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Keyword: fed

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  • Feds Launch Investigation of Tires

    05/14/2014 11:48:43 AM PDT · by Paul46360 · 6 replies
    WLSAM ^ | 5-14-14 | Brian Ross
    An ABC News investigation found that a badly-flawed and archaic government recall system has permitted millions of potentially dangerous tires to remain in use, on store shelves for sale or simply unaccounted for.
  • Tim Geithner is no hero, no matter how many times he says that he is one

    05/14/2014 10:46:33 AM PDT · by Kaslin · 9 replies
    Townhall.com ^ | May 14, 2014 | Nick Sorrentino
    TARP was the absolute height of crony capitalism. Many of the big banks should have gone down, but in the midst of a “Blackberry panic” – as David Stockman puts it – the masters of the masters of the universe lost sight of reality and the nature of markets. Yes, Goldman Sachs would have gone down. But this would have been a GOOD THING. The blood which should have filled the the streets of Downtown Manhattan would have washed the unsustainable leverage clean from the system (for a while.) Giants are meant to fall. It would have been good for...
  • The Death of the Dollar Menu shows Fed's Wage Erosion

    05/13/2014 7:04:43 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 14 replies
    American Thinker ^ | 05/13/2014 | Nicholas Arnold
    “Got a buck? you’re in luck!” This jingle was a staple for you ever since your parents started giving you an allowance. At the time, you got maybe $5 a week to spend or save as you pleased. Although this was a fortune as far as you were concerned, a fiver tends to evaporate quickly, and your snack options were limited. One of the few exceptions to this was McDonalds. For just a dollar and change you could get a double cheeseburger or even hot fudge sundaes. Fast forward 5 years. You’re paying a lot for college, so the Dollar...
  • Chicago suburb tells feds to keep their money -- and their school lunch regulations

    05/11/2014 7:28:39 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 9 replies
    American Thinker ^ | 05/10/2014 | Richard L. Benkin
    A school district in Chicago’s northwest suburbs is quitting the National School Lunch Program over new regulations championed by first lady Michelle Obama. The so-called Smart Snacks in School policy, set to take effect on July 1, is the latest attempt by our Regulator-in-Chief to dictate every aspect of Americans’ behavior. It dictates strict calorie, sodium, fat, and sugar guidelines for any food sold in schools during the day. That even includes the ubiquitous bake sales and other fundraisers. Instead of forcing the school district’s 500 low income kids and others to eat “healthier,” however, the administration is only creating...
  • Fed Chair Yellen: Minimum wage hike to have negative impact on jobs

    05/08/2014 4:38:15 PM PDT · by Nachum · 9 replies
    CNBC, with Reuters ^ | 5/8/14 | Staff
    In testimony before a Senate committee on Thursday, Fed Chair Yellen said a minimum wage increase would likely have some negative effects on jobs, though it´s not clear how large. Still, boosting the federal minimum wage, which has remained at $7.25 per hour since mid-2009, would benefit some people, she added. In recent months, the federal minimum wage has been a hot-button issue. In February, President Barack Obama boosted the minimum pay for federal contractors hired in the future to $10.10 per hour. He´s also voiced his support for the federal level for all workers to rise to $10.10 from
  • Gold falls on Yellen’s assessment of economy

    05/07/2014 1:08:09 PM PDT · by Olog-hai · 30 replies
    Associated Press ^ | May 7, 2014 3:37 PM EDT
    Gold is falling after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen gave an upbeat assessment of the U.S. economy and said that inflation remains low. […] Yellen’s comments suggest that the Federal Reserve is set to continue reducing its economic stimulus, lessening the threat of rising prices. Investors typically buy gold as a hedge against inflation. …
  • Former San Fran Fed Employee Threatened To Murder Ex-FHFA Head Ed DeMarco

    05/06/2014 5:20:12 PM PDT · by dynachrome · 5 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 5-6-14 | Tyler Durden
    When it comes to the San Francisco Fed, it is best known throughout the financial community as the group of crack economists who spend millions of taxpayer funds to investigate such probing, for kindergarteners at least, topics as: is water wet, do trees make a sound when they fall in the forest, is it still worth going to college, and are hedge funds important in a crisis. Little did we know that, at least some of them, are homicidal psychopaths with suicidal tendencies. Because this is precisely what was revealed moments ago when Bloomberg reported that the chief operating officer...
  • The Fed Could Have Bought California & Texas… or All of China & Japan's Treasuries With QE Money

    05/06/2014 10:53:36 AM PDT · by blam · 8 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 5-6-2014 | Phoenix Capital Research
    The Fed Could Have Bought California & Texas… or All of China & Japan's Treasuries With QE Money Phoenix Capital Research 05/06/2014 12:31 The Federal Reserve has spent over $3.2 trillion in the post-Crisis era. The bulk of this money printing has gone towards buying garbage mortgage securities or US Treasuries from Wall Street. Because we’ve reached a point in time at which $1 trillion no longer sounds like a lot of money, we thought we’d go through the exercise of assessing just what the Fed could have done with this money besides give it to Wall Street. With $3.2...
  • The Hidden Motive Behind Quantitative Easing

    04/19/2014 4:36:32 PM PDT · by BfloGuy · 45 replies
    The Mises Institute ^ | 4/19/2014 | Hunter Lewis
    Foreign individuals and businesses long ago cut back on their purchases of U.S. bonds. Their place was taken by foreign central banks. The central banks simply created money in their own currency and used it to buy our bonds.The Federal Reserve always knew that we couldn’t rely on foreign central banks to buy our bonds forever. This may be the main reason it began the program called quantitative easing, in which the Fed created money out of thin air specifically to buy back U.S. debt.Quantitative easing may have been intended to be a kind of insurance policy. If foreign central...
  • Armed Fed Agents and Snipers? Nevada Rancher Is Taking on the Gov’t in a Battle at Breaking Point

    04/09/2014 8:28:06 AM PDT · by xzins · 134 replies
    The Blaze ^ | Apr. 8, 2014 | Becket Adams
    Armed federal agents deployed last week to northeast Clark County, Nev., for what can only be described as a major escalation in a decades-long standoff between a local cattle rancher and the U.S. government. .Cliven Bundy, the last remaining rancher in the southern Nevada county, stands in defiance of a 2013 court order demanding that he remove his cattle from public land managed by the U.S. Department of the Interior’s Bureau of Land Management. The 67-year-old veteran rancher, who has compared the situation to similar confrontations with government officials in Ruby Ridge and Waco, Texas, told TheBlaze that his family...
  • St. Louis Fed Research Director: Bitcoin Could Be A Good Threat To Central Banks

    04/07/2014 7:28:18 AM PDT · by Errant · 8 replies
    Business Inisider ^ | 6 April 2014 | Rob Wile
    Last week, St. Louis Fed Director of Research David Andolfatto released a presentation on Bitcoin, becoming one of the most prominent central bank officials to study the cryptocurrency. We caught up with Andolfatto to ask him about why he put this deck together, where he thinks Bitcoin is going, and whether he personally has anything invested in it. Business Insider: What was the genesis for this presentation? David Andolfatto: Its genesis was a blog post I'd started, addressing arguments that gold bugs frequently put forth, that gold is superior money. Of course, Bitcoin was in the news — I read...
  • Deflating the Deflation Myth

    04/02/2014 3:55:29 PM PDT · by BfloGuy · 28 replies
    The Mises Institute ^ | 4/2/2014 | Chris Casey
    The fear of deflation serves as the theoretical justification of every inflationary action taken by the Federal Reserve and central banks around the world. It is why the Federal Reserve targets a price inflation rate of 2 percent, and not 0 percent. It is in large part why the Federal Reserve has more than quadrupled the money supply since August 2008. And it is, remarkably, a great myth, for there is nothing inherently dangerous or damaging about deflation. Deflation is feared not only by the followers of Milton Friedman (those from the so-called Monetarist or Chicago School of economics), but...
  • Yellen: Economy Still Needs Extraordinary Support

    03/31/2014 4:40:22 PM PDT · by mykroar · 22 replies
    FoxBusiness.com ^ | 3/31/2014 | Dunstan Prial
    Janet Yellen REUTERS The monetary policies crafted and initiated by the Federal Reserve are intended to help Main Street rather than Wall Street, Fed Chair Janet Yellen told an audience of grassroots community organizers in Chicago on Monday. In an address that employed a handful of devices reminiscent of a political speech, Yellen made her case for a dovish approach toward raising interest rates. Yellen singled out the plights of several individuals – who she named and whose situations she described in detail – to illustrate labor markets are healing slowly and prolonged accommodative policy is needed to ensure labor...
  • The Incompetence Of The Federal Reserve And Deep State Is Unavoidable

    03/25/2014 9:50:03 AM PDT · by Errant · 9 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 25 March 2014 | Charles Hugh-Smith
    It's not the managers who are incompetent, it's the organization itself that is incompetent. I received a number of interesting reader responses to my previous entries on the incompetence of the Federal Reserve and the Deep State: The Federal Reserve: Masters of the Universe or Trapped Incompetents? (March 21, 2014) Why Is Our Government (and Deep State) So Incompetent? (March 6, 2014) Some readers thought I was underestimating the power of these institutions to pursue essentially unlimited money-printing and related global strategies. While I understand the apparent power of unlimited money-printing and global Empire, my point (poorly articulated the first...
  • Place You bets: How do you think Obama and his comrades will want to use the next ‘serious crisis’?

    03/20/2014 1:17:49 PM PDT · by Voice of Reason88 · 29 replies
    March 17, 2014 | Anonymous
    Make a guess and place you bets – we all know it’s on it way, the next crash is going to happen sooner or later, it's just a question of what the left will try to do to not waste another “serious crisis” Think about it – the Fed is Printing money.. .excuse me “Digitizing” – they can’t even go through the motion of spitting out worthless paper that diminishes our savings, they have to add insult to injury with that sort o chicanery Let’s face it, somewhere in the deep dark crevices of the leftist mind, they have their...
  • So Janet Yellen Wants Higher Interest!

    03/20/2014 8:59:18 AM PDT · by xzins · 27 replies
    Townhall ^ | Mar 20, 2014 | Roger Schlesinger
    I would like to win the lottery; many others would like to win the billion dollar prize for the one with the perfect brackets for March Madness, some would simply like the year off with pay and a whole bunch of Americans would like a job. Where are the fairy God Mothers when we need them? A large number of our friends and relatives would like to rid themselves of diseases that are holding them back; a large group would like peace in our time; the President would like a computer and internet Guru, too many young girls would like...
  • Janet Yellen Punt Prompts Panic: Even a hint of a taper is enough to scare people.

    03/20/2014 6:45:59 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 11 replies
    National Review ^ | 03/20/2014 | Tim Cavanaugh
    The spring of 2014 has not yet begun, but a jittery Wall Street was spooked Wednesday by the prospect that interest rates might rise “as soon as” the spring of 2015. That was the immediate response to Federal Reserve chairwoman Janet Yellen’s first press conference since taking office. Yellen’s mere suggestion that the Fed might someday pursue a less inflationary policy has been blamed for a drop in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, and armchair central bankers are jumping on the rookie Fed chief for talking the market down. Fed may raise rates as soon as next spring, Yellen suggests:...
  • Stocks slump on Janet Yellen's rate hike remark

    03/19/2014 2:39:18 PM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 12 replies
    CNN Money ^ | 03/19/2014
    Investors weren't too thrilled by what they heard from Janet Yellen during her first meeting in charge of the Fed. The Dow fell more than 100 points, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq also finished lower. Stocks were relatively stable as Yellen started her press conference. But the Dow fell as many as 180 points before recovering after she said the Fed's stimulus program would most likely be finished by the fall and that a rate hike could come as soon as early 2015. Prior to the press conference, the Fed said it will continue trimming, or tapering, its monthly...
  • Foreigners Sell A Record Amount, Over $100 Billion, Of Treasurys Held By The Fed In Past Week

    03/14/2014 7:20:53 AM PDT · by Errant · 26 replies
    Zero Hedge ^ | 14 March 2014 | Tyler Durden
    A month ago we reported that according to much delayed TIC data, China had just dumped the second-largest amount of US Treasurys in history. The problem, of course, with this data is that it is stale and very backward looking. For a much better, and up to date, indicator of what foreigners are doing with US Treasurys in near real time, the bond watchers keep track of a less known data series, called "Treasury Securities Held in Custody for Foreign Official and International Accounts" which as the name implies shows what foreigners are doing with their Treasury securities held...
  • Food Price Inflation Scares The Fed

    03/14/2014 6:42:27 AM PDT · by SeekAndFind · 22 replies
    American Thinker ^ | 03/14/2014 | Chriss Street
    Stock markets around the world fell today, led by the 246 point dive, or 1.5%, for the U.S. Dow Jones Industrial Average and the 1.9% drop for German stock market index.  Analysts generally pointed to worries about a shrinking Chinese lending and the potential trade war between Russia and the West, but I am more concerned that since the beginning of 2014 food prices have skyrocketed.  The Federal Reserve must be concerned that their international support for “cheap money policies” to stimulate economic growth may be funding commodity speculation that is driving prices higher and creating wide spread misery. If...