Lowe wrote:
I read Roche's paper on MR, and I have a few questions for you guys.
I'm getting ready for a trip and don't have much time. If you want to ask Cullen yourself, you can do it here:
http://ask-cullen.com
You'll probably get better answers directly from him, or from one of his more knowledgeable readers.
Lowe wrote:1) Do banks ever mix their outside money (Fed reserves) with their inside money (credit-created money, outside Fed)? Or is the outside money only ever used in transactions with other banks with reserves, and with the Fed?
Electronic base money, or "high powered" money never leaves the Federal Reserve. Credit-created money is nothing more than an entry on a statement. In essence, the credit on your statement gives you the ability to transfer the bank's high powered money (or withdraw notes from an ATM).
Lowe wrote:2) To what extent can banks negotiate for better terms, when they are compelled legally to act as a partner in transactions with the Fed?
For example, if I am a bond trader at a bank, and a Fed bond trader expresses his desire to buy some of my bank's T-bills, how much can I bid the price of those bonds up, from whatever the market price is?
The Fed doesn't really call up your bank and have a conversation with you. It's all done on the secondary market. The New York Times did a piece on the QE trades awhile back...
NYTimes: An Inside View of QE2
The New York Times wrote: Mr. Frost and his team work out of a small, beige corner office with arched windows that used to be a library. There, at about 10:15 most workday mornings, one of them pushes a button on a computer. Across Wall Street, three musical notes -- an F, an E and a D -- sound on trading terminals, alerting traders that the Fed is in the market.
On one recent Tuesday morning, what Mr. Frost and his five young colleagues did over a 45-minute period might have unsettled even a seasoned Wall Street hand: they bought $7.8 billion of Treasuries.
Mr. Frost and his team drew up the daily schedule for what the Fed calls its Large-Scale Asset Purchase program. And that program is, by any measure, large scale: through next June, these traders will buy roughly $75 billion of Treasuries a month -- on top of another $30 billion it is reinvesting in Treasuries from its mortgage-related holdings.
But depending on daily market conditions, Mr. Frost can decide not to buy certain bonds if they are already in short supply.
As offers to sell Treasuries flash on a bank of trading screens, a computer algorithm works out which ones to accept. The computer compares the offers from Wall Street against market prices and the Fed's own calculation of what constitutes a ''fair value'' price.
The real work is done by three traders who sit at a long table against the wall, tapping at seven screens.
The lead trader one recent morning was Tiffany Wilding, 26. While she reviewed the offers accepted by the algorithm, a second trader, Blake Gwinn, 29, double-checked her decisions and a third, James White, 29, made a duplicate of everything in case the computers crashed.
Mr. Frost stood behind his colleagues, ready to intervene -- even cancel the Fed's purchases -- at any sign of trouble.
They have their work cut out, trying to outwit the 18 investment firms that deal directly with the Fed. These so-called primary dealers -- the Goldmans and Morgans of the world -- employ some of the sharpest minds on Wall Street.
Source:
NYTimes: An Inside View of QE2
It is literally people tapping keyboards — trading bits of data. Not all that exciting.
Lowe wrote:From what I understand the typical open market operations of the Fed result in Treasury prices being bid up/down. Up if the Fed is buying, down if the Fed is selling. This assumes the Fed is the biggest influence upon the Treasury market, which I think is fair. This should be true because the Fed is in the open market, and must be competitive in its bids.
Generally speaking, yes. That's the idea.
Lowe wrote:From what I have heard, QE is different, in that it is not open market. The law compels the banks' bond traders to participate, since they probably would not, otherwise. Is that correct? If so, the extent to which they can negotiate for prices above market value, should be the extent the market price of bonds rises.
Well, it's not so much "the law" as it is a contractual obligation. A Primary Dealer isn't forced to be a Primary Dealer. They sign up willingly and can opt-out if they want to (though it's a big deal to be a "Primary Dealer" so nobody would really "opt-out" of being a Primary Dealer). As you'll see from the NYT article, sometimes QE doesn't have the effect that they want it to have on interest rates.
Lowe wrote:Flow A:
Fed buys Treasurys / reduces liquidity (reserves) --> Reserves scarcer --(2)--> Reserve-lending banks bid up FFR --(1)--> FFR guides lenders rates up
Fed sells Treasurys / increases liquidity (reserves) --> Reserves less scarce --(2)--> Reserve-borrowing banks bid down FFR --(1)--> FFR guides lenders rates down
Sorry, but I must be misunderstanding you. If the Fed buys Treasuries from Primary Dealers, that would
increase the liquidity and the reserves of Primary Dealers, right? And if the Fed were to sell Treasuries, to Primary Dealers, wouldn't that
decrease their liquidity and reserves? After all the QE, there are too many reserves right now.
Lowe wrote:FFR
The problem with FFR right now is that we live in a world with IOR. IOR is now the de facto FFR because there are too many reserves.
See:
http://pragcap.com/will-the-fed-end-up- ... e-programs
http://pragcap.com/interest-on-excess-r ... lation-low
You are asking excellent questions. The nice thing about Cullen and his site is that he (or his readers) is more than happy to answer these kinds of highly technical questions. They enjoy these kinds of questions because it allows them to refine their understanding of the monetary system and that potentially enables them to invest better. They aren't in it to convince people of good/bad fiscal policies.
So, I would pose the question to
http://ask-cullen.com and see what you get back! Sorry I can't be of more help.
Nothing I say should be construed as advice or expertise. I am only sharing opinions which may or may not be applicable in any given case.