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Management or Manipulation

The Tio Story

by , September 18, 2006Print

A TIO is an abbreviation for Term Investment Option, and is a way for the Treasury to make extra income.

From the treasury site here, the "Treasury will periodically auction excess operating funds to participants for a fixed term at a rate determined through a competitive bidding process." Another view of TIOs from the St. Louis Fed.

Now for some interesting quotes, with our comments, from a few Federal Reserve members over the last 17 years:

Oh...

Our favorite quote from a member of the Federal Reserve.

“Governments supplement private (counterparty) surveillance when they judge that market imperfections could lead to sub-optimal economic performance.”
-- Alan Greenspan, during a Sept. 2002 speech in London entitled "Regulation, Innovation, and Wealth Creation"
  1. "Private counterparty surveillance"? Is this "Fed-speak" for the PPT since the Fed is actually a private organization, or perhaps for the CRMPG? Even without the benefit of a tinfoil hat, the concept of private and controlling surveillance of the market is quite disturbing.
  2. An admission that governments interfere ("supplement") during periods of "sub-optimal" performance, from the Maestro. We wonder who defines what is sub-optimal, at the very least, and also note that September 2002 was also the approximate bottom in the U.S. stock markets.
  3. The first public TIO transaction from the U.S. Treasury was in April 2002.

The running TIO total pool and the S&P 500, since early 2006

Just simply notice the very high correlations between the dates a TIO transaction starts and ends with the up and down moves of the S&P 500. Also note that TIOs aren't the only tool in the Fed's toolbox.

Management or Manipulation: You decide

Securities lending, bonds & Fed intentions and hopes

Another little known tool of the Fed used in managing interest rates is Securities lending, and it can be helpful to see what the Fed wants to have happen on the shorter term with bonds and interest rates. It's also quite illustrative of the strong effect that the Fed has and can have on those markets. Notice how Securities Lending operations have always led changes in interest rates since 2000.

Currently, it appears to us that the Fed want rates to go back up some, probably due to the yield curve inversion.

Web site: http://www.nowandfutures.com

TIO daily chart: http://www.nowandfutures.com/daily.html
SecLend weekly chart: http://www.nowandfutures.com/fed_watch.html

© 2006 Bart
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Note: Excel Spreadsheet available upon request.

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Bart

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