The bubble in farm land, just like the general real estate bubble, was precipitated by the Fed's money printing and
general easy money policies.
Easy money policies abroad push the dollar higher, hurting U.S. exporters and making it harder for the Fed to get inflation back up to its 2 percent target.
However, asset and debt bubbles, enabled
by easy money policies, could derail his plans and thrust the global economy into another recession.
RT @LauricellaTom: Pimco's El - Erian:
Easy money policies mean stocks, bonds «trading at very artificial levels» @MoneyBeat @Pimco #WSJ... Apr 16, 2013
The Fed pointed to low interest rates as evidence that it was following
an easy money policy and never mentioned the quantity of money.
And bear in mind that this growth is with the effects of
the easiest money policy ever seen in history.
Sen. Mike Crapo, R - Idaho, said before Thursday's vote that he would oppose her because of his disapproval of the Fed's
easy money policies.
From 1987 when Greenspan took over for Volcker, our economy went from 150 percent debt to GDP to 390 percent as we had
these easy money policies moving people more and more out the risk curve.
Chinese equities have skyrocketed on the back of speculative buying locally and
easy money policies.
On the one hand, the Federal Reserve's
easy money policy will cap U.S. dollar gains through this year.
The Most Hated Rally in History A Financial Times article on March 2 examined the post-financial crisis bull market and contained the phrase we have used to title this section.1 The article discusses a theme we have often stated, ``... that many investors have simply not believed in a stock market rally fueled by central banks»
easy money policies.»
The Federal Reserve is pursuing
an easy money policy, to offset the federal spending cuts that would otherwide become an economic drag (and might still be a drag — we don't know yet).
Poloz shot down any suggestion the Bank's
easy money policy is responsible for soaring home prices
That book critiqued
the easy money policies of Alan Greenspan, and the asset bubbles he was creating.
Stocks flew as a result of
the easy money policy of the Fed in the»20s.
Many critics have complained that
the easy money policy and low interest rates set by the US Federal Reserve have inflated a bubble in the global stock markets.
The Fed drove us into this liquidity trap through increasing application of
an easy money policy.
In an exclusive interview with Maclean's this week, Bank of Canada Governor Stephen Poloz shot down any suggestion the Bank's
easy money policy is responsible for home prices in cities like Toronto and Vancouver rising at double - digit annual rates.
For the past few years I've been arguing that this bull market has been driven primarily by the Fed's
easy money policies.
Overall, the markets are likely to reward active management over passive as
the easy money policies of the last several years will likely become something of the past.
With large US deficits, trade deficits, the quantitative easing already performed by the Federal Reserve,
easy money policies, and worldwide debt concerns, investors may rightly be cautious regarding the potential for inflation over upcoming years.