📄 Extracted Text (870 words)
From: Jes Staley <MMII >
To: Jeffrey Epstein <[email protected]>
Subject: Fwd: Re:
Date: Wed, 28 Dec 2011 01:59:22 +0000
something I wrote today
Begin forwarded message:
From: "Zuccarelli, Jennifer R"
Date: December 27. 2011 5:13:49 PM EST
To: "<
Subject: Re:
This is good. I really like it.
But depends where you want to say it. Is this for a closed press speech?
From: Jes Staley fmailto:
Sent: Tuesday, December 27, 2011 05:08 PM
To: Zuccarelli, Jennifer R
Subject:
This is something I wrote up. What do you think
" Last week, with the European Central Bank's extension of three year
funding to any and every European bank, backed by almost any and all
collateral, even collateral with short maturities, Paul Krugman has now
run the table. For with this move, the ECB has joined the Federal
Reserve Bank of the United States in adopting the most aggressive
monetary policy we have seen in our life time. Between QE2/twist, and
now the move by the Europeans, we are going to witness an enormous,
expansive, and active push by the world's two great Central Banks to get
the economies of the world going.
It is part of Paul Krugman's plea that governments in Europe and the
U.S. do whatever is necessary, to get economic growth. While Krugman
may sound, in his weekly pieces in the New York Times, like he is
fighting a losing battle with cold hearted rightest and economic
fundamentalists, he actually has been winning in the bigger picture.
While the firscal outlook may not be great in Europe, it still has one of
the greatest safety nets of any modern society. And if you missed it, in
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the U.S. we have generated one of the country's biggest annual deficits
with a little fiscal push of our own. And now, both Continents are about
to try the greatest exercise of priniting money that modern democracies
have seen.
It is what Merkel has said she fears most. When you visit Germany,
everyone will tell you three things when it comes to the European crisis.
First, Germany owes an enormous debt to Europe. Second, Southern
Europe must control their budgets. And third, and dont miss this one,
Germany can never let the European Central Bank print money. For
every German believes that part of what led to the first issue, was the
hyper inflation of the 1930's created by German's printing money.
German's are terrified of inflation. And inflation starts with printing
money.
Its a point I have some sympathy for, as I lived in the hyper inflation
world of Brazil in the 1980's. It is no wonder that two consecutive,
leftist Presidents in Brazil, starting with the labor leader known the world
over, as Lula, ran a governement who's fiscal and monetary policy would
make the farthest right leaning, German.... proud. For Lula witnessed the
reality of inflation in his early years. Inflation is a brutul tax on the poor.
Throw human sympathies out the door, inflation is a government tax to
pay down debt, where the burden is carried almot totally by the least able
to afford it. Run-away inflation is a crushing and relentless charge on a
societies poorest. And it is caused, primarily, because Governments print
money to avoid difficult choices.
Paul Krugman's economics contemplate extraordinary deftness by high
officials pushing the right economic buttons. Right now, our Fed has
bought over $2 trillion dollars of US debt to fund almost every penny of
deficit spending of the last two years (where did they get that money
from?). And now the Europeans are doing something similiar. Central
Banks are not supposed to lend without strong, bullet proof collatoral; its
called secured lending.
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Remember how the market tricked itself with triple AAA securites. So
how secure is a three year loan collatoralized by a one year piece of
paper. What would you say if a bank gave you a three year loan, and
said that you only had to show proof that you could pay your loan back
in the first year.
Last week the ECB held its first auction for this type of transaction.
Over 500 banks in Europe borrowed over $600 billion in one day. And I
would wager, unchecked, this will grow by another $1 trillion early next
year when they do it again.
What both the Fed and the ECB are doing, is dramatically growing their
balance sheets by putting money into the public markets. What all
economists know is that at some point, they will have to take this money
back.
If the heads of our Central Banks are indeed the true "Masters of the
Universe", they will show a level of self control and card counting, like
the very best card sharks of all time. And Paul Krugman will have
helped save the world's economy.
But it is a huge gamble, and one can only hope, that the worlds
economists haven't forgotten the early lesson of economics: There is no
free lunch."
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