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We're dieing and out of work and soon millions will be homeless and uninsured
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Oct 19, 2020 22:32:08   #
lindajoy Loc: right here with you....
 
4430 wrote:
You are spot on we here in Illinory have been screwed by the Democrats for decades and the Democrat v**ers are simply brain dead and keep v****g their kind back in time after time absolutely NO COMMON SENSE at all !


When Daley was an office at least he was smart enough to take care of the constituents that’s why they all loved him so much. With what you guys got going on in there now all that is really taking place as the complete bankruptcy of the city well actually the state at this point..Terrible...

Reply
Oct 19, 2020 23:45:01   #
Sicilianthing
 
Lonewolf wrote:
All because trump is the most incompetent president in our history.
And all he cares about is remaining in power .


>>>

The Banking 8 families will use Trump a populist as the Patsy and Pied Piper for their next trick, so you can see the economic collapse spreading already.

Reply
Oct 19, 2020 23:58:36   #
Crayons Loc: St Jo, Texas
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
>>>

The Banking 8 families will use Trump a populist as the Patsy and Pied Piper for their next trick, so you can see the economic collapse spreading already.

Well if thing's are as bad as You say...why did I have to expand and pour another 8k feet of concrete?

Reply
 
 
Oct 20, 2020 00:07:34   #
jeff smith
 
Milosia wrote:
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simple question from regulators: Why are profitable corporations being offered money from the central bank at a far cheaper interest rate than local communities? In one instance, Chevron was able to borrow money at half the rate as Wisconsin — meaning the oil giant was effectively getting a government subsidy, while state taxpayers were being offered a predatory rate. Why?

Fed officials had few answers, and still haven’t addressed the iniquity. The result is a perverse dynamic: Cheap Fed cash is boosting corporate profits, stock prices, shareholder dividends and executive pay, all while budget-strapped states and cities are being forced to choose between high-interest loans or mass layoffs of teachers, firefighters, emergency workers and other public-sector employees during a deadly p******c.

It doesn’t have to be this way, according to a coalition of lawmakers and grassroots groups that have launched a campaign for reform. Their demands are straightforward: They want the Fed to use its authority to make long-term loan commitments to cities and states at zero percent interest — the rate that the Fed already lends to Wall Street banks. Proponents say that would allow municipalities to avoid mass layoffs and also save $160 billion in annual interest payments they pay Wall Street firms on their past debt.

“I represent a working class immigrant community, and the financial collapse hit us hard,” said Democratic Rep. Chuy Garcia of Chicago. “We talk about the financial crisis, but we don’t talk enough about the austerity that came after the great recession. Austerity was a choice. State and local governments need to get the financing they need,” said Garcia, urging the Fed to take action.

$160 billion is no small amount: A new report from the Action Center on Race and the Economy shows how that’s enough to “help 13 million families avoid eviction by covering their annual rent” or enough to “provide all 31.5 million unemployed workers $600 a week in P******c Unemployment Assistance for eight weeks.”

Arbitrary Rates Help Corporations & Crush Local Communities

Under existing law, the Fed has wide latitude to adjust interest rates on loans to corporations and local governments — which means it is making the choice to give powerful politically connected companies vastly preferential lending terms, while holding states and cities hostage with usurious interest rates.

While the Fed has emerged as a key player in the C****-** crisis as a backstop for Wall Street and providing mass liquidity in the corporate bond market, the Fed has only purchased two bonds in its Municipal Liquidity Facility, lending just $1.6 billion of the $500 billion of lending capacity it has. Instead of lending at the rate that it lends to banks — with the interest rate currently at zero — the Municipal Liquidity Facility has offered loans of at least 1 percent for terms of 24-36 months.

Events over the last two months illustrate how arbitrary the rates are.

In August, after the Congressional Progressive Caucus criticized the Fed for failing to do enough to encourage cities and states to use the MLF, the Fed lowered the interest rate by 0.5%

Then, during the September 17 hearing of the Bailout Oversight Commission that oversees the Fed’s p******c lending programs, commissioner Bharat Ramamurti spotlighted a major discrepancy in lending rates between an oil giant and the state of Wisconsin.

"The Fed is using public money to purchase a bond from Chevron at a rate of 0.9% over more than 4.5 years,” Ramamurti said. A state like Wisconsin, with the exact same rating as Chevron has to pay 1.28 percent over 3 years.”

Ramamurti added that while the Fed purchased a Philip Morris bond at 0.75% interest, a state “ government like Kentucky, which has the exact same credit rating as Philip Morris, [must] pay an interest rate of more than 2% over 3 years.”

The arbitrariness of the Fed’s municipal interest rate became an issue in the potential layoffs of thousands of municipal workers in New York City. Union leader Henry Garrido said he had reached out to the Municipal Liquidity Facility to attempt to fend off the possible layoff of 22,000 of his members.

“The Fed was offering a 1.9 percent at 24 months — we could do twice better in the outside market,” said Garrido. “Then they called us again after intervention by leading Democrats and said ‘We’ll offer 36 months and lower to 1.6 percent.’ We can still do better on the regular market.”

On October 14, a broad group of organizations including the National League of Cities came out in favor of an expanded MLF program. The Bailout Oversight Commission’s September monthly report was delayed, Ramamurti has alleged, because of Republicans wanting to obscure the unanimity of support for an expanded MLF.

“The 50 basis point cut [in August] showed that there was no deeper logic behind the rates,” said Nathan Tankus, the research director of the Modern Money Network. “Why wasn’t it already set up with the lower rate? The fact that you can cut that price shows that it’s arbitrary.”

The Revolving Door

The Fed’s ability to respond to the scale of the c****av***s crisis could be limited by the revolving door between the Fed and Wall Street.

The Fed official in charge of the Municipal Liquidity Facility, Kent Hiteshew, was the first Director of the Treasury Department’s Office of State and Local Finance from 2014 to 2017 during the Obama administration.

As a result, he played a “key role” in the PROMESA Act, which bailed out Wall Street bondholders of Puerto Rican debt, and entrenched brutal austerity measures in Puerto Rico under the rule of a Financial Control Board. The present in Puerto Rico, with massive cuts to government services, could be the future across the country if the MLF is not expanded and Congress does not extend aid.

Prior to his time in the Obama administration, Hiteshew had spent 18 years at Bear Stearns. Before that, he worked at Drexel Burnham Lambert, the criminal junk bond firm headed by Michael Milken.

Many leading Wall Street banks, brokerage firms, and law firms have lucrative municipal finance businesses that would be undercut by a more direct and comprehensive MLF program.

Tankus added: “The Fed has two bazookas. One of them is a municipal bazooka and the other is a corporate credit bazooka. They have the municipal bazooka setting on low and the corporate bazooka setting on high.”

While you may agree with the a Felon running the Fed, I don’t.
Trumps man at the Fed. Go ahead and blame the Dems , it only makes you look stupid.
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simp... (show quote)


you will have to ask your bimbocratic representative and senator most of your questions . why the government gives corporations a better interest than a state . although i am not sure that they do .
well why put such questions here ?
you seem to ramble on an on about government loans .
well if this kent person was a obumerr person . then why not blame sh-t for br--ns for having him there to protect his buddies .
actually you are the one that sounds STUPID .
are you just jealous that you can't get the interest that the big boys are getting ?
i don't like it that big corporations get to borrow money for next to nothing . with all of the profits they make . why not make them spend their money on improvements ?
but still your in the wrong arena for such questions .

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 00:12:53   #
jeff smith
 
Lonewolf wrote:
You suport a man who has already destroyed America and Putin is proud of him.


sorry pee brain . how has this President destroyed the country ?
why you still pissed off at his winning the e******n ?
why you think that he is putins puppet ?
are you a bot ? you can't be a real live person .
the garbage you put on here is just to STUPID to be real .

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 00:16:45   #
jeff smith
 
bilordinary wrote:
The squirming is proportional to the pressure that is being felt.
I'm learning how to avoid g****r pronouns!


why? you one of those things that think your an animal?

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 00:18:13   #
Sicilianthing
 
Crayons wrote:
Well if thing's are as bad as You say...why did I have to expand and pour another 8k feet of concrete?


>>>

Idk and don’t care

Reply
 
 
Oct 20, 2020 00:34:22   #
jeff smith
 
Lonewolf wrote:
were out of work soon out of money covd rates are rising business going under Americans are no longer able to travel .


and you blame President Trump , for all of this ? yep in some areas the China v***s is rising . people do things that are reckless . but that's Trumps fault ? he has listened to the scientist and Dr's. when they were trying to figure this v***s out . mask , no mask , mask , no mask . he did as he thought proper with the advise he was given . he cut travel from China , and what did fancy prancy nancy do ? come on down to China town . everything is fine and the food is excellent . and the bimbocrat in n.y. go about your daily business everything is under control . and that buttheaded governor , sending every elderly person with the v***s back to nursing homes . then sleepy dopey bought and paid for c****e joe , it's xenophobic . yep them bimbocrats really know how to do things right don't they ?
i travel all over the country . but i don't live in a bimbocratic controlled state . where they seem to be doing everything they can to destroy their economy . do they really think it is going to hurt the President ? your bimbocrat polititions are as stupid as some of their followers seem to be . with the crap yall post on here .

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 00:39:02   #
Crayons Loc: St Jo, Texas
 
Sicilianthing wrote:
>>>

Idk and don’t care


If you don't care about yer own ass 'sunshine', No one else is gonna help ya

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 01:01:59   #
Sicilianthing
 
Crayons wrote:
If you don't care about yer own ass 'sunshine', No one else is gonna help ya


>>>

I don’t care

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 10:04:40   #
TexaCan Loc: Homeward Bound!
 
Milosia wrote:
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simple question from regulators: Why are profitable corporations being offered money from the central bank at a far cheaper interest rate than local communities? In one instance, Chevron was able to borrow money at half the rate as Wisconsin — meaning the oil giant was effectively getting a government subsidy, while state taxpayers were being offered a predatory rate. Why?

Fed officials had few answers, and still haven’t addressed the iniquity. The result is a perverse dynamic: Cheap Fed cash is boosting corporate profits, stock prices, shareholder dividends and executive pay, all while budget-strapped states and cities are being forced to choose between high-interest loans or mass layoffs of teachers, firefighters, emergency workers and other public-sector employees during a deadly p******c.

It doesn’t have to be this way, according to a coalition of lawmakers and grassroots groups that have launched a campaign for reform. Their demands are straightforward: They want the Fed to use its authority to make long-term loan commitments to cities and states at zero percent interest — the rate that the Fed already lends to Wall Street banks. Proponents say that would allow municipalities to avoid mass layoffs and also save $160 billion in annual interest payments they pay Wall Street firms on their past debt.

“I represent a working class immigrant community, and the financial collapse hit us hard,” said Democratic Rep. Chuy Garcia of Chicago. “We talk about the financial crisis, but we don’t talk enough about the austerity that came after the great recession. Austerity was a choice. State and local governments need to get the financing they need,” said Garcia, urging the Fed to take action.

$160 billion is no small amount: A new report from the Action Center on Race and the Economy shows how that’s enough to “help 13 million families avoid eviction by covering their annual rent” or enough to “provide all 31.5 million unemployed workers $600 a week in P******c Unemployment Assistance for eight weeks.”

Arbitrary Rates Help Corporations & Crush Local Communities

Under existing law, the Fed has wide latitude to adjust interest rates on loans to corporations and local governments — which means it is making the choice to give powerful politically connected companies vastly preferential lending terms, while holding states and cities hostage with usurious interest rates.

While the Fed has emerged as a key player in the C****-** crisis as a backstop for Wall Street and providing mass liquidity in the corporate bond market, the Fed has only purchased two bonds in its Municipal Liquidity Facility, lending just $1.6 billion of the $500 billion of lending capacity it has. Instead of lending at the rate that it lends to banks — with the interest rate currently at zero — the Municipal Liquidity Facility has offered loans of at least 1 percent for terms of 24-36 months.

Events over the last two months illustrate how arbitrary the rates are.

In August, after the Congressional Progressive Caucus criticized the Fed for failing to do enough to encourage cities and states to use the MLF, the Fed lowered the interest rate by 0.5%

Then, during the September 17 hearing of the Bailout Oversight Commission that oversees the Fed’s p******c lending programs, commissioner Bharat Ramamurti spotlighted a major discrepancy in lending rates between an oil giant and the state of Wisconsin.

"The Fed is using public money to purchase a bond from Chevron at a rate of 0.9% over more than 4.5 years,” Ramamurti said. A state like Wisconsin, with the exact same rating as Chevron has to pay 1.28 percent over 3 years.”

Ramamurti added that while the Fed purchased a Philip Morris bond at 0.75% interest, a state “ government like Kentucky, which has the exact same credit rating as Philip Morris, [must] pay an interest rate of more than 2% over 3 years.”

The arbitrariness of the Fed’s municipal interest rate became an issue in the potential layoffs of thousands of municipal workers in New York City. Union leader Henry Garrido said he had reached out to the Municipal Liquidity Facility to attempt to fend off the possible layoff of 22,000 of his members.

“The Fed was offering a 1.9 percent at 24 months — we could do twice better in the outside market,” said Garrido. “Then they called us again after intervention by leading Democrats and said ‘We’ll offer 36 months and lower to 1.6 percent.’ We can still do better on the regular market.”

On October 14, a broad group of organizations including the National League of Cities came out in favor of an expanded MLF program. The Bailout Oversight Commission’s September monthly report was delayed, Ramamurti has alleged, because of Republicans wanting to obscure the unanimity of support for an expanded MLF.

“The 50 basis point cut [in August] showed that there was no deeper logic behind the rates,” said Nathan Tankus, the research director of the Modern Money Network. “Why wasn’t it already set up with the lower rate? The fact that you can cut that price shows that it’s arbitrary.”

The Revolving Door

The Fed’s ability to respond to the scale of the c****av***s crisis could be limited by the revolving door between the Fed and Wall Street.

The Fed official in charge of the Municipal Liquidity Facility, Kent Hiteshew, was the first Director of the Treasury Department’s Office of State and Local Finance from 2014 to 2017 during the Obama administration.

As a result, he played a “key role” in the PROMESA Act, which bailed out Wall Street bondholders of Puerto Rican debt, and entrenched brutal austerity measures in Puerto Rico under the rule of a Financial Control Board. The present in Puerto Rico, with massive cuts to government services, could be the future across the country if the MLF is not expanded and Congress does not extend aid.

Prior to his time in the Obama administration, Hiteshew had spent 18 years at Bear Stearns. Before that, he worked at Drexel Burnham Lambert, the criminal junk bond firm headed by Michael Milken.

Many leading Wall Street banks, brokerage firms, and law firms have lucrative municipal finance businesses that would be undercut by a more direct and comprehensive MLF program.

Tankus added: “The Fed has two bazookas. One of them is a municipal bazooka and the other is a corporate credit bazooka. They have the municipal bazooka setting on low and the corporate bazooka setting on high.”
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simp... (show quote)


Too embarrassed to admit to another Yahoo news article! 😂

Reply
 
 
Oct 20, 2020 10:07:33   #
TexaCan Loc: Homeward Bound!
 
Milosia wrote:
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simple question from regulators: Why are profitable corporations being offered money from the central bank at a far cheaper interest rate than local communities? In one instance, Chevron was able to borrow money at half the rate as Wisconsin — meaning the oil giant was effectively getting a government subsidy, while state taxpayers were being offered a predatory rate. Why?

Fed officials had few answers, and still haven’t addressed the iniquity. The result is a perverse dynamic: Cheap Fed cash is boosting corporate profits, stock prices, shareholder dividends and executive pay, all while budget-strapped states and cities are being forced to choose between high-interest loans or mass layoffs of teachers, firefighters, emergency workers and other public-sector employees during a deadly p******c.

It doesn’t have to be this way, according to a coalition of lawmakers and grassroots groups that have launched a campaign for reform. Their demands are straightforward: They want the Fed to use its authority to make long-term loan commitments to cities and states at zero percent interest — the rate that the Fed already lends to Wall Street banks. Proponents say that would allow municipalities to avoid mass layoffs and also save $160 billion in annual interest payments they pay Wall Street firms on their past debt.

“I represent a working class immigrant community, and the financial collapse hit us hard,” said Democratic Rep. Chuy Garcia of Chicago. “We talk about the financial crisis, but we don’t talk enough about the austerity that came after the great recession. Austerity was a choice. State and local governments need to get the financing they need,” said Garcia, urging the Fed to take action.

$160 billion is no small amount: A new report from the Action Center on Race and the Economy shows how that’s enough to “help 13 million families avoid eviction by covering their annual rent” or enough to “provide all 31.5 million unemployed workers $600 a week in P******c Unemployment Assistance for eight weeks.”

Arbitrary Rates Help Corporations & Crush Local Communities

Under existing law, the Fed has wide latitude to adjust interest rates on loans to corporations and local governments — which means it is making the choice to give powerful politically connected companies vastly preferential lending terms, while holding states and cities hostage with usurious interest rates.

While the Fed has emerged as a key player in the C****-** crisis as a backstop for Wall Street and providing mass liquidity in the corporate bond market, the Fed has only purchased two bonds in its Municipal Liquidity Facility, lending just $1.6 billion of the $500 billion of lending capacity it has. Instead of lending at the rate that it lends to banks — with the interest rate currently at zero — the Municipal Liquidity Facility has offered loans of at least 1 percent for terms of 24-36 months.

Events over the last two months illustrate how arbitrary the rates are.

In August, after the Congressional Progressive Caucus criticized the Fed for failing to do enough to encourage cities and states to use the MLF, the Fed lowered the interest rate by 0.5%

Then, during the September 17 hearing of the Bailout Oversight Commission that oversees the Fed’s p******c lending programs, commissioner Bharat Ramamurti spotlighted a major discrepancy in lending rates between an oil giant and the state of Wisconsin.

"The Fed is using public money to purchase a bond from Chevron at a rate of 0.9% over more than 4.5 years,” Ramamurti said. A state like Wisconsin, with the exact same rating as Chevron has to pay 1.28 percent over 3 years.”

Ramamurti added that while the Fed purchased a Philip Morris bond at 0.75% interest, a state “ government like Kentucky, which has the exact same credit rating as Philip Morris, [must] pay an interest rate of more than 2% over 3 years.”

The arbitrariness of the Fed’s municipal interest rate became an issue in the potential layoffs of thousands of municipal workers in New York City. Union leader Henry Garrido said he had reached out to the Municipal Liquidity Facility to attempt to fend off the possible layoff of 22,000 of his members.

“The Fed was offering a 1.9 percent at 24 months — we could do twice better in the outside market,” said Garrido. “Then they called us again after intervention by leading Democrats and said ‘We’ll offer 36 months and lower to 1.6 percent.’ We can still do better on the regular market.”

On October 14, a broad group of organizations including the National League of Cities came out in favor of an expanded MLF program. The Bailout Oversight Commission’s September monthly report was delayed, Ramamurti has alleged, because of Republicans wanting to obscure the unanimity of support for an expanded MLF.

“The 50 basis point cut [in August] showed that there was no deeper logic behind the rates,” said Nathan Tankus, the research director of the Modern Money Network. “Why wasn’t it already set up with the lower rate? The fact that you can cut that price shows that it’s arbitrary.”

The Revolving Door

The Fed’s ability to respond to the scale of the c****av***s crisis could be limited by the revolving door between the Fed and Wall Street.

The Fed official in charge of the Municipal Liquidity Facility, Kent Hiteshew, was the first Director of the Treasury Department’s Office of State and Local Finance from 2014 to 2017 during the Obama administration.

As a result, he played a “key role” in the PROMESA Act, which bailed out Wall Street bondholders of Puerto Rican debt, and entrenched brutal austerity measures in Puerto Rico under the rule of a Financial Control Board. The present in Puerto Rico, with massive cuts to government services, could be the future across the country if the MLF is not expanded and Congress does not extend aid.

Prior to his time in the Obama administration, Hiteshew had spent 18 years at Bear Stearns. Before that, he worked at Drexel Burnham Lambert, the criminal junk bond firm headed by Michael Milken.

Many leading Wall Street banks, brokerage firms, and law firms have lucrative municipal finance businesses that would be undercut by a more direct and comprehensive MLF program.

Tankus added: “The Fed has two bazookas. One of them is a municipal bazooka and the other is a corporate credit bazooka. They have the municipal bazooka setting on low and the corporate bazooka setting on high.”

While you may agree with the a Felon running the Fed, I don’t.
Trumps man at the Fed. Go ahead and blame the Dems , it only makes you look stupid.
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simp... (show quote)


Yahoo news anyone? 😉

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 10:10:42   #
TexaCan Loc: Homeward Bound!
 
Milosia wrote:
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simple question from regulators: Why are profitable corporations being offered money from the central bank at a far cheaper interest rate than local communities? In one instance, Chevron was able to borrow money at half the rate as Wisconsin — meaning the oil giant was effectively getting a government subsidy, while state taxpayers were being offered a predatory rate. Why?

Fed officials had few answers, and still haven’t addressed the iniquity. The result is a perverse dynamic: Cheap Fed cash is boosting corporate profits, stock prices, shareholder dividends and executive pay, all while budget-strapped states and cities are being forced to choose between high-interest loans or mass layoffs of teachers, firefighters, emergency workers and other public-sector employees during a deadly p******c.

It doesn’t have to be this way, according to a coalition of lawmakers and grassroots groups that have launched a campaign for reform. Their demands are straightforward: They want the Fed to use its authority to make long-term loan commitments to cities and states at zero percent interest — the rate that the Fed already lends to Wall Street banks. Proponents say that would allow municipalities to avoid mass layoffs and also save $160 billion in annual interest payments they pay Wall Street firms on their past debt.

“I represent a working class immigrant community, and the financial collapse hit us hard,” said Democratic Rep. Chuy Garcia of Chicago. “We talk about the financial crisis, but we don’t talk enough about the austerity that came after the great recession. Austerity was a choice. State and local governments need to get the financing they need,” said Garcia, urging the Fed to take action.

$160 billion is no small amount: A new report from the Action Center on Race and the Economy shows how that’s enough to “help 13 million families avoid eviction by covering their annual rent” or enough to “provide all 31.5 million unemployed workers $600 a week in P******c Unemployment Assistance for eight weeks.”

Arbitrary Rates Help Corporations & Crush Local Communities

Under existing law, the Fed has wide latitude to adjust interest rates on loans to corporations and local governments — which means it is making the choice to give powerful politically connected companies vastly preferential lending terms, while holding states and cities hostage with usurious interest rates.

While the Fed has emerged as a key player in the C****-** crisis as a backstop for Wall Street and providing mass liquidity in the corporate bond market, the Fed has only purchased two bonds in its Municipal Liquidity Facility, lending just $1.6 billion of the $500 billion of lending capacity it has. Instead of lending at the rate that it lends to banks — with the interest rate currently at zero — the Municipal Liquidity Facility has offered loans of at least 1 percent for terms of 24-36 months.

Events over the last two months illustrate how arbitrary the rates are.

In August, after the Congressional Progressive Caucus criticized the Fed for failing to do enough to encourage cities and states to use the MLF, the Fed lowered the interest rate by 0.5%

Then, during the September 17 hearing of the Bailout Oversight Commission that oversees the Fed’s p******c lending programs, commissioner Bharat Ramamurti spotlighted a major discrepancy in lending rates between an oil giant and the state of Wisconsin.

"The Fed is using public money to purchase a bond from Chevron at a rate of 0.9% over more than 4.5 years,” Ramamurti said. A state like Wisconsin, with the exact same rating as Chevron has to pay 1.28 percent over 3 years.”

Ramamurti added that while the Fed purchased a Philip Morris bond at 0.75% interest, a state “ government like Kentucky, which has the exact same credit rating as Philip Morris, [must] pay an interest rate of more than 2% over 3 years.”

The arbitrariness of the Fed’s municipal interest rate became an issue in the potential layoffs of thousands of municipal workers in New York City. Union leader Henry Garrido said he had reached out to the Municipal Liquidity Facility to attempt to fend off the possible layoff of 22,000 of his members.

“The Fed was offering a 1.9 percent at 24 months — we could do twice better in the outside market,” said Garrido. “Then they called us again after intervention by leading Democrats and said ‘We’ll offer 36 months and lower to 1.6 percent.’ We can still do better on the regular market.”

On October 14, a broad group of organizations including the National League of Cities came out in favor of an expanded MLF program. The Bailout Oversight Commission’s September monthly report was delayed, Ramamurti has alleged, because of Republicans wanting to obscure the unanimity of support for an expanded MLF.

“The 50 basis point cut [in August] showed that there was no deeper logic behind the rates,” said Nathan Tankus, the research director of the Modern Money Network. “Why wasn’t it already set up with the lower rate? The fact that you can cut that price shows that it’s arbitrary.”

The Revolving Door

The Fed’s ability to respond to the scale of the c****av***s crisis could be limited by the revolving door between the Fed and Wall Street.

The Fed official in charge of the Municipal Liquidity Facility, Kent Hiteshew, was the first Director of the Treasury Department’s Office of State and Local Finance from 2014 to 2017 during the Obama administration.

As a result, he played a “key role” in the PROMESA Act, which bailed out Wall Street bondholders of Puerto Rican debt, and entrenched brutal austerity measures in Puerto Rico under the rule of a Financial Control Board. The present in Puerto Rico, with massive cuts to government services, could be the future across the country if the MLF is not expanded and Congress does not extend aid.

Prior to his time in the Obama administration, Hiteshew had spent 18 years at Bear Stearns. Before that, he worked at Drexel Burnham Lambert, the criminal junk bond firm headed by Michael Milken.

Many leading Wall Street banks, brokerage firms, and law firms have lucrative municipal finance businesses that would be undercut by a more direct and comprehensive MLF program.

Tankus added: “The Fed has two bazookas. One of them is a municipal bazooka and the other is a corporate credit bazooka. They have the municipal bazooka setting on low and the corporate bazooka setting on high.”
In mid-September, the Federal Reserve faced a simp... (show quote)


Couldn’t you find a different Yahoo news story? Using the same one 3 times is a bit lazy, don’t ya think!😎

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 12:20:54   #
Kickaha Loc: Nebraska
 
TexaCan wrote:
Couldn’t you find a different Yahoo news story? Using the same one 3 times is a bit lazy, don’t ya think!😎


They can't understand that Trump has no power over the Federal Reserve. It is not part of the Treasury Department nor any other part of the federal government, it is a private company. We should not be ceding any governmental power over our nation's finances to a private company. Just because 'Federal' is in the name doesn't make it part of the government.

Reply
Oct 20, 2020 18:51:38   #
bilordinary Loc: SW Washington
 
TexaCan wrote:
Couldn’t you find a different Yahoo news story? Using the same one 3 times is a bit lazy, don’t ya think!😎


Yes but Yahoo is far and unbalanced.

Reply
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