Gaius
14
That much is definitely true and refers to the first chart.
You are probably aware of the following but for those who may not be:
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The Fed makes money. Because previously it printed money and bought bonds, MBS etc… The Fed collects the interest on those bonds and MBS.
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The Fed pays-out money as interest to banks when banks deposit overnight money with the Fed.
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Normally, the two are in balance and any “profit” the Fed makes is returned to the Treasury.
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But recently, for a couple of reasons (to fight inflation and to stabilize banks after SVB etc.) the Fed has raised the interest rate it pays out to banks so much that, for the first time ever, the Fed is taking some very serious “losses.”
For the moment, let’s forget about the job market, the GDP and all the “normal stuff.” The Fed has to cut the rates it pays to banks to stop taking these losses. Over time it will probably have to keep cutting rates in order to make a gain that will offset the loss it is currently taking. That is a lot of rate-cutting in the future . . . even if it leads to inflation.