Centenaire de la Réserve fédérale, un siècle d'escroquerie monétariste - Les Echos. La Fed manipule le marché des métaux précieux pour protéger la valeur d’échange du dollar US. Par Paul Craig Roberts J’ai été le premier à dire que la Réserve fédérale manipulait tous les marchés, non seulement le prix des obligations et les taux d’intérêts, mais aussi le marché des métaux précieux afin de protéger la valeur d’échange du dollar US, valeur menacée par l’assouplissement quantitatif de la Fed.
Quand la Fed met en circulation des dollars plus rapidement que ce que la demande n'augmente, il est clair que sa valeur d’échange risque de s'effondrer. Philippe Béchade: Les actions, une bulle gonflée par la Fed, seule! Intégrale Placements - 5 juin. Philippe Béchade: La FED achète un dollar de PIB entre 6 et 8 dollars, Intégrale Placements - 31/07.
Philippe Bechade "on a essayé d'enfumer les gens" 03 Avril 2013. Philippe Béchade: "On ne parie rien, on sait ce qui se passe" dans Intégrale Placements - 10 avril. Fed Audit 2013 // OIG13031. 11-Septembre : le secret de la Réserve fédérale américaine. GEAB N°73 est disponible ! Crise systémique globale 2013 : Le Grand Brouillard Statistique impose de passer de la navigation aux instruments à la navigation à vue – Pièges, repères et grilles de lecture. Dans les tendances Up&Down présentées dans le numéro de janvier, notre équipe avait placé en Down « Les indicateurs économiques » avec l’argumentaire suivant : « Entre des indicateurs économiques de court terme qui décrivent seulement ce qui s’est passé dans la semaine, d’autres qui sont manipulés par les gouvernements pour refléter le message qu’ils souhaitent passer, et d’autres enfin qui n’ont plus de pertinence dans le monde actuel, la réalité économique est pour le moins très mal décrite, voire travestie, par ces chiffres pourtant suivis par les entreprises, les banques, les pays.
Ce brouillard statistique empêche une navigation fiable, pourtant primordiale dans ces temps de crise. » Que ce soit le fruit de manipulations intentionnelles de la part des acteurs dans leur effort de survie ou le résultat de l’extrême volatilité des bases de calcul (comme la valeur des monnaies et du dollar US tout particulièrement), cette tendance se confirme en effet. Say Goodbye To The Purchasing Power Of The Dollar. On a long solo car trip last week, I listened to several podcasts to pass the time.
One was a classic: The Invention of Money, originally released by NPR's Planet Money team back in January of 2011. I highly recommend listening (or re-listening) to it in full. The podcast is an effective reminder of how any currency in a monetary system is a fabricated construct. A simpler way to explain this is to say it has value simply because we believe it does. Through the centuries – in historic cultures like that of Yap Island who used giant, immovable stone disks for commerce, to today's United States, whose Dollar fiat currency exists primarily in digital form – "money" is able to be exchanged for goods and services because society agrees to accept it (at a certain rate of exchange). The Fed Audit. The first top-to-bottom audit of the Federal Reserve uncovered eye-popping new details about how the U.S. provided a whopping $16 trillion in secret loans to bail out American and foreign banks and businesses during the worst economic crisis since the Great Depression.
Invité] Les années Bernanke : Les grands traits de la politique de la FED (1), par Onubre Einz. Après avoir fait un papier montrant les limites de la reprise américaine en cours - se trouver toujours à la remorque du crédit public, il nous a semblé intéressant de consacrer une série de courts papiers aux années Bernanke.
Auréolé d’un palmarès universitaire prestigieux, Mr Bernanke, a succédé au catastrophique Greenspan, grand artisan de la libération financière, de la baisse des taux d’intérêt et de la crise qui en a résulté. Républicain modéré, arrivé à la tête de la FED en 2006 avec le concours de Bush Jr, Bernanke cédera son Poste à Yanet Yellen en février 2014. L’heure est donc au bilan d’une action qui s’est trouvée confrontée à une crise sans équivalent depuis la Grande dépression des années 30. Fed Has Bought More U.S. Gov’t Debt This Year Than Treasury Has Issued.
Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke (AP Photo/Alex Brandon) (CNSNews.com) - So far this calendar year, the Federal Reserve has bought up more U.S. government debt than the U.S. Treasury has issued. On Dec. 31, the total debt of the U.S. government was $16.4327 trillion and then-Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner announced that the government had hit what was then the legal debt limit.
Last week, however, Congress enacted a law to suspend the federal government debt limit until May 18, 2013, and allow the administration to resume increasing the debt. TONER MAN. Reality Check: Do We Really Need To Audit The Federal Reserve? Ron Paul and Bernie Sanders interviewed on KPCC- 10/05/09 Part 1. Reggie Middleton REALity TV #1: Benjamin Bernanke LIED To The World About QE3/Unemployment. This Is How $14 Trillion Flows Every Day Through The US Financial System. After several weeks ago, the New York Fed was kind enough to tell us that absent perpetual expectations of Fed generosity, the stock market would be over 50% lower, today its intrepid bloggers focus on another critical aspect of the US financial system, and the Fed's mediation thereof: namely visualizing the "plumbing" that keeps the financial system afloat.
From the FRBNY: "On a typical day, more than $14 trillion of dollar-denominated payments is routed through the banking system. When The Fed Has To Print Money Just To Print Money. While the topic of net Fed capital flows, and implicit balance sheet risk has recently gotten substantial prominence some three years after Zero Hedge first started discussing it, one open question is what happens when we cross the "D-Rate" boundary, or as we defined it, the point at which the Fed's Net Interest Margin becomes negative i.e., when the outflows due to interest payable to reserve banks (from IOER) surpasses the cash inflows from the Fed's low-yielding asset portfolio, and when the remittances to the Treasury cease (or technically become negative).
To get the full answer of what happens then, we once again refer readers to the paper released yesterday by Morgan Stanley's Greenlaw and Deutsche Bank's Hooper, which discusses not only the parabolic chart that US debt yield will certainly follow over the next several decades, but the trickier concept known as the Fed's technical insolvency, or that moment when the Fed's tiny capital buffer goes negative. Well, yes and no. La Banque centrale américaine provoque un «mini krach» obligataire - Finances. Fed Helps Lenders’ Profit More Than Homebuyers:Mortgages.
The Federal Reserve’s latest mortgage bond purchases so far are helping profit margins at lenders including Wells Fargo & Co.
(WFC) and JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM) more than homebuyers and property owners looking to refinance. Since the Fed’s Sept. 13 announcement that it would buy $40 billion more securities per month, the rates offered for new 30- year loans have fallen by just 0.13 percentage point, compared with a drop of about 0.7 percentage point for yields on the bonds into which the loans get packaged, according to data compiled by Bloomberg and Bankrate.com.
La révoltante histoire de la "Réserve fédérale" américaine, hold-up planétaire sur la création monétaire. Mark Pittman, Reporter Who Challenged Fed Secrecy, Dies at 52. Bloomberg News Reporter Mark Pittman Mark Pittman and wife Laura Fahrenthold Bloomberg News reporter Mark Pittman Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Mark Pittman, the award-winning reporter whose fight to make the Federal Reserve more accountable to taxpayers led Bloomberg News to sue the central bank and win, died Nov. 25 in Yonkers, New York.
He was 52. Bloomberg's Erik Schatzker reports. Nov. 30 (Bloomberg) -- Mark Pittman, the award-winning reporter whose fight to make the Federal Reserve more accountable to taxpayers led Bloomberg News to sue the central bank and win, died Nov. 25 in Yonkers, New York. Edward Mandell House. Un article de Wikipédia, l'encyclopédie libre.
Benjamin Strong, Jr. Benjamin Strong, Jr. (December 22, 1872 – October 16, 1928) was an American banker. He served as Governor of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York for 14 years until his death. Strong exerted great influence over the policy and actions of the entire Federal Reserve System.[1] Economic policies and advocacy[edit] Strong was also involved in the establishment of the Federal Reserve System. Citation de Thomas Jefferson / 1861.
Le complot de la Réserve Fédérale / 1995. Résumé. Teaser. Teaser 2. Chapitre 2. Chapitre 3. Chapitre 4. Chapitre 5. Chapitre 6. Chapitre 7. Lincoln. Karl Marx, un plagiaire ? Table des matières. Couverture. Couverture fr.
Interventions de la FED (5 dernières années) Panic of 1907. Economic conditions[edit] When U.S. President Andrew Jackson allowed the charter of the Second Bank of the United States to expire in 1836, the U.S. was without any sort of central bank, and the money supply in New York City fluctuated with the country's annual agricultural cycle. Each autumn money flowed out of the city as harvests were purchased and—in an effort to attract money back—interest rates were raised.
Foreign investors then sent their money to New York to take advantage of the higher rates.[6] From the January 1906 Dow Jones Industrial Average high of 103, the market began a modest correction that would continue throughout the year. Panic[edit] Cornering copper[edit] The 1907 panic began with a stock manipulation scheme to corner the market in F. To finance the scheme, Otto, Augustus and Charles Morse met with Charles T.
The stock closed at $30 on Tuesday and fell to $10 by Wednesday. Contagion spreads[edit] F. Panic hits the trusts[edit] J.P. Aldrich–Vreeland Act. The Aldrich–Vreeland Act was passed in response to the Panic of 1907 and established the National Monetary Commission, which recommended the Federal Reserve Act of 1913. On May 27, 1908, the bill passed the House on a mostly party-line vote of 166–140, with 13 Republicans voting against it and no Democrats voting for it.[1] On May 30, it passed in the Senate with 43 Republicans in favor and five Republicans joining 17 Democrats opposed. President Roosevelt signed the bill that same night.[2] The act also allowed national banks to start national currency associations in groups of ten or more, with at least $5 million in total capital, to issue emergency currency.
These bank notes were not to be backed by just government bonds, but also just about any securities the banks were holding. National Monetary Commission. Background[edit] Following the panics of the late 1890s and early 1900s, the American people were aroused to the need for basic reforms. One of the most painful aspects of the economic crisis before World War I was the rush by individuals and businesses, as they became apprehensive about the economic future, to the banks to convert their deposits into cash. A common way to mitigate these "bank runs" was to suspend cash payments during crises, either by imposing a maximum daily withdrawal or complete suspension. ln the Southeast and Midwest, the resulting shortage of cash was so serious that local clearinghouses issued emergency notes against collateral pledged by cooperating banks so that people could carry on business.
Suspending cash payments and issuing clearinghouse certificates were better than allowing a panic to continue, but the public wanted a reform that would prevent suspensions altogether.