Because the Fed pays interest on reserves, Quantitative Easing (QE) doesn't function like traditional money printing. Instead, it effectively swaps long-term government debt (like bonds) for short-term floating-rate debt (bank reserves), altering the maturity composition of government liabilities.

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The Fed's intervention in funding markets, while not officially labeled Quantitative Easing, directly helps the Treasury finance its debt, effectively monetizing it and providing critical liquidity to markets.

On paper, the Fed is shrinking its balance sheet to cool the economy (quantitative tightening). In reality, rate cuts and other channels are injecting liquidity into the financial system faster than it's being removed. This contradictory policy means that despite official tightening, actual liquidity conditions are already easing, fueling asset prices.

Despite official rhetoric, the Fed is creating money out of thin air to buy short-term government debt. Labeled "reserve management purchases," this is functionally quantitative easing, designed to keep the government's borrowing costs from exploding.

The Fed's T-bill purchases are a technical maneuver to manage bank reserves and avoid distortions in the bills market. Unlike Quantitative Easing (QE), the primary goal is not broad economic stimulus, but to ensure the smooth functioning of money markets, a critical distinction for interpreting Fed actions.

The plan to buy mortgage bonds is not a direct solution for homeowners but a form of money printing (QE). This move likely props up banks holding increasingly unattractive mortgages as housing prices are pushed down, effectively bailing out financial institutions rather than individuals.

The impending halt of the Fed's balance sheet reduction (QT) is not a reaction to a major economic crisis, but a technical necessity to prevent stress in short-term funding markets as bank reserves become scarce. The Fed is preemptively avoiding a 2019-style repo spike, signaling a quiet return to mild balance sheet expansion.

Contrary to the push for an "efficient" (smaller) Fed balance sheet, an abundance of reserves increases bank safety. Bank reserves are immediately accessible liquidity, unlike Treasuries which must be sold or repoed in a crisis. This inherent buffer can make the banking system more resilient.

The Fed's plan to reinvest maturing mortgage-backed securities (MBS) into Treasury bills is a stealth liquidity injection. The US Treasury can amplify this effect by shifting issuance from long-term bonds to short-term bills, which the Fed then absorbs. This is a backdoor way to manage rates without formal QE.

QE doesn't increase private sector purchasing power. It is an asset swap where the Fed buys Treasuries and provides cash-like deposits. This pushes investors into riskier assets like stocks and corporate debt, causing financial asset inflation, but not necessarily consumer price inflation.

Under "fiscal dominance," the U.S. government's massive debt dictates Federal Reserve policy. The Fed must keep rates low enough for the government to afford interest payments, even if it fuels inflation. Monetary policy is no longer about managing the economy but about preventing a debt-driven collapse, making the Fed reactive, not proactive.