The U.S. Treasury does its own repo program, similar to the Fed repo operation. John Crudele wrote a great article on it, with help from JesseL who tracks Treasury Repos (Term Investment Options (TIOs)) on his website. I have been monitoring TIO for over a year now, and in the last 3 days Paulson has engaged in the largest successive TIO operations in the history of the program. People can track TIO ops here: http://www.fms.treas.gov/tip/ . The Crudele article can be accessed here: http://www.nypost.com/seven/11072006/business/u_s__treasury_is_quietly_
doing_the_feds_work_business_john_crudele.htm

I really believe we are entering a new era of Fed/Govt monetization of our financial system. People can see what really happened when Weimar Germany engaged in the behavior that is now being engaged in by our Govt. at http://www.nowandfutures.com/index.html . My new nickname for "Hammerin Hank" is "Heir Weimar Hank."
Dave in Denver

From Jesse:

"80 percent of the $10 billion TIO that expires May 15. went off at 5.079% today. Uh, isn't Fed Funds supposed to be 5.25 these days? Is Paulson feeding discounted tax money to his favorite banksters?" ….

Comparison of the Weimar Republic and US: stock markets, monetary inflation, etc.

From 1914-1922, the stock market rose about 89x (from about 100 to 8900), the dollar (deutsche mark) rose 1525x and coal rose 1250x.

http://wallstreetbear.com/board/http://www.nowandfutures.com/us_weimar.html






NEW YORK POST



U.S. TREASURY IS QUIETLY DOING THE FED'S WORK

http://www.nypost.com/php/pfriendly/print.php?url=http://www.nypost.com/seven/11072006/business/u_s__treasury_is_quietly_doing_the_feds_work_business_john_crudele.htm

By JOHN CRUDELE



November 7, 2006 -- FOR the past few years the U.S. Treasury has been quietly involved in what the financial markets call "repo" agreements and this near-secret operation could explain why the nation's money supply seems to be confoundingly large.

It might also explain why Washington decided earlier this year to stop publishing M3 money supply figures, the broadest and most popular measure of money in circulation.

Repurchase agreements - or repos - have long been used by the Federal Reserve to get money quickly into the hands of financial institutions, which in turn can put the money into circulation in the form of loans.

Last Thursday, for example, the Fed executed $2.5 billion in overnight repos and $8 billion in 14-day repurchase agreements. These were reported on the financial wires.

The Treasury completed a $5.5 billion repo operation on the same day under what it calls the Term Investment Option. There was no mention of the Treasury operation on the wires. In the Fed's repo deals, the banks temporarily turn over securities to the central bank in exchange for cash.

The Treasury TIO program works in a similar way, except the financial institutions pledge securities as collateral in exchange for the cash.

Is this like the repo operation at the Fed? "Kinda'," says a spokeswoman for Treasury. "But not really." She said the TIO program only replaced the old way of putting government cash in banks without making the banks place bids, which gets the government a better deal.

Most people judge whether the Federal Reserve is trying to influence economic growth by its actions with interest rates.

If the Fed is raising rates, for instance, it really isn't tightening credit if it is also putting large amounts of money into the hands of bankers through repos.

The opposite is also true: the Fed can't really speed up the economy by cutting the interest rates it controls (and hoping all other rates come down) if it is keeping a tight fist on the amount of money banks have available to lend. This is the way the repo market has worked - up to now.

These days, whenever the Treasury finds itself with extra cash lying around, it can turn the money over to the Fed to be invested.

Apparently the Treasury doesn't report its repo auction results in the Fed's report since last Thursday's maturities in the two operations didn't match. It's difficult to call this operation "secret" if financial institutions have been using it for three years to increase their liquidity. But folks I asked on the trader side of the investment community if [said?] they had never heard of this arrangement.

Experts worry whenever there is too much money - liquidity - in the financial system because it can lead to things like price spirals in the housing market and bubbles in stocks.

But even more worrisome for the financial markets than too much liquidity would be an inability to track the amount of money being pumped into the financial system.

Unless I find out differently, it looks as if the Treasury has created a way to duplicate the Fed's power. And that is a disturbing possibility unless it is somehow monitored.

john.crudele@nypost.com