There is only one source. The money came from the US Federal Reserve, and the purchase was laundered through Belgium in order to hide the fact that actual Federal Reserve bond purchases during November 2013 through January 2014 were $112 billion per month.
In other words, during those 3 months there was a sharp rise in bond purchases by the Fed. The Fed’s actual bond purchases for those three months are $27 billion per month above the original $85 billion monthly purchase and $47 billion above the official $65 billion monthly purchase at that time. (In March 2014, official QE was tapered to $55 billion per month and to $45 billion for May.)
Why did the Federal Reserve have to purchase so many bonds above the announced amounts and why did the Fed have to launder and hide the purchase?
Some country or countries, unknown at this time, for reasons we do not know dumped $104 billion in Treasuries in one week.
Another curious aspect of the sale and purchase laundered through Belgium is that the sale was not executed and cleared via the Fed’s own National Book-Entry System (NBES), which was designed to facilitate the sale and ownership transfer of securities for Fed custodial customers. Instead, The foreign owner(s) of the Treasuries removed them from the Federal Reserve’s custodial holdings and sold them through the Euroclear securities clearing system, which is based in Brussels, Belgium.
We
do not know why or who. We know that there was a withdrawal, a sale, a
drop in the Federal Reserve’s “Securities held in Custody for Foreign
Official and International Accounts,” an inexplicable rise in Belgium’s
holdings, and then the bonds reappear in the Federal Reserve’s custodial
accounts.
What are the reasons for this deception by the Federal Reserve?
The
Fed realized that its policy of Quantitative Easing initiated in order
to support the balance sheets of “banks too big to fail” and to lower
the Treasury’s borrowing cost
was putting pressure on the US dollar’s value. Tapering was a way of
reassuring holders of dollars and dollar-denominated financial
instruments that the Fed was going to reduce and eventually end the
printing of new dollars with which to support financial markets.The
image of foreign governments bailing out of Treasuries could unsettle
the markets that the Fed was attempting to sooth by tapering.
A hundred billion dollar sale of US Treasuries is a big sale. If the seller was a big holder of Treasuries, the sale could signal the bond market that a big holder might be selling
Treasuries in large chunks. The Fed would want to keep the fact and
identity of such a seller secret in order to avoid a stampede out of
Treasuries. Such a stampede would raise interest rates, collapse US
financial markets, and raise the cost of financing the US debt. To avoid
the rise in interest rates, the Fed would have to accept the risk to
the dollar of purchasing all the bonds. This would be a no-win
situation for the Fed, because a large increase in QE would unsettle the
market for US dollars.
Washington’s
power ultimately rests on the dollar as world reserve currency. This
privilege, attained at Bretton Woods following World War 2, allows the
US to pay its bills by issuing debt. The world currency role also gives
the US the power to cut countries out of the international payments
system and to impose sanctions.
As
impelled as the Fed is to protect the large banks that sit on the board
of directors of the NY Fed, the Fed has to protect the dollar. That the
Fed believed that it could not buy the bonds outright but needed
to disguise its purchase by laundering it through Belgium suggests that
the Fed is concerned that the world is losing confidence in the dollar.
If
the world loses confidence in the dollar, the cost of living in the US
would rise sharply as the dollar drops in value. Economic hardship and
poverty would worsen. Political instability would rise.
If the dollar lost substantial
value, the dollar would lose its reserve currency status. Washington
would not be able to issue new debt or new dollars in order to pay its
bills.
Its wars and hundreds of overseas military bases could not be financed.
The
withdrawal from unsustainable empire would begin. The rest of the
world would see this as the silver lining in the collapse of the
international monetary system brought on by the hubris and arrogance of
Washington.
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