buddtholomew wrote:
Those weekly amounts are minor in comparison to the 85B in monthly purchases and dont warrant a 3% decline. If anything, gold should habe risen now that tapering in October is less likely with the shutdown.
Those purchases are an asset swap: cash reserves for Treasurys. They aren't inflationary unless the banks then loan their increased reserves, as much as they are already loaning, or more. That might happen, and it might not.
So the swaps do not change the inflation expectation, although they might make it more uncertain. Nor do they change the interest rates much, since the Fed has mostly influenced rates as much as it can, in dropping rates to record lows through its bond purchases over the last few years. Interest rates have gone up somewhat recently, despite continued QE.
Contrasted with QE, gov't spending is inflationary, in the sense that a larger USG budget means more money in the pockets of USG employees, and more of it being spent on goods an services. Banks can sit on cash reserves, or try to loan them back to Uncle Sam when an auction comes up, but USG employees can't do that because they have bills to pay. So whereas QE is not on its face inflationary, gov't spending is.