Gold, Dollar And Rates Say No QE

 | Aug 16, 2012 02:02AM ET

There is a consensus as of late that the Fed will launch another round of stimulative action in the form of a balance sheet expansion program (Quantitative Easing) by the next FOMC meeting in September. Of course, this was also the consensus before the June and August meetings - yet each disappointment only led to a stronger belief that the next meeting would be the one. Those expectations have kept stock markets afloat even in the face of weaker earnings, revenue and softening economics.

Note: For the purposes of this report we are excluding "Operation Twist" which was implemented by the Fed in September of 2011 as it was not specifically a balance sheet expansion program.

A Bit Of History

The US Federal Reserve held between $700 billion and $800 billion of Treasury notes on its balance sheet before the last recession. In late November 2008, the Fed started buying $600 billion in Mortgage-backed securities (MBS) to inject liquidity directly into the financial system in an attempt to thaw out a nearly frozen credit market. In March 2009, the Fed began to aggressively buy bank debt, MBS, and Treasury notes until balances reached a peak of $2.1 trillion in June 2010. This operation became known as Quantitative Easing or Q.E.

Purchases of additional securities were halted in the June of 2010 as the economy was showing some signs of nascent improvement. However, such hope was quickly dashed as the economy began to quickly slide back towards recession and the markets declined nearly 14%. The deterioration spurred the Fed into further action in August of 2010, as the Fed worried about the onset of deflation, making further puchases of $30 billion in 2–10 year Treasury notes a month. Then in November 2010, the Fed announced a second round of quantitative easing, or "QE2", buying $600 billion of Treasury securities through the end of the second quarter of 2011. The chart below shows the programs and their respective effects on the equity markets.