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Poser's rank opinions means jack, they are just that, opinions. He offers
no reasons or fact to back them up. His views on this prove to me just how
little this man knows. If the Fed ACTIVELY rigs the currency market,
practically weekly in convert with Japan, and raises the money supply at
every sign of market weakness, how/why is it so unbelievable to you that
they do not have a team buying futures to spark buy programs with our tax
dollars ?
Not only is it likely, it is a surety. Especially given their total
reckless monetary policy, destructive trade deficit, and massive government
debt. They know damn well that they better rig the markets to support them.
I do believe that eventually, the market will prove bigger than they are,
one can only hope that their reckless policies will not go unpunished.
James Taylor
----- Original Message -----
From: Dennis Holverstott <dennis@xxxxxxxxxx>
To: <realtraders@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, April 19, 2000 7:24 AM
Subject: [RT] Re: Plunge Protection team [Fwd from Steve Poser]
> Dennis - From this email address, I cannot post to the list. Could you do
it
> for me? Thanks, Steve Poser
>
> The moron newspaper reporters out there than think there is a plunge
> protection team buying stocks or futures should be hung from the highest
> rafters. While there is no doubt that there is a team of people at the Fed
> and Treasury that monitor the markets, I'd say that the odds that they are
> actually in there buying futures is somewhat lower than the odds of John
> Rocker receiving a standing ovation at Shea Stadium on June 19th when he
> arrives there with the Braves.
>
> It is absolutely amazing that people believe this. Might the Treasury
(more
> likely than the Fed) call Goldman Sachs or Merrill Lynch and ask if there
is
> a place to buy? Maybe. But, even governments cannot turn markets around.
> Look at Hong Kong in 1997/1998. They bought all the way down to to 6000 or
> so. Remember the European currency crisis in the 1990s? All the central
> banks were trying to prop up the trading bands, and could not stop the
> markets from going where they were supposed to go (admittedly, FX is much
> larger than equities). If the market wants to tank, it will tank. If it
does
> not want to tank, it will not tank.
>
> To add to this, if we use 1/2 our brains and eliminate the totally
assinine
> idea that the government or the Fed is buying futures or stocks, then the
> idea that the brokerage or banking community could turn it is so stupid
that
> it does not even merit consideration.
>
> What can the Treasury do? Nothing quick. Change laws I guess and jawbone
the
> markets. The Fed can flood the banks with liquidity. That is what they did
> in 1987. I have not checked the data, but I doubt that is what happened (I
> guess we will find out tomorrow with the weekly M's though the conspiracy
> theorists will note that of course that data will be hidden -- I guess
that
> Fed has a Swiss bank account!). It would make little sense that the Fed is
> trying to push the market higher, since they are concerned about it being
> too high (though I suspect a stock market crash creates more imbalances
than
> minor inflation). They might desire to see less volatility, but they might
> not know how to do that anyway. They intervene in bonds and currencies in
> public and prescribed ways (actually Treasury does the currency trades
with
> the Fed acting as the agent). There is nothing public about this (of
course
> it is illegal and is not happening, which explains why it is not public,
> because it is not happening).
>
> The other part of the idea, that they are buying S&P futures is just too
> laughable. If futures get rich, there must be follow through buying in
> stocks, or the markets just fall back. Remember, when these programs of
> alleged futures purchases are going on, there are always, by definition,
> program trading curbs on, so the Street cannot even easily buy the cheap
> stocks to bring about proper parity. More likely then, we would see
futures
> fall back!
>
> Usually, conspiracy theories grow out because they are neat little
> explanations that cannot be explained easily otherwise. They assume
markets
> are rational. They are not. This theory falls completely apart, even if
you
> are willing to ridiculously assume that the Fed or the Treasury are
> illegally buying stocks or futures. It just takes a minor amount of
thought,
> something that the idiots in the press hope you never bother with, to blow
> this stupidity apart. It is harder to explain the conspiracy theory than
it
> is to explain it away!
>
> Steven Poser
>
>
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