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Fed officials call for tougher regulation to prevent asset bubbles: FT

Published 10/17/2020, 02:51 PM
Updated 10/17/2020, 08:10 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston's President and CEO Eric S. Rosengren speaks in New York

(Reuters) - Tougher U.S. financial regulation is needed to avoid the rise of excessive risk-taking and asset bubbles in the markets at a time when the Federal Reserve is keeping interest rates low, two senior Fed officials told the Financial Times in an article published on Saturday https://on.ft.com/3kesfsU.

Boston Fed President Eric Rosengren told the newspaper that the Fed lacked sufficient tools to prevent companies and households from taking on "excessive leverage" and called for a rethink on issues related to U.S. financial stability.

"If you want to follow a monetary policy ... that applies low interest rates for a long time, you want robust financial supervisory authority in order to be able to restrict the amount of excessive risk-taking occurring at the same time," the FT quoted him as saying.

"(Otherwise) you're much more likely to get into a situation where the interest rates can be low for long but be counterproductive," Rosengren said.

Minneapolis Federal Reserve President Neel Kashkari said there was a need for stricter regulation to avert repeated interventions in the market by the Fed.

"I don't know what the best policy solution is, but I know we can't just keep doing what we've been doing," he told the newspaper.

"As soon as there's a risk that hits, everybody flees and the Federal Reserve has to step in and bail out that market, and that's crazy. And we need to take a hard look at that," he said.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: The Federal Reserve Bank of Boston's President and CEO Eric S. Rosengren speaks in New York

A representative of the Boston Federal Reserve confirmed Rosengren's remarks made to the Financial Times, adding he was interviewed on Oct. 8. Kashkari was not immediately available to comment on the article published on Saturday.

Latest comments

you (the FED and US Government) took the US off of the gold standard and went Keynsian. Yet, you do not want the Keynsian fallout and consequences for doing so???
Step 1: create a bubble so rich people can get richer. Step 2: inflate the bubble until it bursts. Step 3: Throw helicopter money at the problem thus creating a mega bubble. Step 4: complain about the system. Rinse and repeat
Most people work for real wages and invest what they dont spend to survive on real assets that either depreciate or remain constant in value relative to inflation throughout their lives. Who and what causes an asset bubble? The financial markets and derivatives. By controlling interest rates and the flow of money the Fed can control both, but they chose to play politics and kept pouring fuel on what was a pretty hot fire aleady.
I dont see how! If it be done, it would have been done! This high salary paid guy just empty talk!
https://money.usnews.com/investing/news/articles/2020-10-17/fed-officials-call-for-tougher-regulation-to-prevent-asset-bubbles-ft
Puts on NIO and their 1800% gain this year
This is akin to an arsonist calling for better fire prevention.
right ..
why you said it when I just bought it
Nobody creates more asset bubbles than the FOMC
The Fed can't create this "Monetary Policy", congress does. So that basically explains everything we need to know right away : Nothing will change, and the Fed will HAVE to bail out the country is a major risk occurs during leveraged risk taking. The Fed's hands are tied and can do NOTHING except print money, repo, play with interest rates and buyback bonds. There's no political incentive to change financial regulation (billionaires LOVE the profits and donate to PACs heavily) so congress will sit on their hands regarding preventing bubbles, as they already have been. This is nothing.
finally they verbalize what we've all known this whole time. the only question is when we the markets reflect the lack of consistent printed money support?
They won't. The entire market is built on the fact that USA has a vested interest in not allowing itself to implode. It's built to V off bottoms on excessive stimulus news. There's really no risk for rich people, they just buy and buy and buy and hedge and buy and sell their hedges during a crash and buy and buy... and they do it with AI, while they golf. This market is pinned to a wall, or America collapses into financial ruin. Plan accordingly.
Here comes the sell off
too late
this is literally nothing.
The sell-off is coming, perhaps as late as after the election, as a 'sell the news' event
there come inflation
Whoever at FT posted this jun. k didn't do their homework or they would have come across my comments that the old Romans played this IDENTICAL GAME for 300 years before their empire collapsed. -- Sorry, we're royally stuck on the same path of kicking the can down the road and bye-bye dollar
Like they have any “monetary policy” except creating new money. Of course, they do not have any choice, because politicians of all stripes demand more money, because voters want it. Dysfunctional system, aka late-stage democracy.
Yuppppp
BIGGEST JOKE IN TOWN -- ROFL. I Bet that ●DJT smells he's losing to Biden (otherwise he wouldn't tolerate this type of talk) ●went short .. --- First we had repo loans with Billions --- (Totally s..ks that this potus is allowed to 2-time the market without the SEC seeing every trade his account makes. All of DJT's wider family circles should have the same audit team reviewing their transactions every week)
.. (with Billions ..) getting lost and never repaid by various banks who borrowed the money in the 1st place ..
bring your political bs elsewhere.
The only way to prevent asset bubbles is to outlaw fiat currencies...and get government out of banking altogether.
.. and reverse 1970's gold stsndard situation
So basically, asset bubbles are here to stay because governments that have no control over their own currency have national security risks and lack the necessary control to maximize their currencies impact as needed. We are not moving away from fiat currency.
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