Richard Fisher interview excerpts
Money and Finance

Richard Fisher interview excerpts


Via ValueWalk:

On recent reports from the San Francisco Federal Reserve that suggest bond buying and money printing has a very minimal effect on the GDP: 

“I argued that when I argued against this program so I am happy to see and they have one of the best research departments in the entire Federal Reserve system. The point is we’ve gone through this program, interest rates have been at historic lows, we’ve had a secular trend as well as this final crescendo, which was assisted by the Federal Reserve program. I think it certainly helped corporations clean up their balance sheets. I don’t think there’s any question about that. At the same time, there were some costs. Savers have been hit, small banks and other intermediate bank sizes have been hurt in terms of their interest rate margins. It has exacerbated that decline in interest rate margins that occurred over the last 20 years. So there are costs and benefits. Again, the benefits of QE3 and the efficacy of that program are constantly being analyzed and we’ll just see what the committee as a whole, because it is a committee of 19 people, decides under Chairman Bernanke’s leadership in September and in subsequent meetings.”




- Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Outlook Will Shift As Conditions Shift
Our investment outlook will shift as market conditions shift, and we will lean toward a more constructive stance when conditions support it. There are straightforward ways to do that while still remaining careful about larger cyclical risks. Present conditions...

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It will come as no surprise to those who know me that I did not argue in favor of additional monetary accommodation during our meetings last week. I have repeatedly made it clear, in internal FOMC deliberations and in public speeches, that I believe that...

- 2010 Repost: Wsj Op-ed: Open Letter To Ben Bernanke
As talk of QE3 remains in the headlines, I thought it might be a good time to review this Op-Ed, which was signed by Seth Klarman, Jim Grant, Jim Chanos and Niall Ferguson, among others, in November of 2010. The following is the text of an open letter...

- Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Reality Of The Situation
For nearly two years, the massive interventions of central banks have repeatedly pulled a fundamentally weak and debt-burdened global economy from the brink of resumed recession. The Federal Reserve's balance sheet is now leveraged 52-to-1, with assets...

- Wsj Op-ed: Open Letter To Ben Bernanke
Signed by Seth Klarman, Jim Grant, Jim Chanos and Niall Ferguson, among others: The following is the text of an open letter to Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke signed by several economists, along with investors and political strategists, most of...



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