There's A Liquidity Crunch Developing

Submitted by Alasdair Macleod of GoldMoney.com,

This week an article in Euromoney points out that liquidity in bond markets is drying up. The blame is laid at the door of regulations designed to increase banks’ capital relative to their balance sheets. Furthermore, the article informs us, new regulations restricting the gearing on repo transactions are likely to make things worse, not only reducing bond market liquidity further, but also affecting credit markets. The reason this will be so is that in a repurchase agreement a bank supplies credit to non-banks for the period of the repo.

One could take another equally valid point of view: the reason for deteriorating liquidity in bond markets is due in part to yields being unnaturally low. If you price bonds too highly, which amounts to the same thing, few investors want to buy them without the unconditional support of the central bank as a ready buyer. This, after all, is why just the hint of tapering recently was enough to derail the markets. So here again we come up against the same choice: if the Fed insists on mispricing the market with its interventions and zero interest rate policy it must fully support the market with both QE and also twist applied to the yield curve to maintain market liquidity.

For the investment analysts and commentators that still expect tapering this must come as something of a surprise. The underlying point they have missed is that once a central bank embarks on a policy of printing money as a cure-all, it is impossible to stop, or even to just taper without risking a liquidity crisis. Increasingly illiquid markets are now telling us that QE should be increased.

The point was rammed home this week by the ECB’s decision to lower interest rates. The move was sold to the financial press as designed to stimulate inflation and reduce the risk of deflation. However, central to the deflation argument is the need to stimulate liquidity in the secondary markets, which according to the Euromoney article “are now close to breakdown”.

At least the ECB rate cut should defuse tapering expectations in US markets, making it easier for the Fed to back down from its failed experiment. The Fed now needs to plant the suggestion that QE will have to be increased, or a similar mechanism designed to boost liquidity introduced.

This will not be difficult in the prevailing economic conditions. Even though GDP remains a positive figure, concerns over deflation abound and are preoccupying more and more analysts. These are concerns which analysts can readily accept as an immediate and greater risk than inflation.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/AYODrMtNJws/story01.htm Tyler Durden

There’s A Liquidity Crunch Developing

Submitted by Alasdair Macleod of GoldMoney.com,

This week an article in Euromoney points out that liquidity in bond markets is drying up. The blame is laid at the door of regulations designed to increase banks’ capital relative to their balance sheets. Furthermore, the article informs us, new regulations restricting the gearing on repo transactions are likely to make things worse, not only reducing bond market liquidity further, but also affecting credit markets. The reason this will be so is that in a repurchase agreement a bank supplies credit to non-banks for the period of the repo.

One could take another equally valid point of view: the reason for deteriorating liquidity in bond markets is due in part to yields being unnaturally low. If you price bonds too highly, which amounts to the same thing, few investors want to buy them without the unconditional support of the central bank as a ready buyer. This, after all, is why just the hint of tapering recently was enough to derail the markets. So here again we come up against the same choice: if the Fed insists on mispricing the market with its interventions and zero interest rate policy it must fully support the market with both QE and also twist applied to the yield curve to maintain market liquidity.

For the investment analysts and commentators that still expect tapering this must come as something of a surprise. The underlying point they have missed is that once a central bank embarks on a policy of printing money as a cure-all, it is impossible to stop, or even to just taper without risking a liquidity crisis. Increasingly illiquid markets are now telling us that QE should be increased.

The point was rammed home this week by the ECB’s decision to lower interest rates. The move was sold to the financial press as designed to stimulate inflation and reduce the risk of deflation. However, central to the deflation argument is the need to stimulate liquidity in the secondary markets, which according to the Euromoney article “are now close to breakdown”.

At least the ECB rate cut should defuse tapering expectations in US markets, making it easier for the Fed to back down from its failed experiment. The Fed now needs to plant the suggestion that QE will have to be increased, or a similar mechanism designed to boost liquidity introduced.

This will not be difficult in the prevailing economic conditions. Even though GDP remains a positive figure, concerns over deflation abound and are preoccupying more and more analysts. These are concerns which analysts can readily accept as an immediate and greater risk than inflation.


    



via Zero Hedge http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/zerohedge/feed/~3/AYODrMtNJws/story01.htm Tyler Durden

Starr’s Mill High School goes green: Fine Arts Department presents ‘Shrek the Musical’

In a faraway kingdom, an ogre shows up to rescue a feisty princess. Throw in a donkey who won’t shut up, a bad guy with a short temper, a cookie with an attitude and over a dozen other fairy tale misfits and that’s “Shrek The Musical.”

Starr’s Mill has assembled a cast of 50 student actors, singers, musicians, and dancers, some making their stage deput in the show.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-10-2013/starr%E2%80%99s-mill-high-school-goes-green-fine-arts-department-presents-%E2%80%98shrek-musical

Rotary Club of Fayetteville honors men and women of Fayette County

During October, Rotarians are encouraged to focus on Vocational Service. The Fayetteville Rotary Club held its annual recognition program for Vocational Service on Oct. 7, 2013, where it presented awards to four outstanding individuals.

As part of Vocational Service Recognition Month, each recipient received a Certificates of Appreciation and joint gifts from the Fayetteville Rotary Club and Frank’s at the Old Mill. Restaurant Manager Darlene Psomas was honored to participate in the presentations.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-10-2013/rotary-club-fayetteville-honors-men-and-women-fayette-county

Champion cheerleaders

The Starr’s Mill Varsity Cheerleaders won the McIntosh Chief Cheerleading Classic on Saturday, November 2. Not only did Starr’s Mill win the 5A division, but they were named Grand Champions for the entire competition. They will compete next Saturday, November 9, at the Region Finals in Columbus.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-08-2013/champion-cheerleaders

PTC settles discrimination lawsuit for $300K

A former administrative assistant with the Peachtree City Police Department has been awarded $300,000 in a settlement of her sex and disability discrimination case against the city and Police Chief H.C. “Skip” Clark.

The settlement for Lisa Ficalore includes $5,000 in back pay awarded by a vote of the City Council Thursday night and $300,000 that is being paid by the city’s risk management carrier, the Georgia Interlocal Risk Management Agency (GIRMA).

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-10-2013/ptc-settles-discrimination-lawsuit-300k

Haddix out as runoff set for PTC mayor’s seat

The job isn’t over for Peachtree City voters, who will need to choose between Vanessa Fleisch or Harold Logsdon to be their next mayor in a runoff election Dec. 3 since no one in the five-candidate field got more than 50 percent of the vote.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-10-2013/haddix-out-runoff-set-ptc-mayor%E2%80%99s-seat

Coston loses to Tyrone incumbent by 6 votes

The votes were cast Tuesday night and the recount came on Thursday. When all was done, incumbent Tyrone Councilman Ken Matthews beat challenger Pota Coston by a slim margin of six votes in the race for the Post 3 council seat.

Matthews won the contest taking 659 votes while Coston received 653 votes. A total of 1,317 votes were cast, representing a 29.8 percent turnout of Tyrone’s approximately 4,000 registered voters.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-10-2013/coston-loses-tyrone-incumbent-6-votes

Imker decries sales tax failure at polls

Peachtree City Councilman Eric Imker decried the loss of a sales tax vote that would have put a 1 percent levy in effect for two years and provided $14.2 million to pay for road and cart path repairs in the city.

At Thursday’s council meeting, Imker pointed out that the tax only passed one of the city’s 12 precincts, and if failed countywide with 57 percent of voters saying no to the sales tax.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-10-2013/imker-decries-sales-tax-failure-polls

Starr’s Mill Debate Team off to strong start

The Starr’s Mill High School Debate team has gotten off to a strong start, with multiple wins at Griffin, Roswell, and Warner Robins, with an exceptionally strong showing at the Johnson High School tournament, reports Amanda Nails. The results were as follows:

Novice Public Forum: Darius Cooper and Liam O’Connell, 4th Place; Liam O’Connell, 3rd Place Speaker Award.

Varsity Public Forum: Maud deGroot and Vicki Justice, 2nd Place; Maud deGroot, 4th Place Speaker Award; Vicki Justice, 3rd Place Speaker Award.

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via The Citizen http://www.thecitizen.com/articles/11-09-2013/starr%E2%80%99s-mill-debate-team-strong-start