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How The Federal Reserve Impacts The Stock / Cryptocurrency Market:
First, is known as a “Balance Sheet Runoff.”
This just means that, when those Bond IOU’s mature and come due…the Federal Reserve can choose to take that money OUT of circulation, instead of re-investing it. It would be no different than them loaning you $10,000 for one year…and, then when you pay it back, they take that money - and, instead of loaning it to someone else…it’s just: *POOF*…Gone. In terms of how much this amounts to, a recent report showed that $4.5 Trillion In Purchases would “unwind” at a rate of more than $50 billion per month.
Second, is known as a “Tapering.”
See, up until recently, the Federal Reserve was BUYING $120 Billion Dollars Per Month of Treasury Bonds and Mortgage Backed Securities to “inject” more money into the economy. But now, they’re moving forward with a plan to slowly reduce that amount by $30 billion per month until - by the end of March - they’re no longer buying anything else.
And third, raising interest rates.
At the end of the day, the goal is that interest rates will begin to increase, now that the unemployment rate dropped to 3.9%. The biggest fear is that the Federal Reserve will begin REMOVING liquidity from the markets, taking excess money OUT of supply, and draining all of that sweet, sweet leverage that kept prices higher than usual.
The sudden sell-off was attributed to their comments within the FED Minutes:
It's quoted that: “Many participants judged that the appropriate pace of balance sheet runoff would likely be faster than it was during the previous normalization episode.” …. which, is another way of saying: Our economy is doing better than expected, we have more money in circulation than expected, and inflation is higher than expected…THEREFORE, we can have faster rate hikes - and, a faster RUNOFF than expected…which, is worrying investors.
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What's up guys, it's graham here so by now most of us have probably heard the phrase that the federal reserve is beginning to crash the market throughout the last few days. That has been the number one headline as the stock market began, to sell off. Cryptocurrency dropped 11, seemingly overnight and, to date 40 of the nasdaq is now down 50 or more. In fact, bloomberg even reported that at no other point, since the bursting of the dot-com bubble had so many companies falling like this.

While the index itself was so close to a peak, not to mention when you hear terms like the balance sheet, runoff taper tantrum and a reduction in net asset purchases, it's confusing and it's worth breaking down so that you'll have a better grasp on. What's about to happen and why investors are beginning to panic, but before we go into that, if there's one thing you can do it's smashing the like button for the youtube algorithm doing that helps me tremendously. It's totally free and if you could do that in the next 4.2069 seconds, i'll show you this picture of a really cute baby. Lobster wait! No, not that baby lobster this baby lobster.

So thank you guys so much and also big. Thank you to wealthfront for sponsoring this video, but more on that later, all right! So first here's what's going on and why the markets went up so much to begin with and you're going to want to hear this out, because once you understand this, everything else is going to make sense. In march of 2020, the federal reserve lowered interest rates down to zero percent as a way to soften the impact of coronavirus throughout the economy. The worry was that, when everything is shut down, people would begin to spend less money that would cause prices to fall.

People would then begin to hoard their money and that would send us into a 1920s like great depression, so by lowering interest rates. That works as a way to encourage people to spend more money and borrow more money, thereby pushing us through a very difficult time. But how they went about doing this is what's causing the problem today. One of the ways of increasing money, supply and lowering interest rates is what's called open market operations, and even though it sounds like a james bond objective in goldeneye, the entire concept is actually rather simple.

First, you have what's known as a bond. This is basically just an iou from a city, state or government that says, if you lend me money, i will pay you back with interest, but how much interest they pay is simply a form of supply and demand the less demands there is for these ious. The more interest they have to pay to entice people to buy them and the opposite of true when there's a lot of demand - and they don't have to pay out as much so as a way to lower interest rates. The fed went in and bought up.

All of these bonds driving up the demand and lowering the return, so the end result is pretty much more money. Lower rates, of course, as we could see, their balance sheet throughout the last two years, has more than doubled as they purchased more and more bonds within their own portfolio and, as a result, the market loved it low interest rates meant that companies could expand at a Much faster rate valuations were higher because people had more money to spend and that's worried some people who start thinking what's going to happen when the fed stops buying these bonds and printing more money into the economy. Well, we're going to find out because that's what brings us to today see from the very beginning. We knew that low interest rates, bond buying and asset purchases would be reduced, but what we didn't know is how quickly that would occur, and that's where we have the first problem.
As inflation began to increase throughout the last year, people began to worry that the fed was keeping interest rates too low for too long will too much money entered the economy, although it was still too early to tell if record high inflation was a result of too Much money, printing or from supply chain bottlenecks that caused prices to increase. After all, if something goes up in price because it suddenly becomes the scarce material, that's not inflation, that's just normal supply and demand. So if higher prices were a result of supply chain issues, eventually, prices would begin to normalize and things would decrease, but that's not happening as fast as they would like. That's why they just recently signaled that inflation is lasting longer than they anticipated it's higher than they thought and to counteract the rising prices, they're going to be reducing their bond buying and subsequently raising rates faster than expected.

How are they doing this, and why is the market freaking out? You might ask to start. They do this in a few ways, and the first is what's known as a balance sheet runoff that just means when those bond ios mature and they come due. The federal reserve could choose to take that money out of circulation instead of reinvesting it. It would be no different than them loaning you ten thousand dollars for a year and then, when you pay it back, they take that money and instead of loaning it to somebody else, it's just poof gone in terms of how much this actually amounts to, though a Recent report showed that four and a half trillion dollars would unwind at a rate of more than 50 billion dollars a month.

The second we have a term known as tapering see. Up until recently, the federal reserve was buying 120 billion dollars a month of treasuries and mortgage-backed securities as a way to inject money into the economy, but now they're moving forward with a plan to reduce that number by 30 billion dollars a month until by the end Of march they're no longer buying anything else and third, we have raising interest rates at the end of the day. The goal is that interest rates will begin to increase. Now that unemployment has dropped to 3.9 percent, the biggest fears the fed is going to be removing liquidity from the markets, taking excess money out of supply and draining all of that sweet, sweet leverage that keeps prices higher than normal.
But let's be real. We all knew this was going to happen from the very beginning, so why is it now that the market is beginning to panic? That's because of a few specific comments they made and investors.com has broken this down for us perfectly. They quoted that many participants judged that the appropriate pace of balance sheet runoff would likely be faster than it was during the previous normalization episode, which is basically just another way of saying our economy is doing better than expected. We have more money in circulation than expected, and inflation is higher than we expected.

Therefore, we could have faster rate hikes and a faster runoff than expected, but how does that compare to the last time this happened. We'll look no further than the mortgage crisis of 2009, when the federal reserve did something eerily similar to what we're. Seeing today after the housing market crashed, they began buying mortgage-backed securities in an effort to stimulate lending and get the housing market back on its feet. But in 2013 they announced that they would begin to think about raising rates and without one little comment, the market went into a full-scale panic.

Investors suddenly stopped buying mortgage-backed securities interest rates spiked out of nowhere. Volatility went crazy, emerging markets, tumbled, and the thought was that this was the beginning of the end. However, much of that proved to be an overreaction, because the fed didn't actually begin raising interest rates at the time of the announcement and after some time things went back to normal until 2018.. This was a time when our economy was growing at a consistent rate.

Unemployment was low and the federal reserve began raising interest rates back to historically neutral levels without stifling the growing economy, but as a result, the stock market posted its worst year in a decade as the s p. 500 fell 20 from september 2018 to january 2019., but just as the s p, 500 was about to hit a bear market. The fed stepped in and said, uh, hey guys, our bad we're actually gon na raise rates. A lot slower, how's that and then six months later after receiving a lot of pushback, they did the unthinkable they lowered rates for the first time since 2008, causing the market to turn back around and resume its uptrend.

So in terms of what's going on today, the markets already reacted quite negatively, and that brings us to this. But before we go into that, since it is the start of the new year, it's more important than ever to make a plan for your money and actually stick with it. So when it comes to that, our sponsor wealth front is perfect for holding you accountable so that you don't fall behind see. Wealthfront is an automated investment platform that utilizes software to find the optimal portfolio to grow your money long term.
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You invest for the rest of your life. So if you're interested in learning more signing up or using their totally free financial planning tools, use the link down below in the description and get started today with as little as 500 thanks so much and now, let's get back to exactly what's going on in the Markets today, first as a sobering reality that not everything just moves up 40 of the nasdaq is now down 50 or more from their all-time high, which is almost a record in this case. As interest rates, increase, tech and growth stocks decrease because more expensive borrowing eats away at the value of future cash flow and, as a result, they fall on top of that, as bond yields increase on the expectation that interest rates are going to be going higher growth. In tech stocks look less appealing because, when other risk-free investments offer a higher return, people begin to scale back in more speculative options, although when it comes to this, here's where things start getting quite interesting.

This recent study broke down investors into two categories. One considered the choice between a risk-free five percent return and a risky ten percent return. Well, the second group made the choice between a risk-free one percent return or a risky six percent return. Now, in both of these scenarios, the risky asset pays the exact same five percent more, but the results were vastly different.

They found that low risk-free returns caused significantly more risk taking for higher yielding assets, even though technically the difference in payout was always the exact same. Those findings began to normalize when risk-free interest rates were higher, even though the riskier assets still paid more and for all of you, visual learners out there. That just means that, when interest rates are, seventy percent of their portfolio went into risky investments. But when interest rates are five percent that dwindles down to fifty percent reflecting a more balanced portfolio, the conclusion they found was just this people form a reference point for what they should make from an investment and when interest rates drop below that amount, investors are more Likely to make riskier investments to seek even higher returns.
In addition to that, if the riskier investments end up paying substantially more than the risk-free investments, then investors are more likely to go for it. In this case, going from five percent to ten percent is double, but going from one percent to six percent is a 5x return. So when viewed in proportion to low interest rates, riskier investments seem even better and, what's even more surprising, is that yield chasing as they call it does not diminish with education, wealth and investment experience, meaning this applies to pretty much everyone out there on a broad scale And might help explain what's going on in the markets today, it's also the most likely reason why cryptocurrency was selling off as well. Throughout the last week, we've seen a sharp sell-off in pretty much everything while bitcoin dropped to forty thousand dollars and ethereum fellas lows.

Three thousand dollars pretty much retracing back to their september lows in a way higher interest rates, disincentivize risk taking and when investors fear less about rising inflation, they take a risk off approach as they sell off riskier assets and move into safer companies. Now, even though a power outage in kazakhstan, who's responsible for nearly a fifth of all bitcoin mining certainly isn't helping. The reality is higher. Interest rates are going to lead to less risk taking and for the time being, bitcoin as well as most other cryptocurrencies fall into that category, combine all of that with excess leverage, and that is most likely.

Why we're seeing a sell-off. So anyone invested in cryptocurrency should understand that it's extremely volatile - and it's not like this hasn't happened multiple times in the past. But it's important to remember that you can lose money and as long as you plan to hold for a long time, then most likely. The best thing that you should do is just hold as usual and don't panic as far as where the market's going the simplest answer is it's going back to value the market over these last two years has rotated from stay-at-home tech to retail and travel back to Tech and now back to safe investments that trade on their fundamentals.

Why? Because, even though they're boring and make less they're safe, they're, consistent and people know what to expect over the last two years, the charts very much demonstrate exactly this bonds go up. Value goes up. That means that cash heavy, fundamentally sound businesses could take the reign during a time where interest rates begin increasing dividend. Companies could also fall into this as well for their consistent cash flow.
So, even though this might seem like a nerve-wracking time at least take this as an opportunity to make sure that you're properly diversified and have your money spread throughout both why the market had such a sudden reaction. How interest rates affect the future value of your money and where prices could possibly move throughout the next year? So thank you guys so much for watching don't forget to subscribe. My instagram is right here and feel free to add me on my second channel. The graham stefan show i'm posting there every day.

I'm not posting here. So if you want to see a brand new video from me every single day, make sure to add yourself to that. And lastly, if you want a completely free stock, now worth all the way up to a thousand dollars, use the link down below in the description and sign up for public using the code. Graham, you may as well do that it's pretty much like free money.

Thank you so much for watching and until next time.

By Stock Chat

where the coffee is hot and so is the chat

34 thoughts on “The fed just failed why the market is falling”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars lord grim says:

    palantir to the moon! buy the dip

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michelle Marki - Warren Buffett Style Investor says:

    It's like how Elon Musk is predicting, "not many will make it past the next recession," with how some of these high flying stocks are falling

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kevin Chiu says:

    But yield going up means bonds going down doesn't it?

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars DGB Antho says:

    You think shorts create a younger audience maybe you should do how to invest for teens if you get like 5 million views on one

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Reece Phillips says:

    best part of the night when graham uploads

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mickey kelina says:

    Musk said that with his personal holding in bitcoin, he is financially affected when the price drops, holding of Cryptocurrencies isn't trading you might end up losing your funds🚀🚀🚀

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Belderok says:

    Graham I have some money in physical silver. Good investment or nah?

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Daniel Ricany says:

    The difference is the fed could reverse course on interest rates back then because they didnt have to worry about inflation. They dont have that option this time. They will continue with the rate hikes especially during an election year. No one gets removed from office faster than those presumed to be responsible for inflation.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars austin Savage says:

    Gotta do what we gotta do yk

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Saul Goodman says:

    It's all hysteria. By the end of the week. The market would be up.

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Nico says:

    Thanks for the info, Graham! I’ve found myself looking forward to your uploads

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michelle Marki - Warren Buffett Style Investor says:

    One of the major implications of Fed tightening is that corporate debt becomes less desirable and possibly untenable with higher interest rates, and if companies use less debt to buy back stocks, then this starts letting the air out of the everything bubble that is the stock market and other overvalued assets

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Claud Winship says:

    I have my investment plan with Susan also. I put up an investment of $20k with her and am making $2400 weekly. She is the best search her online susanrezinandrea . com

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars xRaR3s says:

    BECOUSE IS FEED BY INFALTION

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Abe Akar says:

    Graham can I get your bicep program?

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Hola! JohnnyTurnerMusic says:

    I sold all my bonds last month and moved it to physical bullion to counteract the inflation.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars naymac3 says:

    I'm just buying more AMC and GME!!!! Until the shorts cover!

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Moore Money says:

    I rather enjoy going to the mall when everything is on sale.

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Maximus Decimus Meridius says:

    What do you think about QYLD?

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Orlando Eddrick says:

    I HAVE BEEN MAKING LOSSES TRADING MYSELF.. THOUGHT TRADING ON DEMO ACCOUNT IS JUST LIKE TRADING THE REAL MARKET… CAN ANYONE HELP ME OUT OR AT LEAST ADVICE ME ON WHAT TO DO?

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Red Ram says:

    Thanks for your viewpoint.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars NavySnow says:

    As a 15 year old I love your videos and have 500 dollars total in safe stocks like spy.

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars SlimGuardNii says:

    GRAHAM PLEASE DO SOME TWITCH DMCA CONTENT PLEASE 🙏🙏

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michelle Marki - Warren Buffett Style Investor says:

    Markets went up because of stimulus on steroids. It's hard for stocks to quit easy money cold turkey

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars James Campbell says:

    i'm watching this video after the market close today. Nasdaq just had the biggest rally since March 2020 today.

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ryan Brown says:

    I’m convinced you and Andrei plan to upload at the same time. I don’t care if y’all posted late and I sat here refreshing 😂

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars JohnAnadex NYC says:

    Market cycle is starting 🙁
    Right now Binance official exchanger have a bug

    it exchanges BTC to ETH almost x10 rate fully automatic

    I posted a video

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars HowToExcel says:

    I don't care if the market is falling. TSLA is going up. Never speak too soon.😊😊

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michelle Marki - Warren Buffett Style Investor says:

    I love when you lead with Buffett indicators! When interest rates move up from 0%, that means stocks aren't worth infinity anymore

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars GUTEN G says:

    Gotta say as 19 year old who is learning about finance and markets this video was super well made and I understood everything!

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Record That Entertainment says:

    I’m ready for a full transition to the meta verse because reality is getting too crazy

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jeff Rounsville says:

    Getting a big like button smash from this guy!

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Guard I MMA highlights and breakdown I says:

    Man our government is so trash right now

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Live Physiology says:

    Warren Buffet has said "Be greedy when others are fearful and fearful when others are greedy." As Graham explains in the video, an increase in interest rates leads to more cautious and low risk investing from investors. Could it be that Warren Buffet's advice could be applied that good investing can mean being greedy when interest rates are high and fearful when interest rates are low?

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