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⚠️⚠️⚠️ #fed #federalreserve #jeromepowell ⚠️⚠️⚠️
The Fed's repo disaster.
00:00 US Bankruptcy.
05:35 The US Repo Market Disaster for the Fed.
09:38 Yield Curve Control MONEY PRINTING.
13:39 2022 United Kingdom Bond Disaster.
16:35 What could Happen.
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Is nuts, but the United States might run out of buyers for U.S treasuries. which might mean the Federal Reserve is going to turn on the money printer again to prevent the U.S government from going bankrupt. I Kid you not, this is what Credit Suisse is predicting. A very particular analyst who has a really good thesis for this.

Listen to this because it's nuts. and in the video, we'll even talk about how to prepare yourself. Quantitative tightening has just begun. In fact, if you look at the St Louis Federal Reserve, you can see on their website that the Federal Reserves balance sheet has absolutely exploded from under one trillion dollars leading up to the 2008 recession exploding to nearly twice that following the 2008 Great Recession.

We then saw their balance sheet run up to nearly 5 trillion dollars by 2015. And then of course, when the money Printing and the stimulus happened after Covid, we we ran up to 8.9 trillion dollars in total assets on hand at the Federal Reserve. Now we've started the quantitative tightening process. As you can see here, the line has started to go down slightly.

The Federal Reserve has gotten rid of a good old about 400 million dollars worth of bonds on their balance sheet. This is an example of tightening. This is basically the Federal Reserve saying, hey, you know what? We're just not going to renew the treasuries on our on our balance sheet as much. We're just gonna start rolling them off to the tune of maybe 90 million dollars a month and this is roughly what they've started doing.

Now the question is is, it possible that the Federal Reserve ends up having to actually go in the opposite direction and start printing money again as we walk into a recession? This is exactly what Credit Suisse believes the Federal Reserve will do, not because they need to stimulate the market, but to prevent the United States government from going bankrupt. Yup, kid you not. we've got a few problems for the government. see: the federal government projects to have about a one trillion dollar deficit per year for the next decade, and the current debt ceiling is about 31.4 trillion dollars.

And guess what folks, we are about 69 billion dollars away from hitting exactly that debt ceiling. You can see that here the right line is the total of debt, a public debt that we have subject to the Limit and the statutory level is right there. And guess who might stand in the way of raising this debt ceiling? Which we think we might hit that debt ceiling limit somewhere around the summer, maybe July of 2023? Well, if you thought it was easy to get stuff done in Congress, your thoughts should have been extinguished when you saw how hard it was just to get house. Speaker Kevin McCarthy elected.

It took 15 rounds of voting just to get the house Speaker elected. That shows you how thin the Republican majority really is in the House of Representatives. This hasn't really happened since once in the 1920s, but more commonly back in the 1800s. This is pretty remarkable.
But imagine trying now to get a debt ceiling increase through the House of Representatives might not happen. And this is really interesting because in order for the government to actually fund it, fund its expenses to keep the government functioning, the government slowly reduces the debt ceiling. But by increasing the debt ceiling, would they actually end up having to do is agree to create more treasury bonds? That's basically the way it works. What they do is they say, hey, uh, we need another 100 million dollars today, What are we going to do? Oh uh, how about we just issue a bond and uh, we'll just promise to repay people 100 million dollars So we'll just issue a promise a piece of paper.

We'll call it risk free because historically it has been. We'll slice it up into little thousand dollar sections and individuals can go buy these treasury bonds and we'll pay them interest on that. But basically, we just kind of created money out of nothing. So we do expect the debt ceiling to get raised so the treasury Department can generate more of these bonds and fund the government.

How much it gets raised will be up for a debate. But what's crazy is, who's going to buy these bonds? What if people stop buying these bonds? Who comes in to buy the bonds when the government stops, uh, having buyers for the treasury bonds? Well, that's where Credit Suisse believes it's the Federal Reserve So as the government knocks on the door of bankruptcy, it's possible the Federal Reserve may have to come and start turning the money printers on again and end quantitative tightening early solely to support the actual function of the government. Now that's fascinating because you might think to yourself, well, who's buying treasury bonds today And isn't it possible that you know the people buying treasury bonds today will just be here to go buy those treasury bombs? Maybe. But according to Credit Suisse the first issue that we Face, there are three issues we face in terms of actually Four issues that we face in terms of ordinary classic buyers of treasuries.

Okay, so the classic buyers of treasuries the number one classic buyer of treasuries are people who need to or institutions who need to Garner some kind of yield from the cash that they have available. Well, problem with that is the Federal Reserve has this thing called the reverse repo. uh, depository account. And basically Banks and institutions have been depositing more cash in the reverse repo Market since about March of 2021.

That's why this line has been going up so much. And the rate on these reverse repos is basically your Fed Funds rate divided by 360. that's how much you get paid per night. so think about that for a moment.

that's your banking year is 360 days. so if you get paid five percent because the Federal Reserve has raised rates to five percent, and you get paid this every single day, Well, that's better than a 10-year treasury yielding you 3.75 or even a two-year treasury. Maybe yielding you 4.25 on the day rate, right? You would make more money, obviously. uh, from the uh from the reverse repo than you would from investing in treasuries.
So in other words, because of the repo rates and the Federal Reserve raising interest so much, you actually end up killing one of your primary buyers of treasuries, people who just want to park money overnight so that buyer goes away. Then Credit Suisse suggests that banks are unlikely to be buyers, so they're going to go away because they're already holding a bunch of underwater bonds and they've kind of gotten screwed and instead they're taking their excess cash and what are they doing it? What are they doing with that? They're putting it into the reverse repo. Market So number Two goes away. Foreign exchange buyers are starting to get priced out because even though the dollars come down a little bit recently, it's very, very expensive compared to historical Norms.

So there's this argument that less foreign buyers might come, and maybe there's even less of an appetite to buy treasury. Bonds in the United States Maybe to diversify a little bit more away from those. And finally, geopolitical events have also led to large FX Reserve managers reducing their appetite for treasury debt number three and four being somewhat correlated somewhat similar to each other, right? So Credit Suisse is making this argument that uh oh, your classic buyers for treasuries are potentially going away because a you've got a bunch of people or institutions able to just throw money into the reverse repo Market In which case, why bother buying treasuries So who's left? Then this is potentially as Credit Suisse calls it a check mate like situation. First, use that coupon code jet down below before prices change.

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Looking at pricing, power, stocks and fundamentals for companies, make sure to check all those programs out. Link down below. This is potentially as Credit Suisse calls it a check mate like situation where the Federal Reserve has to end up coming in and buying treasuries again and they could do this under the guy eyes. Credit Suisse says of what's known as Yield Curve Control.

Now that's really interesting and a very fascinating uh phrase because what just happened in Japan Well, you don't know what just happened to Japan Allow me to indulge you. Oh, here's how Yield Curve Control works. Run with me on this. I'm going to keep it as simple as possible.
Okay, 10-year treasury in the United States right now is like 3.5 3.7 percent somewhere on there. Let's say the government comes in and says we don't want it to go any higher than four percent. So they actually set a cap. They're like, we don't want that number to go over four percent and the reason you might not want it to go over four percent is because even though you want to tighten markets a little bit, you still want to be accommodative to the market, right? You don't want to completely tighten Financial conditions to where you have rates so high and so expensive that you walk into a recession.

This is what Japan is doing. They don't want another lost decade. They want to keep stimulating their economy at least somewhat. And so what they do is they Institute a yield cap.

And anytime interest rates start approaching that yield cap, they push yields down. They can push yields down by buying bonds. Quantitative easing They buy bonds, making bonds more expensive, pushing yields down. now.

Everything's been pretty ordinary in Japan in 2020 to 2021. things have moved or pretty much been respecting of the yield cap and things. Uh, you know, the yield cap has been kept pretty low. This is somewhere around a quarter of a percent, but it started breaking the yield cap line on the right side.

That's because people started dumping Japanese bonds and maybe they're buying U.S bonds or other bonds. So Japan said, uh, Okay, well, let's just be less stimulative to our economy. Let's raise the cap. Nobody was expecting that cap to be raced, and that worked temporarily as the Bank of Japan started buying bonds and pushing those yields down.

That's kind of what we've seen over here, but the Futures pricing is problematic because the Futures pricing suggests the Uh. Basically, the Bank of Japan is going to have to raise the cap again, or they're just going to have to keep Printing and printing and printing more money, over stimulating potentially the economy again, or trying to overstimulate the economy and introducing all of this flood of money into the economy just to keep yields where they want them to be. This is roughly the same thing that you could see happen in the United States, but with a slightly different story. The Fed basically comes in and let's say the 10-year treasury yield is trading for.

Oh, I Don't know. Let's just say it's at 3.5 percent and then all of a sudden the treasury market starts becoming disorderly and the FED needs to buy bonds. So the government can function and not go bankrupt. Well, the FED could just go.

Um, we don't want 10-year treasury yields. Uh, to ensure ordinary functioning of the market to go any higher than 3.25 And so therefore, in limited amounts, we are going to buy 10-year treasury bonds and we're going to push those yields down. Meanwhile, the treasury Department gets the money they need because nobody else is buying the treasury bonds. Remember when the FED buys treasury bonds, the US government gets the money.
The US government is like, ah, yeah, it's here. we have money to buy to spend. and now we can send this money to Ukraine or whatever they want to do with the money, right? So in other words, the FED once again could become the lender of Last Resort for the U.S government. And they could do that by pretending to actually want to Institute yield curve control when really what they're actually trying to accomplish is an ordinary Bond or like an orderly bond market.

Now, what other massive Market in the world, like the fifth, sixth, fifth, or sixth largest economy in the world, just had to Institute Bond buying, which again, is stimulative during inflationary times. Well remember the United Kingdom. They just went through exactly that: Liz Trust of the United Kingdom spent 44 days in office and during her 44 days, she kind of screwed up the bond market because her Chancellor of the exchequa, which is kind of like the Treasury Secretary Kwazi Katang, he came out and said we are a nation of entrepreneurs Okay I don't know why I'm going angry German here but he basically came out and said We're a nation of entrepreneurs and we are going to stimulate our businesses. We are going to lower the top tax rates to motivated and incentivize people to work and we're going to take in less money and we're going to spend more.

And the bond Market's like y'all gonna take in less money and y'all gonna spend more money Effort I'm out. I'm out. That was the that's what the bond market did in the United Kingdom which when people are like I'm out, what do they do They sell their bonds. The selling of the bonds all of a sudden plummeted, the value of bonds yields skyrocketed on the bonds, making the financial system really really tight.

and because the values of these bonds fell, margin calls that institutions are going off all over the place, all over the place. to the point where Margin Call based institutions like who actually handle uh, these transfers and the settlement of these exchanges didn't even have enough hours in the day to process all of the margin calls that were happening. Pension funds were on the doorstep of bankruptcy because their bond values had plummeted so much. and all of a sudden, who comes in to save the day as the British pound loses a ton of value and hits parity with the dollar because people are like I'm out.

Get me out of the United Kingdom It's unstable, Dump the bonds, Dump the British pounds. Who comes in to save the day? Ah well. October 11th You get the Bank of England who makes a statement. Dysfunction in this market and the prospect of self-reinforcing fire sale Dynamics pose a material risk to financial stability.
Therefore, we are widening our purchases of guilts basically treasuries in the United Kingdom for three days and we will buy an unlimited amount of bonds I'm paraphrasing those sort of last sentence there. But anyway, that that the Bank of England's bailout and the ouster of Liz Truss, who's now been replaced by Rishi Sunak, who's now fighting with nursing unions on pay increases uh, and uh, promising to cut spending of the prior Administration and reducing debt and reducing expenses pounds back up over 22, things are stable again, right? But it shows you that if the United Kingdom can have a bond market collapse like that, could we potentially see the Federal Reserve have to really come bail out the United States to actually provide liquidity to the treasury market? Is it possible that treasury yields could Spike as nobody starts buying treasuries uh and and people or institutions instead Park their money in the reverse repo field as all of a sudden, those yields or rates are even higher? Yes, it's absolutely possible. So bottom line, out of all of this is as inflation continues to Trend down and rates go up, you might have more people with money move their money into stocks and less money into bonds. The people who would ordinarily buy bonds might put that money into the reverse repo market.

Now you don't have buyers for treasuries or too few buyers for treasuries. Now the FED has to step in or they risk yield spiking on treasuries and financial instability in markets. So what does the FED do? Well, they don't want instability, they come in and they start printing money again. And all of a sudden, this whole monetary experiment of uh, print money, Print money Print Money Forever continues.

And then we go into the next iteration of QE forever. where basically we never get the Federal Reserve's balances down Because now just for the treasury market to actually function, the FED has to bail everyone out. This is insane and it could come well to uh to a TV screen or computer screen near you within the next six to 12 months. How do you prepare yourself for that? Well, this depends how you want to position yourself.

Some say the beneficiaries of this would actually be the stock market. Now where you want to position yourself in there is up to you personally. It seems like some of the benefit would go to bonds because you'd have a lender of Last Resort coming to buy. It's possible to Value those could actually fall before that ever happens.

So kind of speculating there. Maybe you just look for long purchases like pricing power stocks that you could kind of buy and and hold on to and build your sort of exposure to in a recessionary environment as hopefully we rotate out of this madness and maybe inflation goes away. And what does the FED end up doing? After this financial instability? Well Fed starts cutting rates because then you start seeing the reverse repo rate segment go down below where the treasury market is paying people buy treasuries. Again, rates continue to get cut, maybe treasuries fall more and you kind of get the stair stepping down and the FED is pretty careful about ever launching QT again, or does so in even softer ways until we get those yields slowly coming down again.
All of that I expect would actually be beneficial for the stock market, but it could honestly take another year for that to happen. But here's sort of a manuscript of what could be coming down the pike and what Credit Suisse is expecting for the U.S Bankruptcy. If you like my perspective or how I explain things in this video, check out the programs on building your wealth linked down below I Am confident you won't regret joining the programs and I'm so excited to have you. whether you're looking to build your income through the elite.

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26 thoughts on “Checkmate: the coming federal reserve bailout disaster.”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Surferdude HB says:

    So hold on to my $50k and make it $70k by Dec 🙂

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Surferdude HB says:

    Would you buy those bonds?

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gypsie Thread says:

    Tether says that more than 58% of its reserves are held in U.S. Treasury Bills, accounting for around $39.7 billion. Circle, the company behind USDC, has around $12.7 billion worth of Treasurys in its reserve. Paxos, which issues BUSD, said it has around $6 billion of U.S. Treasury bills. All those figures are from the companies’ latest reports which were issued in November.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tom Chow says:

    The RNC minority wants to destroy the gov and replace it with what no Social security they want to do to america what we did to iraq

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tom Chow says:

    a default on the debt will bring the value of the USD to 0 UN peace keepers from china will restore order

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Rice says:

    Here's an idea… stop creating a deficit..

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John Kelly says:

    Come on Kevin 100 million dollars?
    Congress doesn't even know what a million is.
    Their language starts with Billions and Trillions, not Millions.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John Kelly says:

    More like how thin the swamp is. Not the Republicans are, But the rhinos.

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Financial Tool Builder says:

    Thank you for the summary, I wasn't really clear on all the process around this subject. Really helpful to see clearly.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Alex Chadwick says:

    We are already in Bankruptcy and HAVE BEEN since before the Civil War???

    Federal Reserve Notes are DEBT INSTRUMENTS.

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tubeyourself says:

    We need to have a massive recession to fix this madness. Suffering is the only way through it. We have to suffer to pay for the cost of our idiot politicians reckless spending. There is ALWAYS a cost to pay. There is no such thing as free money. Just bring the crash on now before they dig our hole even deeper! Lay off everybody! Our economy is FAKE. Most of what we have was STOLEN and was never ours. Time to give it all back. Let's fix this now instead of putting problems on the backs of our children and our children's children. You'd have to be an idiot to buy a bond for such an irresponsibly run nation. That's high risk at this point. Go hungry now or starve to death later…

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Key Gen says:

    Kevin, why would you trust credit suisse when they are on the brink of bankruptcy themselves because of mismanagement? You really think they got their shit together?

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tjBuds says:

    I'm sorry but this just made me more confused and concerned about this market.
    You said you might wanna be in stocks maybe bonds but maybe neither is it like what ?

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars mchf phone says:

    A democractic process actually utilized in the house was actually refreshing. Maybe the rubber stamp atmosphere will take a back seat?

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John Purcell says:

    Bad news, Kevin. More Fed money printing = more inflation. And this cycle starts all over again.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars MIke Silverman says:

    wow even Kevin now knows the US government is bankrupt.

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars TittyTittyBangBang says:

    Newsflash – we’ve been bankrupt since the Civil War, that’s why the US gov’t is a corporation and the FEd was created. You should read “Jekyll Island”. And look up 28 UCC 3002 (15)

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars tom says:

    Thanks for today's hopium, Kevin

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Rogers says:

    Lol and the crooked wheel goes around and around to keep the wealthy more wealthy

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sueni says:

    I am a full-time FX trader. I love your channel. This is my daily dose (amongst others) of news and educational content at the same time. Just beautiful. You are just as important to my daily routine as Bloomberg is! Thx mate!

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Mr balloonpimp says:

    You know the only entities that can buy into the reverse repo market are banks….

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Shmoken Joe says:

    Theyll close the banks for 3 days/week first

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Kyle says:

    Let the government go bankrupt. They need to learn you can’t just spend money and turn your back. Cut the spending and garbage programs

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars GM4ThePeople says:

    Does Kevin know the difference between "less" & "fewer"?

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Not who you think says:

    If that happens the us economy won’t exists

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars T Sm says:

    Thank you, Kevin. I appreciate your work.

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