#DOGE

24 02, 2025

Karen Petrou: How the White House Could Have Fun with the Fed

2025-02-24T09:11:47-05:00February 24th, 2025|The Vault|

President Trump has an awesome ability to keep even his closest allies perplexed by nonstop announcements that often break precedent, accepted norms, and even the law.  Just as opponents begin to rally against one initiative, the White House launches another, sending dissenters off in a different direction, leaving the actions they initially targeted unchanged or even forgotten. Still, several policy themes are coming through loud and clear through all these different actions that have far-reaching financial-market cumulative impact.  One is the sheer volatility all this chaos creates; another to which I turn here is the President’s sure and certain effort to make the Federal Reserve a tool of the executive branch, going beyond setting interest rates to turn it into America’s sovereign wealth fund.

As we noted, The President’s executive-order barrage includes one demanding a U.S. sovereign wealth fund (SWF).  The tricky bit here is not the lines that would quickly blur between public and private enterprise, an historic U.S. economic principle that won’t slow Mr. Trump down for a minute.  Instead, it’s where the money funding the SWF comes from given the lack of a nationalized commodities enterprise such as Norway’s and the Administration’s hell-bent campaign to reduce the federal deficit.  Solution?  The Fed.

U.S. law is seemingly an obstacle to deploying the Fed as an SWF since it allows the Fed to hold only direct obligations of the U.S. Treasury and its agencies as well as – a Fed sleight of hand in the 2008 crisis – Fannie …

10 02, 2025

Karen Petrou: Payment-System Politics and the Havoc It Wreaks

2025-02-10T09:16:53-05:00February 10th, 2025|The Vault|

Any bank that granted even just “read-only” access to its payment services with as few controls as the U.S. Treasury would and should be harshly sanctioned by its supervisors.  Who steps in to ensure the smooth functioning of the multi-trillion Treasury payment system?  Do any of Mr. Musk’s operatives know what would happen if they pulled the wrong plug and disabled critical payments on U.S. debt or to American citizens such as those for Social Security?  And, what if they don’t care if they disrupt payments if they believe this suits a political purpose?

When I wrote my memo last week hoping that these fears are alarmist, we didn’t know then what we know now about unlimited payment system access by a key DOGE warrior since named to head the Fiscal Service and the youth, inexperience, and dubious histories of the payment-system teams.  Do any of them know that payment-system finality is an essential element of payment-system credibility and financial-system stability or do they view the payment system as a video game with a prize for the team member who finds the target that rings the loudest political bell?  Do any of these Trump appointees know that making even a little mistake could be catastrophic in a system handling trillions of dollars in billions of transactions or are they looking for viral moments on encrypted social-media platforms so they become the envy of like-minded young men?

As FedFin noted last week, what Congress and the press took as a pledge …

3 02, 2025

Karen Petrou: Why Playing with Treasury’s Payment System is Playing with Fire

2025-02-03T09:04:54-05:00February 3rd, 2025|The Vault|

In just two weeks, Donald Trump has done something no one ever expected which he may not even intend:  overturning the axiomatic expectation that a full-faith-and-credit obligation of the United States government is the best there is.  Now, the U.S. will honor its commitments only if it still likes them.  Anything that upends financial-market axioms stokes systemic risk and stoking is now so heated that it threatens even the multi-trillion Treasury market on which U.S. prosperity and global financial stability depend.

Is this alarmist?  Yes, but then who would have thought the White House would issue an edict freezing all federal funding or maybe just some federal funding even though more than just some federal funding was frozen?  Who would have thought the U.S. would cease all but a very few foreign-aid payments including those with other sovereign governments no matter which geopolitical or humanitarian interests are sacrificed? Even if some of this was audible on the campaign trail, none of it was thinkable to anyone counting on constitutional checks and balances along with a sound sense by someone in the White House of second-order effects.

It is in this context that one more Trump Administration action is particularly worrisome and why I fear even for the once-sacrosanct promise that the U.S. will not just honor its commitments, but also pay its bills.  Elon Musk’s acolytes at DOGE have now been granted unfettered access to the Treasury payment system.  Why?

Maybe it’s just curiosity or maybe DOGE wants to update …

9 12, 2024

Karen Petrou: Do We Need the Financial Stability Oversight Council?

2024-12-09T09:17:27-05:00December 9th, 2024|The Vault|

On Friday, the Biden Administration’s FSOC proved yet again that it deserved Rohit Chopra’s dismissive description as a “book report club.”  As far as we can tell, all it has done for all of the last four years is issue some nice papers about digital assets and the payment system about which nothing was ever done and put forth dutiful annual reports along with two new systemic-designation standards with which it has since done absolutely nothing.  We’ll take our usual look at this year’s annual report, but it will be even less relevant than usual because FSOC is likely to do at least as little in Trump 2.0 as it did with its own recommendations during Trump 1.0.  Given this sorry record, should the Department of Government Efficiency eviscerate the Council?

Sure, why not if all FSOC plans to do is as meaningless as all is town over the past eight years.  Still, Congress wasn’t wrong when it created a Council designed to force communication across super-siloed regulators and to look hard at nonbanks outside their reach.  Indeed, as nonbanks increasingly dominate core intermediation and infrastructure functions, a forward-looking, effective FSOC would be a vital safeguard against market success derived principally from regulatory arbitrage.

Effective system-wide governance is not impossible.  Late last month, the Bank of England showed what can and should be done to address systemic risk.  Using the Bank’s authority to govern across the financial industry, it released a “System-Wide Exploratory Scenario” (SWES), essentially a financial-system wide stress …

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