was collapsing. Not since 2008 had there
been such a dramatic drop across so many different sectors of the
market.
Because of
continued rising inflation and the Federal Reserve's suppression
of interest rates, investing in traditional safe havens such as
savings accounts, mutual funds, and Treasury bonds has become unprofitable.
Lots of money is moving through the system seeking a return on investments
or at least some measure of safety, as increasingly desperate investors
move their funds around in search of long-term profits and stability.
Until the Fed stops its monetary intervention and allows interest
rates to be set by the free market, investors will move their money
in a volatile manner. They will invest in commodities and stocks
while prices swing upwards, but will flee to bonds and cash at the
first sign of a downturn.
The
uncertainty caused by the Fed does help some people professional
traders on Wall Street for example. Increased volatility and huge
price swings mean more opportunities for profit, as sophisticated
electronic trading programs can buy and sell huge positions within
a fraction of a second of a major market movement. But small businessmen
are misled by the artificially low interest rates into making unwise
investments, and those whose jobs vanish when the Federal Reserve's
latest bubble pops suffer. Without the knowledge or ability to move
with the markets or diversify overseas, average Americans see their
savings stagnate or depreciate along with their hopes and
dreams for a better tomorrow.
The only way
to return to a sound economy is for the Federal Reserve to cease
and desist its monetary manipulation and allow interest rates to
be determined by markets, just as the price of goods, services,
and labor should be determined by markets. Everything the Fed is
doing by pumping money into the economy benefits only the insolvent,
too-big-to-fail banks. Low interest rates encourage consumers to
take on more debt, meaning more profits for the banks issuing those
loans. Purchasing mortgage-backed securities, as the Fed has done,
keeps housing prices inflated, helping the banks who have non-performing
mortgages on their books. However, it hurts consumers who continue
to be priced out of the housing market. In order to maintain a decent
standard of living for the American people and to restore the vibrancy
of the U.S. economy, it is time to end the Fed.
See
the Ron Paul File
October
6, 2011
Dr. Ron
Paul is a Republican member of Congress from Texas.
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