Is the Coronacrisis Giving the Fed Cover to Hold Corporate Debt?
For years there have been warning signs that a recession could light the fuse on a massive corporate debt bomb, and it’s possible that the coronavirus may be the match.
For years there have been warning signs that a recession could light the fuse on a massive corporate debt bomb, and it’s possible that the coronavirus may be the match.
Toilet paper producers haven't stopped making it. But anti-gouging laws in many places have ensured that prices can't rise to ensure that your neighbor doesn't buy three hundred rolls at the regular price while others in greater need can't find any at all.
Thanks to relentless intervention by governments and central banks, the financial system now looks to government policy as the solution to every problem.
Although authoritarian states can indeed act swiftly, they always act on the wrong information—and the wrong objectives.
Printing up paper money and giving it or lending it to domestic businesses or to India will not bring about a miraculous replacement of the lost goods and services or repair broken supply chains.
The new powers acquired by the CDC and other agencies will likely be retained and put to use long after this crisis has abated. And further government intervention in the biomedical and healthcare sectors is virtually guaranteed.
The Fed created the economic crisis with its more than a decade-long campaign of ultralow interest rates and quantitative easing policy that injected massive liquidity into financial markets. The coronavirus is simply the match that lit the fuse.
Everywhere one looks there seems to be panic about the coronavirus.
As Danielle DiMartino Booth put it, this is the money "bazooka reloaded."
Last week, the Federal Reserve responded to Wall Street’s coronavirus panic with an “emergency” interest rate cut.