The Federal Reserve has been propping up the stock market through - TopicsExpress



          

The Federal Reserve has been propping up the stock market through its quantitative easing program that forced interest rates to all-time lows and drove investors out of bonds and into stocks. But those days may be coming to an end. For one, the Fed can’t keep printing money to buy U.S. bonds. Bond purchases by the Fed, with printed money, account for about three-quarters of all Treasury bond purchases resulting in a Federal Reserve balance sheet that exceeds $3.6 trillion. One day, QE must come to an end. Indeed, on June 19, 2013, Fed chairman Bernanke hinted that QE might slow from its recent pace. The stock market reacted with a hefty decline of 2.5 percent on June 20. By June 24, the stock market had declined almost 5 percent in less than a week. Now this isn’t a crash by any measure, but it might be a harbinger of things to come. Here’s where the predictability thesis come in. We know that the market won’t like any reduction in Fed purchases. So what will happen when the Fed not only reduces its bond purchases, but stops them altogether? Hasn’t the market told us how it will react? I think so. Moreover, QE is likely to end by December or early next year, so that gives us a projected timetable of coming events.
Posted on: Thu, 29 Aug 2013 23:45:21 +0000

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