"The Federal Reserve is directly involved in manipulating the stock market"
https://www.wnd.com/news/article.asp?ARTICLE_ID=60041
Consumers should expect a deep recession,
triggered by the "stealth methodology" of the Federal Reserve to "depress" the
market even while lowering interest rates in an ostensible effort to stimulate
economic growth, an economic analyst charges.
"The
Federal Reserve is directly involved in manipulating the stock market," said
Mike Bolser in a telephone interview with WND yesterday.
The New York
Stock Exchange finished the day down 108 points, closing at 12,635, much as
Bolser predicted, despite recent emergency Fed rate cuts of 1.25 percentage
points aimed at stimulating the economy.
"Fed wants the Dow Jones
Industrial Average and other financial indicators to descend in a managed way,"
Bolser said. "The Fed wants to drive the DJIA toward the 8,000 level, or below,
in order to help create a deep recession which will have the effect of slowing
consumption across the board and dampening the otherwise harmful effects of
inflation.
"A falling DOW is only one element of the recession effects of
the excessive Fed-created housing and credit creation, whose bubbles are now
bursting," he added.
"Without this recession, we would be on quick trip
to hyper-inflation," Bolser, the author of an internationally followed
newsletter published in conjunction with his InterventionalAnalysis.com website,
said, "and the Fed wants to prevent this."
In his twice-daily
subscription newsletter, Bolser has devised a quantitative methodology for
utilizing Federal Reserve repurchase agreements to predict upward and downward
movements of the DJIA, measured on a 30-day moving average.
Yesterday,
Bolser noted the Fed added $18 billion to repurchase agreements, edging the pool
up to a total of $153.158 billion in unexpired temporary repurchase
agreements.
Repurchase agreements involve a
sophisticated use of government securities issued every day by the Fed, but
little understood or followed, even by sophisticated investors.
A
repurchase agreement, as defined by the Fed, is a government security offered by
the federal government to a small list of specified primary government
securities dealers, for a limited period of time, usually 28 days or less, with
overnight return being the most common.
The government securities are
"rented" by the primary dealers and they can be added to the primary dealer's
portfolio or collateralized and then used in the open market to implement the
Fed's open market policy.
At the end of the repurchase agreement, the Fed
obligates itself to take back the government securities from the primary
dealers, effectively canceling the contract.
Meanwhile, while holding the
government securities let out by the Fed in the repo agreement, primary dealers
are free to utilize the liquidity provided by the repurchase agreement to
manipulate the economy in accordance with the Fed's true monetary policy,
whether publicly declared or not.
Primary dealers use the funds provided
by the government securities they hold under the repurchase agreements to buy
dollar exchange futures contracts, stock market futures, or to buy commodities
contracts, including gold mining shares. All of this is in accord with
implementing Federal Reserve monetary policy to manipulate currency, commodity
and stock markets up or down, depending on the goals the Fed wants to accomplish
at any particular time, the economist alleges.
Over the past several
months, however, the Fed has implemented a policy to issue smaller amounts of
daily repurchase agreements, with the goal of reducing the total pool of
repurchase agreements available to the Fed's short list of 20 banks that it
qualifies to serve as primary government securities dealers participating in the
Fed's Open Market Operations.
Only the 20 banks
specified in the Federal Reserve Bank of New York's list of primary government
securities dealers are allowed to participate in Fed repurchase
agreements.
"The primary government security dealer banks are like
a private club," Bolser told WND. "You get to stay in the club as long as you
take the repurchase agreements and enter the markets to implement Fed monetary
policy the way the Fed wants it implemented. Violate the unspoken rules, and you
risk being thrown out of the club."
Yesterday's $18 billion addition to
the repurchase agreement pool caused the total amount of the outstanding
repurchase agreement pool to remain below the Dow's 30-day moving average in a
clear trend.
Bolser used this data to predict the Fed was manipulating
the stock market lower, a controversial prediction when most economists see the
Fed's emergency actions to reduce the target Fed Funds rate 1.25 percentage
points lower over an eight-day period that ended with last Wednesday's meeting
of the Federal Open Market Committee.
"Ultimately, the government is in
the business of inflating the dollar," Bolser said, "so the Fed is trying to
engineer a recession, in order to cushion the pernicious effects of its own
inflation."
"In my view, the government intentionally desires a deep
recession not unlike that of the 1930s," he continued. "The Fed, however,
dissembles, attempting to display the opposite impression with its rate
cuts."
"Cutting rates will not boost the economy in an environment where
the credit bubble has burst and banks are afraid to lend," he explained. "But
decreasing the repurchase pool will push the economy down, especially when the
primary banks execute monetary policy in accordance with the wishes of the Fed
to short the market with future contracts that push the indices
down."
Bolser argued the Fed's ability to manipulate the market by
increasing or decreasing the pool of available repurchase agreements amounts to
a "stealth methodology" where the Fed can now depress the market, while
implementing a policy of lowering interest rates, which most economists would
see as trying to stimulate economic growth and the stock market.
"You
have to remember the primary goal of the Fed is to support the bond market,
which the Fed has done for quarter century," Bolser stressed. "The Fed needs a
strong bond market so the Treasury can sell the enormous amount of Treasury
securities, especially to China, that we need to sell to finance what this year
may be as large as a $400 billion dollar budget deficit calculated on a cash
basis."
"As a result, the friend of the Fed is the
bond speculator," he added.
Among the U.S. banks and securities firms
currently on the list are Bank of America Securities, Cantor Fitzgerald,
Countrywide Securities, Bear Stearns, Daiwa Securities America, Goldman Sachs,
Greenwich Capital Markets, HSBC Securities (USA), J.P. Morgan Securities, Lehman
Brothers, Merrill Lynch Government Securities and Morgan Stanley.
Also on
the list are France's BNP Paribas Securities, Great Britain's Barclays Capital,
Switzerland's Credit Suisse Securities, Japan's Mizuho Securities and Germany's
Dresden Kleinwort Wasserstein Securities.
"These dealers are the foot
soldiers of the Fed, as it implements monetary policy," Bolser
said.
Studying Bolser’s "Repos/DOW" chart from Dec. 7 through
yesterday, a broad correlation between the downward movement in the Fed
repurchase agreements pool totals and the DJIA as seen by tracking the 30-day
moving average is clear.
"With this strategy, the Fed hopes we won't
experience the extreme 'stag-flation' we had in the late 1970s," he argues. "The
Fed hopes to induce a recession to manage downward stock prices and commodity
prices, including oil, gold, copper, and lumber, as well as the overall consumer
demand for retail goods."
"Stag-flation" is an unusual economic situation
in which economic stagnation is combined with inflation. Some economics believe
that is happening now as the economy slows down while food and energy prices
rise sharply.