The Fed's Next Money Printing Program, QE3, is Inevitable

A third quantitative easing program almost certainly awaits because the Fed is incapable of letting interest rates rise due to the detrimental effects this would have on their balance sheet. The only way they can secure interest rates at a lower level than they were purchased is to keep on buying more securities with printed money and enforce a cap/ceiling on market interest rates. The Fed is certainly not going to sell assets because they are currently the major purchasers of the asset markets they participate in, i.e. Treasuries, agency debt and mortgage backed securities. The Fed being the major holder and purchaser of particular assets has led the Fed to mark their assets to prices which they would pay, not necessarily the price of an outside buyer, and should the Fed become a major seller of these assets the need for mark downs versus current valuations is highly likely. In this circumstance, the Fed will again come face to face with their tiny capital base as they are unable to absorb losses of even 1% on their current asset markings without going insolvent.

Without QE3, interest rates can be expected to rise, and this should influence the Fed to step in and try restrain yields. Even though money printing has continued since the end of QE2, this is insufficient to maintain the Fed?s bubble. If interest rates rise substantively, this will put major pressure on sovereign, state and household solvency and could lead to near future bankruptcies across the board. The Fed will not stand idle and will come in to try paper over the markets problems in an illusory rescue attempt.

Bill Gross, manager of the world?s largest bond hedge fund, says bond yields should rise after the Fed ends QE2. Who is going to buy those treasures when a trillion dollars of purchasing power exits the market, he asks? (see video interview) With the Fed?s intent to restrain bond yields from rising, another money printing program is the only solution in their tool kit.

Whether preemptive or responsive, the Fed?s reaction this time around will likely be much faster than in previous episodes. The Fed is much more equipped now, after having several new powers resolved by congress and experiencing the 2008 chapter of the crisis, and are now unlikely to be as timid and lagging going forward.

Another way of seeing the inevitability of QE3 is realizing that the Fed has two mandates, price stability and low unemployment. The Fed has convinced themselves that inflation is not a problem so the only responsibility left for them is to ensure a high level of employment. The only measure the Fed has to even attempt to influence this is to print money, and yesterday?s Fed statement indicated that they are concerned about the level of unemployment, meaning they getting ready for a new money printing program to try and ?address? this.

All of the above points to good times ahead for gold and silver as the money printing spigot is more easily turned on at full blast going forward, despite the short, relative drought we?re currently experiencing.

Glossary of Terms

Bullion
Metal valued by its mass.
Bullion Coin
A coin valued by its precious metal content (typically with a purity of at least 90%) and used primarily for investment purposes.
Commodity
A product that exhibits some level of uniformity across suppliers.
Diversification
In finance or investing is a method of reducing risk by investing in diverse assets.
Face Value
The value inscribed on a coin (usually lower than its market value).
Hedging
In finance or investing is a method of reducing risk by investing in assets that exhibit an inverse relationship or are inversely correlated.
London Bullion Market Association
The trade association representing the wholesale gold and silver market in London and credited with setting the standards for the quality of gold and silver bars.
Numismatic Coin
A coin valued by its rarity, history or other characteristic of collectability.
Numismatics
The study or collection of coins, currency and closely related objects.
Privy Mark
Also called a “mint mark” is an engraving on a coin that denotes its mint of origin.
Proof Coinage
Collector coins that are fed manually, struck several times for superior quality and inspected by hand. Proof coins are minted in limited quantities and admissible in retirement savings accounts.
Spot Price
The quoted price of a commodity at the time of trading, usually only valid for one or two business days.
Troy Ounce
A standard unit of measure totaling roughly 31 grams.
Uncirculated
A term for coins that have been released to the public via mints or coin dealers but not intended to be used as every day currency.
World Gold Council
A market development organization, providing data and insights to gold-related industries including: investment, jewelry, technology and government.