Don't you love the new way to cover? Quantitative Easing....
posted on
Nov 01, 2010 08:10PM
We may not make much money, but we sure have a lot of fun!
OTTAWA - With Ottawa and the Bank of Canada spurning more stimulus, the economy may still get an indirect boost from emergency measures being launched south of the border this week.
The betting among markets and economists is that U.S. Federal Reserve chairman Ben Bernanke will launch a second round of quantitative easing Wednesday, bathing the country with between $500 billion and $2 trillion in cash.
The most likely scenario is that Bernanke will announce the purchase of between $500 billion and $1 trillion in treasury bills, in $100-billion-a-month instalments.
Called QE2, or QE-The Sequel, the expected followup to $1.4 trillion of monetary stimulus that ended in March is controversial because, unlike last year, the U.S. economy is no longer in free-fall.
And many say it might not work, or not well enough to be worth the risk.
But having hinted at the move for months, analysts say it may be more destructive to do nothing than to go ahead with what may be stimulus overkill.
"I think they have no choice now because the markets have backed them into a corner," said Scotiabank economist Derek Holt. "If they don't do something there's going to be a wicket disappointment priced into some of the trades."
Bernanke is hoping a fresh infusion of cash into the economy will bring down long-term interest rates, injecting new life into the economy by making borrowing for mortgages and corporate loans easier and less expensive.
The other benefit is that by printing more of it, the U.S. dollar will fall further in comparison to other currencies, hence boosting exports and domestic industries.
But analysts caution that it is far from clear that already tapped out households will be lured into taking on more debt just because rates are low — and Bernanke is risking igniting inflation or another housing bubble.
Although the Bank of Canada toyed with the concept of quantitative easing in 2009, it eventually settled for a year-long program of emergency-level interest rates.
The Fed has no more room to move on rates, however, since it is already at zero, and is left with printing money as a last resort to spur an economy hobbled both by super-low inflation and high unemployment.