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Well, this is exciting. Worries about the minutae of the Treasury market, and how bond managers finance their Treasury holding. It's a dizzying game of Chinese whispers/"Everybody paid in full" with twenty different ways it can go wrong.
So a bunch of academics thought up that if... and you Bitcoiners won't believe this... the Fed stands ready to take over the risk, then all works out, YES?
This proposal is just for the Fed to do a bit more of the trade: Instead of lending against Treasuries, it would buy the Treasuries and also sell the futures. It’s economically pretty much the same thing, though: The Fed can print money, and it can lend its balance sheet to levered investors so they don’t all have to dump their Treasuries at once. The Fed is the lender of last resort in the US financial system, and in modern finance that means being the synthetic lender of last resort.
the purchases would be self-liquidating because the reversal of the securities purchases would be embedded in the short positions in derivatives
ah, man. Gotta love the financial regulation/Fed lender-of-last-resort type reasoning. If there only was a better way to do money/savings/assets.

In a separate story:
Banking is getting incrementally narrower, and nonbank financial firms are increasingly getting into businesses that 20 years ago were done by banks.
I love when financial markets find ways around clunky regulations. "BANKS SHOULD DO BANK STUFF," uh-hu, okay, then let's set up these new entities doing the bad stuff, that the very same banks lend to instead. Makes sense, makes sense.

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The financial system is basically a giant game of musical chairs, except the Fed is always there to add more chairs when things get shaky. Their latest idea? Instead of just lending against Treasuries, they’ll buy them outright and hedge with futures. Same trick, different name. The Fed keeps stepping in as the “synthetic lender of last resort,” making sure nobody has to actually face the consequences of their bets.
Meanwhile, banks keep getting squeezed by regulations, so the risky stuff just moves to non-bank financial firms. The same banks that aren’t supposed to take on too much risk just end up lending to these shadow institutions instead. Problem solved, right?
The whole system is held together by intervention, leverage, and creative excuses for printing more money. If only there were a way to do money, savings, and assets that didn’t rely on this mess. Oh wait… we have Bitcoin.
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Eeeeeascape hatch!!
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