Showing posts with label Bernanke. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bernanke. Show all posts

Asian shares mixed after Bernanke comments (AP)

BEIJING – Global stocks were mixed Monday after U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke said the Fed might buy more bonds, while a stronger yen weighed on Japanese exporters.

Japan's Nikkei 225 lost 0.1 percent to 10,167.23. Exporters including automakers lost ground after a disappointing U.S. jobs report Friday weakened the dollar, which would make Japanese exports more expensive abroad.

China's benchmark Shanghai Composite Index gained 0.5 percent to 2,587.17.

In Europe, London's FTSE 100 lost 0.4 percent to 5,745.32, while Germany's DAX gained 0.2 percent to 6,962.84. France's CAC40 was unchanged at 3,750.43.

South Korea's Kospi fell 0.2 percent to 1,953.64, and Australia's S&P/ASX 200 slipped .12 percent to 4,688.6. Benchmarks in New Zealand, Singapore and Taiwan advanced.

Asian investors were encouraged after Bernanke said the U.S. central bank is prepared to buy even more than $600 billion in Treasury bonds over the next eight months if necessary to boost economic growth. That might trigger an influx of money into the markets of developing Asian economies as investors seek better returns.

Hopes for such a move "will have a good impact, at least in sentiment, because there would be further `hot money' that will chase tangible assets," said Peter Lai, investment manager for DBS Vickers in Hong Kong.

In New York on Friday, the Dow Jones industrial average spent much of the day in the red but closed up 0.2 percent, to close at 11,382.09 — not far from its post-recession high.

The U.S. Labor Department reported November unemployment climbed to a seven-month high of 9.8 percent. Employers added just 39,000 jobs, far below what economists had forecast.

In currencies, the dollar was trading at 82.83 yen from 82.61 yen late Friday. It had hovered around the 84-yen line for most of last week before the U.S. jobs data was released. The euro stood at $1.3357 from $1.3380.


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Bernanke takes the US Federal Reserve Defence on "60 minutes

WASHINGTON - Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke intensifies its defence $ 600 billion plan binding of Council of Treasury-purchase the Federal Reserve, say that the economy still struggling to become "standalone" without the assistance of the Government.

In an interview recorded with "60 minutes CBS" aired on Sunday night, Bernanke also argued that the Congress should not cut spending or raise taxes given the fragility of the economy remains.

The high life Barbara Corcoran today takes a look on how far 400,000 State places $ go to United States 12 essential toy hits Christmas past ConsumerMan: shopping holiday tips to save Black Friday money winnings, but consumers are still nerve

The President of the Federal Reserve said think another recession is unlikely. But he warned that the economy may undergo a slowdown in high unemployment dampens consumer spending.

Interview is part of a large counter-offensive Bernanke leads against critics of the plan purchase link the US Federal Reserve announced on 3 November. The purchases are intended to lower rates of interest in the long term, to raise the stock price and encourage more spending to stimulate the economy.

Criticism from Republicans in Congress of the US Federal Reserve officials say they fear that intervention the Fed could stimulate inflation and speculative on Wall Street purchases while doing not much of the economy.

Other issues of "60 minutes", Bernanke interview:

A sustained unemployment would have been much higher-"something as it is in depression, 25 percent"-had the Fed not provided special assistance to Wall Street firms, banks and other companies to facilitate a credit crunch. Said it could take four or five years more unemployment, to 9.8% in the fall to a historically normal 5% or 6%. A reiterated that the Fed is ready to buy even more than 600 billion in bonds of the Treasury Board for eight months, if it decides that the economy has need fuel to lower interest rates. Sustained A risk of inflation is an exaggeration. Bernanke has said he is "100 %" confident that the Fed will be able to push inflation, when the time is right, by increasing interest rates and the conduct of its exciting programs. Called the risk of deflation - a decrease in prices, wages and extended values of stocks and houses - "pretty weak". He said that likely would have been already if the Fed did not maintain super-low interest rates. Urged A Congress in order to improve the nation's tax code "closing the gaps and decreasing rates" for individuals and businesses. He said so doing create a greater incentive for people to invest.

In the interview with no material be broadcast CAs, but was later posted online in the form of video, Bernanke reiterated his opinion that artificially low Chinese currency is "bad for u.s. economic" because it hurts our trade

It is not useful for China, which, he said, because it makes it more difficult for managers of Beijing policies keep China's economy and inflation, overheating.

Critics fear that binding of the Federal Reserve purchases are increasing inflation risks have complained that purchases mean that the Fed is, indeed, printing more money. In the interview, Bernanke called that a "myth." He stressed the Fed does not print money when buying Treasurys and said the program expand the amount of money in circulation "significantly."

History: Yes, the economy is doing stable earnings, but...

Lou Crandall, Wrightson ICAP Chief Economist said that Bernanke is just that purchases the Fed does alter significantly the amount of money circulating in the economy. This is mainly because banks are not ready for most of the money they already hold in reserve. When the Fed buy Treasurys, it increases reserves in the banking system. These reserves actually "creating" money, banks would they lend.

Yet, Crandall suggested that bond purchase programme creates the appearance of money printing, something which could establish the credibility of the Central Bank into play.

Appearance Bernanke Sunday evening is part of a Flash of public relations, that it is mounted since the reserve US Federal announced program on 3 November. Private and public appearances, Bernanke has sought to explain and defend the regular programme Americans, investors and regulators on Capitol Hill.

History: Bernanke, Geithner: take punched against critics

His efforts have included an op - Ed article in the Washington Post and discussions with students in Jacksonville, Florida, economists Jekyll Island, GA, businessmen in Columbus, Ohio, Governors of the Central European banks and members of the Banking Commission of the Senate.

Criticism comes from home and abroad. Responsible for China, Germany, Brazil and others said that the Fed is a scheme to u.s. exporters a competitive advantage by keeping the value of the weak dollar. Weak dollar makes goods less expensive u.s. products abroad and more expensive foreign to the United States.

It is rare for a Fed Chairman to give an interview for broadcast or print session. But it was Bernanke's second appearance on "60 minutes." His first was in March 2009. At that time, he knows the anger on Wall Street orchestrated and rising anxiety about the economy.

History: Actions put in place a strong December

In an interview broadcast Sunday, Bernanke pointed out that the economy is growing at an annual rate of approximately 2.5% - too slow to reduce unemployment. For a self-sustaining recovery, consumers and businesses should spend more, so the economy could grow faster.

Bernanke said he hoped that binding of the Federal Reserve purchase program will allow to lift stock price. This is partly because the decline in the yields of bonds would cause some people to move money into stocks.

Stock prices would increase wealth and trust of individuals and businesses. Expenditure increase lifting revenues, profits and economic growth. Bernanke has referred to this as a "virtuous cycle".

History: The greatest feeble-minded CEO 2010

But when asked at the interview if the recovery is autonomous, Bernanke responded: "it may not be." It is very close to the border. ?

In view of the still-low economic growth, he said: "We are not very far from being the level where the economy is not self-sufficient."

Copyright 2010 the Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Bernanke and Geithner fight back

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On the morning of Nov. 4, two days after the midterm elections, Timothy Geithner was scheduled to fly to Kyoto for a dinner with Asian-Pacific finance ministers. At the last minute, Geithner postponed his trip; there was just too much going on in Washington. The dimensions of the electoral drubbing that President Barack Obama had taken were still sinking in when the Treasury Secretary arrived at the White House to plot strategy at the President's cabinet meeting.

Obama then extended an olive branch to newly empowered Republican leaders, inviting them to meet later in the month. Geithner had no illusion that peace was breaking out. In fact, as he returned to the Treasury Dept. for a private lunch with Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke, the next political battle was already taking shape.

Bernanke would be the new target.

Bernanke and Geithner, who sat for separate interviews for this story, won't say what they discussed at their Nov. 4 lunch; an official describes the meeting as routine. As the Administration's point man in its dealings with the Fed, Geithner lunches with Bernanke almost every week. The Treasury Secretary says there's one topic that's off-limits: "I don't give him advice on monetary policy for two reasons. One is out of respect for the basic independence of the Fed. The other is because I'm not living and breathing monetary policy every day." Treasuries halt slide on speculation costs in check as jobs gain What's a central banker worth? Geithner weak dollar seen as U.S. recovery route

The two had been scheduled to get together earlier that week but waited until immediately after a two-day Fed meeting that began on Election Day—the same session, as it turned out, that put Bernanke in play politically. At the meeting, Bernanke faced down opposition from Kansas City Fed President Thomas M. Hoenig and pushed through his plan for a second round of "quantitative easing"—pumping $600 billion into the economy over the next eight months by buying long-term Treasury debt. The strategy was designed to boost the flagging U.S. economy, bring the unemployment rate down from its painful 9.6 percent level, and prevent a Lost Decade of low growth and deflation similar to what Japan suffered after its real estate bubble burst in 1990.

Complaints were expected — from abroad
With the impact of Obama's $814 billion stimulus program fading and Republicans unwilling to spend more, the President was depending on the Fed to prod the recovery. And Fed officials say they felt obliged to act—to try to reduce unemployment they think is dangerously high and increase inflation they fear is dangerously low. With short-term interest rates already near zero, they sought to bring down long-term rates by taking the unorthodox approach of buying Treasury bonds. The move had already elicited protests from German and Brazilian officials, who worried it would drive down the value of the dollar, making their exports costlier in the U.S. Bernanke and Geithner expected further complaints at the Group of 20 summit in South Korea the following week. They didn't anticipate the size of the battle that erupted at home.

The political attacks on the Fed—once the most sacrosanct of government institutions—started slowly, with Tea Party-backed candidates such as Republican Rand Paul, running for the U.S. Senate in Kentucky, campaigning against the central bank. When Bernanke announced round two of quantitative easing (or QE2, as it became known) on the day after the election, the response was swift. Indiana Representative Mike Pence, a conservative bellwether and possible 2012 Presidential candidate, released a statement accusing the Fed of "masking our fundamental problems by artificially creating inflation." A few days later, former Alaska Governor Sarah Palin, the unofficial leader of the GOP's Tea Party wing, posted on her Twitter account that the Fed was planning to "print $ out of thin air."

On Nov. 8, Palin dragged Bernanke more directly into the fray. In a speech in Phoenix, she demanded that he "cease and desist" before his "pump-priming addiction" brought "permanently higher inflation." On Nov. 15 a group of 23 mostly Republican economists, money managers, and former government officials sent an open letter to Bernanke arguing that the central bank's bond purchases "risk currency debasement." Two days after that the four Republican leaders in the House and Senate—John Boehner of Ohio, Eric Cantor of Virginia, Mitch McConnell of Kentucky, and Jon Kyl of Arizona—wrote to Bernanke to express their "deep concerns" over bond purchases that could lead to "hard-to-control, long-term inflation and potentially generate artificial asset bubbles."

Ever since, Bernanke and Geithner have found themselves pitted against the Republicans and the Tea Party in a battle that could help determine the fate of the economy, Obama's Presidency, and the Federal Reserve itself. Some of their Republican opponents, such as Pence and Tennessee Senator Bob Corker, want to strip the Fed of its mandate to pursue full employment and focus on price stability alone, which would make it harder to justify future rounds of quantitative easing. The most radical antagonists want to go further. Senator Rand Paul (R-Ky.) and his father, Rep. Ron Paul (R-Tex.), argue for doing away with the central bank altogether. Forty-one percent of Republicans and 55 percent of Tea Party supporters believe the Fed should be abolished or radically overhauled, according to a Bloomberg National Poll conducted Oct. 7-10.

'Proxy' for the real target: Obama
For Bernanke, who craves the freedom and flexibility of his predecessors to do what he thinks is right for the economy, this amounts to a political choke hold. "Republicans are using him as a proxy for Obama and are determined to make life miserable for both the Fed and its chair," says Arthur Levitt Jr., the former head of the Securities and Exchange Commission who is now a member of the board of Bloomberg, publisher of Bloomberg Businessweek, and a policy adviser to Goldman Sachs. "The Republicans know this will embarrass Obama."

On Dec. 1, critics of the Fed got more to chew on when the central bank released details of the recipients of $3.3 trillion in emergency loans, asset purchases, and other Fed programs that helped shore up markets during the worst financial panic since the Great Depression. The documents were made public because of a sunshine provision that Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, an independent, added to the Dodd-Frank financial reform bill. "After years of stonewalling by the Fed," Sanders said after the document release, "the American people are finally learning the … jaw-dropping details of the Fed's multitrillion-dollar bailout."

In truth, the details didn't drop all that many jaws. The world already knew that the Fed functioned during the crisis as a warehouse for bad debt. Perhaps the biggest revelation was that Goldman Sachs, whose president said the firm didn't need government help to survive, borrowed as much as $24 billion from the Fed in the weeks after the 2008 Lehman Brothers bankruptcy. Another surprise: European banks were among the biggest users of Fed programs. Zurich-based UBS sold more commercial paper through a Fed emergency facility than any other bank, and Deutsche Bank led all bond dealers in trading mortgage securities with the Fed. All of which may have been more interesting to financial analysts than to the public—and none of which stopped the critics from hammering away at Bernanke. The Fed, charged Ron Paul, "prevented a bad recession for the people who deserved it, the big money people who made all the billions when they were blowing up the bubble. They prevented a deep, deep recession for the Goldman Sachs of the world."

There are substantive economic arguments to be made against the Fed's new round of quantitative easing. One senior banker, who does not want to be quoted disparaging Fed policy, says he thinks Bernanke misread the psychology of the markets and risks undermining the Fed's inflation-fighting credibility by buying bonds when deficits are so high. Yet some Republicans acknowledge that the latest attacks are about politics as well as policy. "There is a real perception among Republicans that for all intents and purposes, Bernanke is a member of the Administration," says Mark A. Calabria, a former aide to Alabama Senator Richard C. Shelby, the ranking Republican on the Senate Banking Committee. It doesn't seem to matter that Bernanke, a registered Republican, was nominated in 2005 by President George W. Bush, or that politics used to stop at the Fed's front door. "The Fed needs freedom to act and act quickly," says Martin Neil Baily, who served as chairman of the Council of Economic Advisers in the Clinton Administration and is now at the Brookings Institution in Washington. "Those are decisions that need to be made outside politics."

Paul Volcker was denounced, too
The central bank has come under political attack before, notably in the Reagan years. "The Fed faces its biggest political risk since Paul Volcker was chairman," says Lyle Gramley, who was on the central bank's board at the time. During Volcker's tenure, 1979-87, the attacks on the Fed came from the left and right as the chairman pushed interest rates as high as 20 percent in 1981, crushing the economy in the process.

Bernanke and Geithner forged a relationship during the peak of the financial crisis of 2008-09, when Geithner was president of the New York Fed and then, from January 2009, Treasury Secretary. Together with former Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, they used the Fed's balance sheet and taxpayer money to prop up the financial system and save the U.S. from another depression. "The main thing we share," says Geithner, "is that we went through the searing experience of the panic together, trying to design a strategy to contain it and clean up the mess afterward. We have the bond you get from that kind of combat."

"He's taken a lot of heat," Bernanke says of Geithner. "He did things I firmly believe needed to be done. We have a lot of mutual trust."

The two men took different paths to their foxhole. Bernanke spent 17 years teaching and writing about the Great Depression at Princeton University before becoming a Fed governor in 2002. Geithner spent most of his career as a government official and policymaker, honing his crisis-management skills in the 1990s as an aide to Treasury Secretary Robert Rubin during the fiscal meltdowns in Mexico, Asia, Russia, and Brazil. In those years, Geithner also helped author a hands-off policy toward the Fed, in which the Clinton Administration refrained from commenting on central bank moves. "If there's a big fight between the government and the central bank, then you have a problem," says Edwin Truman, who has served at both the Fed and the Treasury and is now a senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics in Washington. "It creates all sorts of uncertainty and financial market volatility about who's on top and who's on the bottom."

Geithner and Bernanke share temperament, too. Each is more pragmatic than political, and neither seems to relish the public aspects of his role. Geithner, says Obama strategist David Axelrod, "is kind of a unique character in this venue, in that he's just here to do a job. He's not looking for headlines or notoriety." The same could be said of Bernanke. Both have at times appeared uncomfortable when presenting or defending their policies. (Geithner's plan to repair the financial system in February 2009 was greeted with a 4.9 percent drop in the S&P 500 Index. Bernanke admitted in September that he should have been more straightforward in explaining why the Fed was unable to avert the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers.) Colleagues describe them as nonideological, which is not always an asset in Washington. Geithner switched his political affiliation from Republican to Independent as he moved up the ladder at Treasury. Alan Blinder, a former Fed vice-chairman who is now a Princeton professor, says he doesn't understand how Bernanke is a Republican, given his lack of political orthodoxy.

Boats rowing in the same direction
Because of their personal bond and common interest in protecting their economic prescriptions from political interference, Bernanke and Geithner tend to look out for each other. "They've wisely not allowed themselves to become Siamese twins," says Senator Christopher Dodd (D-Conn.), outgoing chairman of the Senate Banking Committee. "They're complementing each other and utilizing the tools of their offices to enhance common goals—without appearing to be sitting in the same boat, but rather rowing two boats in the same direction."

In February 2009, Bernanke took Geithner's side when the Treasury Secretary was fighting calls for the government to take over large, ailing banks—a step that Bernanke's predecessor, Alan Greenspan, had suggested might be necessary. Geithner's alternative, dreamed up on a beach in Mexico while he was between his New York Fed and Treasury jobs, was to put the biggest banks through Fed stress tests before forcing them to take on more capital. He ultimately prevailed, but only after a nine-hour White House meeting on Mar. 15, during which Geithner and his consigliere Lee Sachs faced down skepticism from the rest of Obama's brain trust, including White House National Economic Council director Lawrence H. Summers.

The favor was returned later that year when Obama, advised by Geithner, nominated Bernanke to a further four-year term as Fed chairman, choosing him over Summers. In backing Bernanke, Geithner was favoring a new ally over the man most responsible for his own rise through the ranks at Treasury. With the economy still fragile and Bernanke's credibility with investors high, Geithner felt it wasn't the right time to make a change, officials say. Geithner took to the phones when Bernanke's renomination looked in jeopardy in the Senate last January. "Tim played an important role in persuading some reluctant senators to support Bernanke's confirmation," says Alan Krueger, a former Treasury chief economist under Geithner who returned to Princeton last month. The Geithner-Bernanke alliance was further cemented during the year-long debate over financial reforms, which Obama signed into law last July. Led by Geithner, the Administration fought off congressional efforts to rein in the Fed's independence. Bernanke emerged stronger than ever.

Occasional dinners with the wives
Bernanke and Geithner aren't fixtures on the Washington social scene, but they do see each other when there's time. Bernanke routinely invites Geithner to baseball games at the Washington Nationals' ballpark south of Capitol Hill; Geithner has been able to attend only once, arriving in the third inning and leaving in the seventh. Occasionally one will have dinner at the other's house with their wives. A guest at one such gathering at the Geithner household: Liaquat Ahamed, author of Lords of Finance: The Bankers Who Broke the World, which details the mistakes that led to the Great Depression. Both men read the book, though Geithner found it so unsettling that he sent Ahamed a note saying he could not finish it until the worst of the current crisis was over.

As their relationship deepened, Geithner and Bernanke learned to understand each other through gestures. A knowing chuckle by Geithner suggests skepticism. The financial crisis generated a number of Geithnerisms, such as "spray foam on the runway," meaning taking steps to limit the fallout when a financial firm crashes. "Two of Tim's favorite aphorisms bear repeating," says Bernanke. "?'Life's about alternatives' and 'A plan beats no plan.' To me, these two aphorisms pretty well sum up what we know about respectively, economics and political science."

There may be new adages to come. Bernanke and Geithner "were very successful in avoiding a depression," says Mohamed A. El-Erian, chief executive officer of Pimco in Newport Beach, Calif. "Now they have to be equally successful in avoiding a lost decade."

The risk is that the attacks could undermine the policy before it's had a chance to accomplish anything. After falling in anticipation of the Fed's move, long-term interest rates rose as criticism mounted. Partly driving the trend: investor fears that Bernanke's Fed colleagues may rally against him, suspending bond buys or at least not extending them when they expire in the middle of next year. "This is going to strengthen his internal opposition," says Vincent R. Reinhart, who directed the Fed's Monetary Affairs Div. from 2001 to 2007. "He's going to have a harder time."

How to answer attacks?
There are limits to what Bernanke and Geithner can do in response to the attacks. As an advocate of Fed independence, Bernanke doesn't want to be seen as doing Obama's bidding. Obama advisers say the White House isn't going to speak out now for the same reason—the threat isn't grave enough, they argue, and to draw the President into the fray would only heighten the danger. Bernanke, for his part, must be careful about speaking out against Republican arguments for immediate budget austerity, even though he believes such a strategy could hurt the recovery. If he answers their attacks, he risks looking like another Obama partisan.

As a former central banker, Geithner is sympathetic to Bernanke's concerns and loath to comment publicly on the Fed's monetary policy actions. Geithner bent that rule after Greenspan suggested the Fed was pursuing a policy of "currency weakening." While professing "enormous respect" for Greenspan, Geithner said the former Fed chairman's comment was "not an accurate description of either the Fed's policies or our policies." In a Nov. 19 interview on Bloomberg Television's Political Capital with Al Hunt, Geithner warned Republicans against politicizing the Federal Reserve and said the Obama Administration would oppose any effort to strip the Fed of its mandate to pursue full employment. "It is very important to keep politics out of monetary policy," Geithner said. "You want to be very careful not to take steps that hurt our credibility."

Obama is in an especially tricky spot. He, too, wants to protect the independence of the central bank and avoid playing into arguments that Bernanke is an extension of his economic agenda. As a result, the President was hamstrung in responding to attacks on the Fed's policies from G-20 officials in the run-up to the South Korea summit. Obama's defense was not as robust as some, including Levitt, thought it should be. "The Federal Reserve is an independent body," Obama said at a Nov. 8 press conference in India on his way to the summit. "It doesn't take orders from the White House, and it's important as a policy matter, as an institutional matter, that we don't comment on particular Fed actions." He added, "I will say that the Fed's mandate, my mandate, is to grow our economy."

'Garden-variety monetary policy'
Having spent months laying the groundwork for QE2—starting with a Bernanke speech on Aug. 27 in Jackson Hole, Wyo.—Fed officials say they were surprised by the fierce criticism that greeted the move. In the scramble to respond, central bank officials urged sympathetic economists to write newspaper pieces, and laid out their arguments in print interviews and TV appearances. Bernanke went to Capitol Hill to brief members of the Senate Banking Committee. He has defended the bond purchases as a natural extension of monetary policy—a way to bring down long-term interest rates, boost growth, and fend off deflation. In an opinion piece in The Wall Street Journal, Blinder, the former Fed vice-chair, supported his old friend's view, calling the bond purchases "garden-variety monetary policy" and labeling the Fed's critics "the economic equivalent of the Flat Earth Society."

The counterattack had little effect. Palin fired back with a letter to The Journal warning of the "clear and present danger" of the Fed "working its printing presses overtime" as the U.S. sinks "even deeper into debt." Some Democratic strategists suggest the Administration should not allow itself to be sucked into this fight. "They shouldn't respond to her," says pollster John Anzalone, who worked for Obama's 2008 campaign. "Few people have credibility on an issue this weighty, and she isn't one of them." Palin didn't respond to requests for comment.

Bernanke is not backing down from his decision. While the economy has shown some signs of picking up, it has yet to achieve escape velocity. Growth is likely to average 2 percent over the last three quarters of 2010, too slow to make a dent in the unemployment rate. If joblessness were to climb back to 10 percent, that could sap what little confidence consumers and companies have, sending the economy back down. It's that dangerous cycle Bernanke is seeking to break. That's why the Fed opted to act despite the criticism.

In the back of Bernanke's mind is Japan. Both he and Geithner share an interest in that country's travails—and a desire to avoid seeing them visit the U.S. "The big risk on the table is a lost decade like Japan," says Mark Gertler, a friend of Bernanke's and professor of economics at New York University. "Both Geithner and Ben are acutely aware of that." Geithner, who speaks Japanese, worked as a Treasury rep in the U.S. embassy in Tokyo in 1990-91. Bernanke wrote a scathing paper about Japan's policies while at Princeton in 1999, then followed up with critical speeches after he became Fed governor in 2002. He focused his criticism on Japan's monetary policy, accusing its central bankers of being too timid in tackling deflation. He suggested they finance a tax cut by buying government bonds. Bank of Japan officials chose not to take his advice, partly out of fear such a move would undermine the central bank's independence.

The specter of Japan's deflation
Geithner insists the U.S. won't go the way of Japan. "We were much more aggressive at an earlier stage in the crisis than has been true for any major country, including Japan," he says. The biggest U.S. banks have been recapitalized. Companies have moved rapidly to lay off workers and shut down excess capacity. And policymakers have been quicker on the draw, with the Fed cutting short-term rates to zero in December 2008 and Obama pushing through a stimulus program just after taking office. "If you look forward from now," Geithner adds, "we have a much healthier balance sheet in the non-financial corporate sector than Japan had and a much healthier balance sheet in the financial sector."

Yet with all of that, the U.S. economy has not achieved a self-sustaining recovery. Growth downshifted in the second and third quarters, to the surprise of both Bernanke and Geithner. Just as in Japan, borrowers in the U.S. remain saddled with too much debt while banks remain cautious about lending. Geithner has warned repeatedly that one lesson of Japan's Lost Decade is that policymakers must not prematurely withdraw stimulus. That's what Japan did in 1998, increasing value-added taxes in an effort to tackle its ballooning deficit. The move pushed the economy back into recession. Geithner is determined to avoid the same thing in the U.S. and is ready to oppose victorious Republicans if they insist on big, immediate budget cuts. "We're fighting against that," he says, adding: "I think we can muster a policy consensus to avoid a large, premature contraction" of fiscal policy.

Now the Fed's independence—and its willingness to do whatever it takes—is being tested. "I don't think the Fed wants to get into a major confrontation with one of the two parties in Congress," says Vin Weber, managing partner of the lobbying firm Clark & Weinstock and a former Republican congressman from Minnesota. The outcry, he says, "is not going to kill Quantitative Easing 2, but it will curtail further easing."

Don't be so sure. Former Fed Governor Laurence Meyer predicts the central bank will end up buying $1 trillion worth of Treasury securities—$400 billion more than planned. And if things get worse and the economy flirts with deflation, expect Bernanke to be even more creative. Fed officials have already talked about the possibility of setting a specific, low target for long-term interest rates, although for now they've decided not to do that because it might entail buying bucket-loads of Treasury bonds. That calculus might change if the economy were to relapse. Then Bernanke would be unwilling to let political pressures curtail his monetary moves. That would put the Fed's independence to its biggest test yet. If it happens, Bernanke will once again count on Geithner for crucial support. That's what foxhole friends are for.

— With Mike Dorning

Copyright ? 2010 Bloomberg L.P.All rights reserved.


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Bernanke strike back to critical plane stimulus

Frankfurt, Germany, Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke hit on Friday to critics of the U.S. Central Bank bond purchasing program and issued an attack slightly veiled policy China to maintain its currency on a leash.

In his first speech since the u.s. Federal Reserve announced the program on 3 November, Bernanke also his case more aggressive so far this Congress also should provide more help stimulus.

No more stimulus, high levels of unemployment can persist for decades, there dit.Mais, in the manufacture of this argument, Bernanke risk fanning claims jumped the Fed into partisan politics.

Bernanke, to a chorus of events on the frenzy of goods within and outside of the Central Bank, said a more robust u.s. economy was essential for the global recovery and dismissed the charges, he was humiliated the dollar.

Video: Bernanke BCE

"The best way to continue to provide strong economic fundamentals which underlie the value of the dollar, as well as to support the global recovery is by policies that lead to a resumption of robust growth in a context of stability prizes at the United States," Bernanke said in a speech at a Conference at the European Central Bank in Frankfurt.

3 November decision the Fed buying more of 600 billions of dollars in debt the u.s. Government with the new currency generated outrage among policymakers in many countries, who accused United States seek to weaken the dollar to obtain a benefit from the export.

German Finance Minister Wolfgang Sch?uble called the policy "clueless."

Critics at home, including Republican leaders in Congress and certain officials of the US Federal Reserve, say they doubt the program will help the economy .they also fear it could harm - trigger inflation leading to a speculative buy on Wall Street.

Americans more ignoring money Life.: doubled the number of Americans who check their finances, montre.Votre career research: digging a hole of career Life.: you can not fire me! I left! life.: College Presidents paid more

Fed officials surrounded their cars this week to defend the programme.Deux added endorsement Thursday, but another expressed opposition and a fourth monetary policy said should not play the main role in the conduct of a stronger recovery.

"Deficits and surpluses are generated by the behaviour of many countries not one single currency,"Bernanke said in a discussion later with the IMF Executive Director Dominique Strauss-Kahn and President of the European Central Bank, Jean-Claude Trichet.""

"It will be very difficult for their own exchange rates to restore balance and so I think that structural adjustments on both sides are needed," Bernanke said.

Strauss-Kahn said he also recognizes that global imbalances involved difficulties but said could not be addressed without "important changes in relative currency values".

"We must move forward in this direction," he said.

Addressing international criticism of the Fed action, Bernanke said that much of the recent weakness of the dollar reflects a workflow increases were notches as investors fled the greenback sovereign debt crisis European spring security.

History: Republicans Bernanke: QE2 could jeopardize dollar

Many emerging economies have worried this volatile investment entries triggered by the decline of the dollar may be destabilizing - fuelling inflation or bubbles.

Bernanke said the failure of some emerging market economies with trade surpluses to allow their currencies to appreciate the problems these countries face worse.

"Surplus countries currency undervaluation is inhibiting the necessary international adaptation and creation of cascading effects that would not exist if the exchange rate reflects better the fundamentals of the market", he said, without explicitly pointing to China.

American officials have long argued that an undervalued Chinese yuan gives the Central Asian export an unfair advantage.

Inflexible said Bernanke currencies have been a necessary rebalancing global growth and could eventually destabilize the world economy.

"For the big countries systemic importance with persistent surpluses into account, the continued growth of exports may eventually succeed if the implications of this strategy for global growth and stability are not taken into account", he said.""

Bernanke said sluggish u.s. growth, decrease in inflation and a rate of unemployment that has oscillated about 10 percent for the month convinced makers Fed they had to pump more than stimulus.

"On its current economic trajectory, the United States runs the risk of seeing millions of unemployed or underemployed during many years," he said in his speech. ""As a society, we find that unacceptable".

However, the Fed itself program can solve the problems of the economy, says Bernanke.

"There are limits to what can be accomplished by the single Central Bank", he said, jam expectations.

"A fiscal program that combines short-term measures to foster strong growth inducing stages of confidence to reduce structural deficits (budget) longer term would be an important complement to the policies of the Federal Reserve," he said.

Bernanke has already warned that the economy is too fragile for the Congress to reduce costs or increase taxes, even though he argued that the legislators and the White House must develop a credible plan to reduce deficits more trillion budget in the long term.

But the Director of the reserve amplified this avertissement.Il is the Republicans in Congress - coming off the coast of great victories in the election of mid-term - use their influence to push for less tax more discipline and Government spending.

Republicans are upset with Bernanke because they believe that the Fed is beyond its limits with liaison.Ils purchasing program argue that the Fed is printing money to pay for a massive government debt.

Republicans Rep Mike Pence and Senator Bob Corker, want mission the Fed to be overhauled.

They want the US Federal Reserve to concentrate solely on keeping inflation at cocher.Elle now has a 'dual mandate' of the Congress: to maintain the low unemployment and inflation.

Put on the defensive, felt Bernanke forced this week to meet with legislators on the Committee's Privy Senate Banking to defend program reserve fédérale.Collègues Bernanke flow were also making public appearances to support the action of the Federal Reserve these last jours.Narayana Kocherlakota, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis and Cleveland Fed President Sandra Pianalto were on circuit Thursday.

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.


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Republicans Bernanke: QE2 could jeopardize dollar

WASHINGTON - Binding of the US Federal Reserve purchase program of can endanger the dollar, spawn inflation and generate top price bubbles Republican lawmakers said in a letter to the President of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke has published Wednesday.

Program quantitative easing from the Fed 600 billion dollars "introduces uncertainty about the future strength of the dollar and could lead to two difficult to destroy, long-term inflation and potentially generate artificial bubble that might cause more economic disturbances" wrote Republican leaders of the House of representatives and the Senate.

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Republicans Bernanke: QE2 could jeopardize dollar

WASHINGTON - Binding of the US Federal Reserve purchase program of can endanger the dollar, spawn inflation and generate top price bubbles Republican lawmakers said in a letter to the President of the Federal Reserve, Ben Bernanke has published Wednesday.

Program quantitative easing from the Fed 600 billion dollars "introduces uncertainty about the future strength of the dollar and could lead to two difficult to destroy, long-term inflation and potentially generate artificial bubble that might cause more economic disturbances" wrote Republican leaders of the House of representatives and the Senate.

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Why plan Bernanke raises trade tensions

 WASHINGTON?— The Federal Reserve's plan to buy more Treasury bonds has incited critics at home to complain of inevitable high inflation and financial turmoil.


It turns out many foreigners are pretty angry, too. They say the Fed's $600 billion program is a scheme to give U.S. exporters an unfair edge — one that endangers the global economy.


Is it? Or is the Fed's plan a credible way to help end a desperate jobs crisis and revitalize a still-tepid economy?

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In either case, few dispute that Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is taking a gamble. Whether or not his plan succeeds in aiding the U.S. economy, it risks triggering a trade war and encouraging dangerous speculation in financial markets.


Already, the finger-pointing threatens to wreck this week's summit of world leaders in Seoul, where the Fed's plan has set off vociferous debate. President Barack Obama on Thursday was forced to defend U.S. policies at the summit, saying "the most important thing that the United States can do for the world economy is to grow."


Many economists say the Fed didn't have much choice — not with U.S. unemployment stalled at 9.6 percent, short-term interest rates already near zero and Congress refusing to spend more to jolt the economy.


"They've run out of bullets," says Uri Dadush, director of the international economics program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace.


So the Fed announced plans to print enough money to buy an average of $75 billion in Treasury bonds each month for eight months. And it left the door open for more. The bond-purchase program is intended to energize the economy by forcing down long-term interest rates. Those lower rates might encourage some consumers and businesses to borrow and spend more.


Will the Fed's program do that?


Not likely, its critics say. For one thing, mortgage rates have already dipped to record lows without reviving the housing market, reducing high unemployment or stimulating much growth. Would people and businesses that can't or won't borrow now at super-low rates start borrowing if interest rates on loans dip a bit more — and borrow enough to rejuvenate the economy?

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A bigger hope is that lower rates will lift stock prices. That's because, as Bernanke has suggested, investors will shift money out of low-yielding bonds and into stocks. Higher stock prices make people feel wealthier — and more willing to spend.


Business leaders are no different. They become more confident when their personal wealth rises and when their company's stock goes up. They're more likely to hire and expand. Once they do, the economy strengthens.


Yet the Fed's move threatens to inflame global tensions. That's because of what happens when it prints more dollars to lower interest rates: More dollars flooding the financial system will cause the dollar's value to fall. That will make U.S. products cheaper around the world. It will also make foreign goods costlier in the United States. Americans will be less likely to buy foreign products.


Economies like Germany and China, which have ridden a wave of exports out of the recession, complain that the Fed's main goal is to lower the dollar's value to give U.S. exporters an unfair price advantage. They call the move hypocritical because Washington has long complained that Beijing keeps its currency, the yuan, artificially low to boost Chinese exports.

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In September, the U.S. trade deficit with China amounted to $27.8 billion. That's just short of August's record high. And it exceeds the U.S. trade gap with the rest of the world combined.


Critics also warn that rates kept too low for too long could inflate new bubbles in the prices of commodities, stocks and other assets. That's what happened before with technology stocks and home prices. Developing countries like Thailand and Indonesia fear that falling yields on Treasuries will send money flooding their way in search of higher returns. Such emerging markets could be left vulnerable to a crash if investors later decide to pull out and move their money elsewhere.


China this week unveiled plans to limit the inflow of so-called hot money. Other countries are considering similar controls on capital.


U.S. stocks have been surging and the dollar sliding since Bernanke said in a speech in Jackson Hole, Wyo., in late August that the Fed was ready to act further to help the U.S. economy. The Dow Jones industrial average has jumped nearly 14 percent. And the dollar has sunk more than 7 percent against the euro and more than 2 percent against the Japanese yen.


"For the rest of the world, the benefits are tenuous, but the risks are hitting them right in the face," Eswar Prasad, professor of trade policy at Cornell University, says of the Fed's bond-purchase program.


The acrimony over currencies and trade reflects global pressures that might be hitting a breaking point. For too long, many economists say, China, Germany and other big exporters have depended on U.S. consumers, instead of their own, to buy their goods and power their economies.


A weaker dollar "topples their entire strategy of relying on exports rather than internal reforms to fix the problems that ail them," says Diane Swonk, chief economist at Mesirow Financial.


Joseph Gagnon, a former Fed official and now senior fellow at the Peterson Institute for International Economics, calls the charge that the U.S. is manipulating the dollar "outrageous." He notes that China and other exporting nations have been buying dollars and each other's currencies to keep their own artificially low - a tactic the U.S. hasn't taken.


"We unilaterally disarmed," Gagnon says.


The U.S. trade deficit — the amount by which the value of imports exceeds the value of exports — narrowed 5 percent in September, to $44 billion. But through the first nine months of 2010, the trade gap is still running 40 percent higher than it was a year earlier.


And the broadest measure of trade — the current account trade deficit — will reach 3.2 percent of U.S. gross domestic product in 2010, up from 2.7 percent in 2009, TD Economics forecasts. The current account gap includes not only goods and services but also investment flows between countries. By contrast, TD expects current account surpluses of 4.7 percent of economic output in China and 6.1 percent in Germany.


China said this week that its trade surplus with the world rose in October to its second-highest level this year. That performance is likely to heighten pressure on Beijing to raise the value of the yuan as the Group of 20 summit of world leaders begins. A higher yuan would make U.S. goods cheaper for Chinese consumers to buy.


Carnegie's Dadush warns that individual countries must solve problems in their own economies, rather than point fingers at each other's. He says U.S. lawmakers should pass a short-term spending plan to jolt the economy, instead of leaning on a Fed program that could rattle world markets.


Then they should draft a long-term plan to shrink the federal budget deficit. The leaders of President Barack Obama's bipartisan deficit commission weighed in Wednesday: They proposed to pare annual cost-of-living increases for Social Security, gradually raise the retirement age to 69 and end some popular tax breaks like the mortgage interest deduction.


Dadush says China should let the yuan rise, to encourage its consumers to spend. China might then rely less on exports and more on its own consumption to fuel its growth.


Yet he fears countries will be tempted instead to further rig their currencies and impose barriers to imports.


"I've been watching trade for 35, 40 years," Dadush says. "I'm more worried about a protectionist resurgence than I've been in my professional lifetime."


Copyright 2010 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Alloy Bernanke has doubts about the latest Fed move

WASHINGTON - A FED official with close ties with the Chairman Ben Bernanke expressed doubts on the question of whether new bond purchase program Monday 600 billion of the US Federal Reserve would succeed to stimulate the economy.

Kevin Warsh, a Governor of the Federal Reserve has also warned 'significant risk' associated with the program, including the potential to trigger excessive inflation thereafter.

The program of the Federal Reserve announced the last week is intended to push rates of interest on loans even lower are maintenant.La Fed hopes loans cheaper will stimulate us to borrow and spend more.A stronger economy could, in turn, calls on companies to hire more and reinvigorate the economy.

But Warsh said he doubted that the program will be "significant" or "sustainable profits" for the economy it made the comments in a speech at the annual meeting of the securities industry and financial markets Association in New York.

Despite his reservations, Warsh was among 10 Fed officers who voted for the 600 billion dollars.La dissent only from Thomas Hoenig, President of the Federal Reserve Bank in Kanas City program.

The Warsh comments pointing to unease about the risks of the Central Bank takes with the new program - even among some officials of the US Federal Reserve have soutenue.WARSH, a lieutenant of Bernanke, has never dissenting vote of the u.s. Federal Reserve.

WARSH has warned that the Fed may have to review its programme if the dollar continues to fall or commodity prices continue to increase, raising inflation throughout the economy.

The US Federal Reserve, last week said it will monitor the effect of the purchases link on the economy program. He left the door open to scale back purchases if the economy is growing more than expected or high inflation becomes too much of a threat o.d. ' on the other hand, the Fed indicated increase purchases if weak economic conditions.

"The Fed is not broken, and trade policies, compensation for financial workshop" said Warsh. ""Given the evils we, additional monetary policy measures are, at best, poor substitutes for stronger growth policies".

WARSH suggests that the tax code to provide more incentives for firms to step up the reform of the Congrès.Il investments indicated that such an approach is a more effective way to strengthen the economy.

Take a different position, James Bullard, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis, sustained in a speech Monday in New York City as the "benefits outweigh the risks."He also voted for the $ 600 billion program last week.

Bullard said he worries that the weakening of the economy could lead to deflation - destructive property and services, wages and the value of the stock price decreases and maisons.Programme purchase link of the Federal Reserve should help to prevent any deflationary force takes shape, he said.Bullard was recognized as too high fuel risk of inflation.

The Federal Reserve to stimulate growth, its balance sheet is now 2.3 trillion dollars.Qui is almost triple the amount before the recession.Adding new link farms will grow to nearly $ 3 trillion.

Hoenig and Warsh say they fear that the large sums that the Fed is pumped into the economy could release inflation .Bernanke, however, stated that these fears are exagérées.Il said entrusting the Fed can absorb all the money that the economy is on firm footing - before inflation gets out of control.

During the 2008 financial crisis, Warsh has worked with Bernanke crafts programs for credit - economy - nouveau.Banks flow oxygen had ceased mainly loans to each other and their customers, helping to dive deeper economy into recession.

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Richard Fisher, President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas, which took part in discussions at the Federal Reserve last week, but is not a Member voting, called "bad medicine" $ 600 billion program for the evils of economy .Fisher, who made his comments in a speech delivered in San Antonio, said he was concerned that the Fed as if it is printing money to pay the debt of the Federal Government.

And frettes plan could make new bubble in the price of products, inventory and other assets.

"Excess... is and financial speculation began to increase his worn-out head", he said.

Copyright 2010 the Associated rights Press.Tous réservés.Ce hardware cannot be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.


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Bernanke defends the Fed plan to stimulate the economy

JEKYLL ISLAND, GA -Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has defended new Fed $ 600 billion program to help the economy Saturday, rejecting concerns that it will stimulate the hyperinflation.

Critical, including the US Federal Reserve officials fear that the money is injected into the economy could ignite inflation or bond or commodity price bubbles.

Speaking at a Conference on the coast of the Georgia, Bernanke said the new program, announced Wednesday, push inflation levels "super ordinary."

Reserve US Federal buy government bonds $ 600 billion in a bid to cheaper loans and get us to spend doing plus.Ce, contribute to economy and prompt companies to stimulate employment.

The economy has not been enough rapid growth to reduce unemployment, which has been stuck to a maximum of 9.6% for the three months of droites.La reserve US federal concern will that high unemployment, values House still weak and poor wage gains weigh on expenditures, a major business of consumer player.

Because businesses are reluctant to increase retail prices in this climate, inflation was running at very low levels.Giving the Fed latitude to launch the new program.

Earlier in the week, Bernanke has expressed confidence that the economy is on firm footing, the Fed can easily absorb all this money without detriment to the economy and triggering inflation.

___

AP Economics Writer Jeannine Aversa in Washington contributed to this report.

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Bernanke: "critical" for the growth of the economy

/ Jacksonville... (Florida) - the Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke has defended the U.S. Central Bank critical binding purchase saying: return to a strong u.s. economy is critical to global stability. He suggested would thus strengthen dollar whose weakness caused rough Bogotá Cree in Beijing.

Decision of the Federal Reserve to buy 600 billion public debt fired bitter comments Nations who claim that it generates the volatility strengthen their currencies against the dollar, inflate the bubble and fuelling inflation in their economies.

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Berlin, the Minister of finance German Wolfgang Sch?uble pronounced: "with all respect, US policy is clueless."

Bernanke, answering questions Friday in Florida, college students emphasized the policies of the US Federal Reserve to give a boost to the low recovery the United States would dividends throughout the world.

"I believe it is important to note... as a strong u.s. economy, an economy recovery, it is essential not only for Americans, but it is also essential for the global recovery," says Bernanke.

G-20 tensions
Monetary policy of the Federal Reserve made more flexible with the new binding purchase plan Wednesday, was imported and other emerging market economies, and seems set to be a bone of contention with a group of 20 nations Summit in Seoul, next week.

The Minister of finance South African Pravin Gordhan said political Fed "the spirit of multilateral cooperation undermines" as the G-20, seeking to achieve .the ' money find themselves in financial markets in emerging countries with potentially devastating impact on their exports, he accused.

American politicians said Bernanke are fully aware of the importance of the dollar's strength in the global economy as réserve.Le dollar currency weakened sharply and made there again after the decision this week about a new so-called quantitative easing cycle.

"The fundamental best dollar will come when the economy is growing," said Bernanke. ""This is where the fundamental principles.

He told the students that commodity prices have increased significantly, they were the exception in the middle of generally silent prices for other products and should not be a serious problem.

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Bernanke has said there are plenty soft summer in the u.s. economy that will prevent producers of power fully products more expensive price in finished products purchased by consumers.

"Traded globally products such as energy, food... have been dating pretty abruptly," he said. "There where there are lot of slack in the economy...It is very, very difficult [...] for producers to pass these costs to the final consumer.?

Soft saving
He added that once the inflationary pressures become visible, the American Central Bank will be ready to change current monetary policy stance accommodating block inflation.

Official interest rates were close to zero for nearly two years.

"It will take a growth and a further reduction soft until we begin to see any type of tire pressure", he said.

Step all of the US Federal Reserve officials share trust Bernanke that inflation can be held in Kansas échec.Réserve City Bank President Thomas Hoenig has renewed his call for interest rates Friday, saying in a speech to real estate agents that new sales liaison program risks igniting inflation and another arrow and cycle of bankruptcy.

Criticism of the Fed's easy money policy can point to signs of improvement on the American job market where employers added jobs for the first time since may, as evidence the new asset purchases are inutiles.Mais analysts said the pace of jobs as insufficient to unfurl the unemployment rate.

"It is still probably not enough to get convinced Fed unemployment goes down or inflation will go, said John Canally, an economist at LPL Financial in Boston."

Most distributors interviewed by Reuters says that expect the fed to develop or expand its programme to stimulate the economy with the sales assets. firms dealing directly with us Federal Reserve economists stated that they expected no unemployment go below of 9.3% before July 2011.

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Doubts grow on the wisdom of Ben Bernanke "super - put".

In the meantime, U.S. crude oil prices jumped $ 2.5 to $87 per barrel. This is 20pc, given that the markets first concluded at the beginning of September "QE2" is.

This is tantamount to a tax on American consumers transfer income U.S. Mid-East Petro-powers.Copper has behaved in a large part of the same fa?on.donc sugar, soybean and cotton.

The dollar plunged again a fois.Qui may have been fed the unstated goal.If so, Washington angry increasing powers of the world and invited reaction with heavy strategic consequences.

Li Deshui Economic Commission in Beijing said string on the part of the "Deep bitterness" Asian China dollar debasement and examine ways to team release the liquidity U.S. tsunami.The Thailand stated that its Central Bank is already in talks with the neighbors to develop a joint policy.

Head of the Central Bank of the Brazil Henrique said Mereilles move the u.s. had created "excessive liquidity dollar that we are absorbent," forcing his country to limit inputs. Mexico, Finance Minister has warned "bubble more."

These countries can easily protect themselves QE2 inflationary effect by increasing interest rates since this leads to the entries of "carry trade" beaver to performance. They are forced to look the capital controls with implications of bode well for the interlaced global system.

London and Frankfurt verdict was also difficult. "In our opinion, is one of the biggest political mistakes in the history of the Fed," said Toby Nangle of Baring Asset Management.

"The Fed is what is called"portfolio balance channel effect"- pushing money from Government and other assets - obligations will be raising prices of risk assets. The bet is that it stimulates profits and wages, rather than just the price. We are still not convinced.How a solution of liquidity will be fixing a solvency problem? ", he said.

"An error" political", says Ulrich Leuchtmann of Commerzbank.The wording of the Declaration of the Federal Reserve is "dangerous" because it leaves the door open for another flood of the Ministry of finance purchases if unemployment remains high. "It's a well," he said.

Of course, it is precisely this open door that has so much juice risk trades, the Australian dollar futures contracts for money and junk bonds.Goldman Sachs believes QE2 ultimately arrives 2 trillion dollars, with no output in 2015.Ce moral hazard is irresistible.This is the Bernanke "super - put".

However, the reluctance of investors jump to u.s. Treasury market as they did after QE1 is telling.30 Years of the Treasury market segment is too small to matter, but symbolism importe.Miliciens sniff stealth by default."If long bond investors continue to launch their toys collective of the cot, subverting the Federal Reserve policy", said Michael Derk de FXPro.

Mr. Bernanke is 5 to 10 years with buying bonds Trésor.Ces bond maturities have are better behaved: ten-year yields fell 14 points Thursday at 2 48pc.However, Mark Ostwald monument Securities said foreign funds can take advantage of the QE2 to empty their assets in the US Federal Reserve, turning us money rather than active emerging markets.

Bond funds are already agités.Projet Bill Gross, pimco says great Bull bond market is denigrating Fed policy as the largest "ponzi scheme" in history.Warren Buffett has added too, warning that anyone who bought bonds at this stage is "making a big mistake."

Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke uses the term "credit easing ' to describe its strategy because the goal is to reduce u.s. borrowing costs ' fails to achieve this objective in the coming months - because investors balk - policy will backfire."

No clear justification of fresh QE found in monetarism orthodoxe.Les data of the issuance of the St. Louis Federal Reserve that the M2 money supply stopped funding at the beginning of the summer and has since expanded at a rapid pace, topping 9pc last block of four weeks.

The US Federal Reserve has used the "Taylor rule ' on the shortcomings of output as a QE, theoretical justification but Stanford professor John Taylor said more or less his theories have been taken hostage." """I think (ve) will do much good, and I am concerned also damage on the road", he said.

It was not lost on the markets than the Federal Reserve purchases of $900bn Treasury (with reinvested funds mortgage debt) June cover deficit of the Treasury during the same période.La slipperly slope towards debt "monetization" waits.

Investors world mostly agreed that was the reason of QE1 emergency liquidity and this stimulus would later be retirée.Mais there is a growing suspicion QE2 as Treasury Board funding disguised.

If they start to act on this suspicion, they could push rates higher rather than lower and submerge the stimulus Bernanke.Qui would precipitate an ugly string of events for the United States.


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Bernanke: Inflation concerns are "overvalued".

WASHINGTON — President Ben Bernanke Worries are exaggerated that the Fed will help plan the economy could free inflationary expectations, said.

Bernanke's comments are hours after the US Federal Reserve announced Wednesday that it buy government bonds $ 600 billion in an attempt to courageous to make cheaper loans boost spending and reinvigorate the economy.

History: Fed takes step bold, risked to strengthen the economy

Critical, including the US Federal Reserve officials fear that the money is injected into the economy could ignite inflation or bubbles bond prices or to produits.Bernanke said these fears of inflation are "overstated."A larger program of 1.7 billion dollars to the financial crisis did not lead to higher inflation, there souligné.lorsque economy is on firm footing, Bernanke has expressed confidence that the Fed can easily absorb all this money without detriment to the economy.

Bernanke revealed his thoughts in an opinion article published Thursday in the Washington Post.

The Fed needs measures because unemployment is too high and that inflation is too low, signs of a still-troubled economy, Bernanke said.

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"We could hardly be satisfied," said the Director of the reserve.

The unemployment rate stood at 9.6%.It was at least 9.5 percent for 14 months, the longest segment since the great depression.

The "soft" in the economy - factories running below capacity and restrict hiring companies - has kept inflation historically low.

In the 12 months ending in September, prices for consumption increased by only 1.1%.Bernanke said the Fed would like to see more nearly 2% inflation to show that the economy is a strong recovery.

Wednesday Fed action also aims to stifle any deflationary force in the bud.

"In the extreme cases, very low inflation can turn into deflation (decrease of prices and wages), contributing to long periods of economic stagnation," Bernanke said.

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Deflation is a generalized prices, wages and the values of homes and the stocks.Elle can cause people to postpone purchases because they feel that they can later purchase priced inférieurs.Baisse income also makes it more difficult to pay faillite.Une times consider saisies.Faire dettes.Augmentent, deflation is difficult for policymakers to rompre.Déflation contributed to "The Japan lost decade" of the 1990s, and the country is still against it.

"With high unemployment and low inflation, economic support is necessary," Bernanke said.

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Fed Chief Ben Bernanke stimulus tips over to fight U.S. deflation

Ben Bernanke has opened the door to yet another multi-billion-dollar round of 'quantitative easing' - a polite, yet intellectually dishonest name, for 'money-printing'Ben Bernanke has opened the door to another round of several billion dollars of "quantitative easing" - a polite but intellectually dishonest, name 'money-printing' photo: GETTY

Ben Bernanke, the Chairman of the Fed, told an audience in Boston yesterday that "the risk of deflation is higher than desirable" and "unemployment is currently forecast to persist for a time".

Central Bank makes us his political challenges facing difficult over the decades it weighs risks start another series of quantitative easing (QE) - or printing money .the financial markets are now convinced that the Fed will add to the 1.7 trillion (1.1 trillion of £) triggered during the depths of the responsible federal reserve récession.Certains us fear that continuing low inflation is originally consumer spending in the hope that prices will eventually be delay even lower.

Comments on inflation is "a clear signal that he (Bernanke) would further stimulus,", said Michael Gapen, an economist at Barclays Capital.

However, there remains a considerable doubt on the scale of any new dose of EQ and the exact form that should be.Mr. Bernanke stated that the Fed options include purchasing more resources in order to inject funds into the economy, as well as changing the way it communicates policy to financial markets and broader economy.

"The scene has been set for EQ program to be launched at the beginning of November," said Kevin Logan, Chief u.s. economist at HSBC. "Now we can expect advice to see what form it will take actually."

Price for the American Government bonds declined after speech Bernanke as bet the Fed could succeed to fuel inflation .the markets stock, investors who have rallied strongly in recent weeks on the hopes that the reserve US Federal would, in the news regularly organising.

Committee of the u.s. Federal Reserve - the body that defines the interest - rate is likely to see fierce debate on whether and how to make a second round of ve.

That the debate further honed in Britain hier.Créer more money to stimulate the economy is a possibility, but may be avoided, said a senior decisionmaker of the Bank of England.

"Currently, it is not clear if the next step with active purchasing program is more likely to be to sell the assets back or buy more," said Paul Fisher, Executive Director of the Bank markets. "The Bank is prepared to be.?


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Bernanke: Fed a further boost to the economy

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said Friday that the u.s. Central Bank is ready to provide assistance to an economy suffering from low inflation and high employment level, but it was short on details, saying the decision makers are still weighing aggressive how they should be.

"Taking into account the objectives of the Committee, it would seem - everything else being equal - a case for continued to give,"Bernanke said in a speech at a conference sponsored by the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston. "

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Bernanke said a long period of unemployment could pose a risk for sustainability of the recovery and said that the low level of inflation means that the risk of a dangerous downward price slide was most desirable.

The economy is growing at a pace "less vigorous we would like to" acknowledged Bernanke.

Unemployment, now at 9.6%, has been stuck by two digits for an an.Bernanke more indicated that the Fed fears that economic growth is likely to remain poor and that unemployment will slowly decrease next year.High unemployment is likely to keep careful consumers in their spending.

Bernanke also said the Fed must proceed with caution to decide what program to purchase Treasury should be debt.He said it is a challenge for the Fed decision makers determine the size of the program and how debt purchases could be stimulated.

Speech of the President of the US Federal Reserve has been followed closely on Wall Street because investors are seeking additional clues about the Central Bank plans to stimulate the economy by purchasing of Treasury bonds.

Traders took that the Fed could announce a concrete program after its next meeting concludes 3 novembre.Mais it is not known how much is the Bank will spend bond purchases or when these purchases will take place.

As we talked about Bernanke, the Government has published a report that highlights a new Council of Treasury-purchase program may be necessary to counteract the déflation.Prix consumption excluding the volatile classes of food and energy were flat or one month of the second law.A separate report on u.s. retail sales showed a third increase monthly directly.

A drop extended price of the goods, wages and the value of stocks and houses is dangerous for the economy and the américains.Il portfolio is paying much more difficult debt, causing more people fall seizures, defaults on credit card bills and drag bankrupt companies.

Bernanke's comments come as the Fed is weighing measures in an attempt to raise the expectations of the population from which they think that inflation is headed in the coming months.

History: The consumer price rise in September because of energy

If the Fed disclose that it will tolerate a higher than normal inflation, which might make companies feel more inclined to move their prix.Shoppers thought price would increase still further in the future, would be more likely to make purchases more t?t.Qui would lift the worrying low inflation.

Such an approach would push "real" or corrected for inflation rates low interest, which could encourage more officials at the meeting noted in September has means to try to influence the expectations of inflation .a way dépenses.Nourris was to include information in the minutes of the meetings of the Fed in an attempt to shape the expectations about inflation.

Speech Read Bernanke's fully on the website of the Federal Reserve.

The Associated Press and Reuters have contributed to this report.


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Fed Chief Ben Bernanke signals more flexibility to counter unemployment, low inflation

Fed chief Ben Bernanke signals more easing to counter high unemployment, low inflation "The risk of deflation is higher than desirable", Mr. Bernanke told a Conference in the Boston Federal Reserve on Friday. Photo: AP

He said in a speech at the Federal Reserve Bank of Boston that the Fed must weigh the risks of a Council of Treasury-purchase program and how debt purchases could be stimulated.

"He was shot and his back against the wall, said Joseph Greco, CEO of Meridian Equity Partners in New York."I suspect that the world will begin to tighten their belts.?

Fed policy makers should widely announce a treasure purchase program for their next meeting for two days beginning on November 2.

The economy is growing at a pace "less vigorous we would like to", said Mr. Bernanke.

Unemployment, now at 9 6pc has been stuck by two digits for more than a year.Mr. Bernanke has indicated that the Fed fears that economic growth is likely to remain dull and unemployment will slowly diminish next year.

High unemployment is likely to keep careful consumers in their dépenses.Pour now, the Fed is more interested to see the prices increase - instead of autumn.

"The risk of deflation is higher than desirable", Mr. Bernanke said, adding: "" it seems - all being equal - a case for further give. ""

Boris Schlossberg, Director of research at GFT Forex New York said: "" map it maintains close to his chest is the size of the EQ contemplating .c ' is the ace up their sleeve that they want to surprise the market with so that they completely give up control of the policy. ""

The dollar fell more after his remarks, reaching parity with the Australian dollar, while gold doped supérieur.Cependant later recovered dollar return its losses to trade higher mid morning in New York, while gold has slipped.

Traders are also reacting in the consumer price that excluding the volatile food and energy prices were flat for a second month and the lowest consumer confidence.

World stock markets which had also edged back fell earlier, higher.

The Fed is weighing measures in an attempt to raise the expectations of the population that inflation will increase in the months to come .the ' hope is that this could make it more likely to raise prices, which would require consumers to make purchases, the inflation of lifting and to stimulate the economy of enterprises.


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