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Quantitative Easing: How the Fed Prints Money

πŸ–¨οΈ What Is QE?

Digital Money Creation

Fed types numbers into computer

Core Process

Buy Government Bonds

Treasury bonds, mortgage-backed securities

Banks Get Cash

Reserves appear in bank accounts

Interest Rates Fall

More bond buying = higher prices = lower yields

πŸ“Š QE Timeline

QE2 (2010-2011)

$600 billion

QE3 (2012-2014)

$1.6 trillion

Unlimited

🎯 Who Benefits?

Stock Market

Rises with QE

Asset Owners

Stocks, real estate up 50%+

Savers Lose

Cash loses purchasing power

How Quantitative Easing Actually Works

Step-by-Step Process

  1. Fed decides to do QE

    • Usually during crisis or recession
    • Announces target amount (e.g., β€œ$80 billion per month”)
  2. Fed creates digital dollars

    • Literally types numbers into computer
    • No printing press needed
    • Creates bank reserves out of thin air
  3. Fed buys bonds from banks

    • Treasury bonds (government debt)
    • Mortgage-backed securities (MBS)
    • Pays banks with newly created money
  4. Banks now have cash reserves

    • Can lend to businesses and individuals
    • Can buy assets (stocks, bonds, real estate)
    • Required to hold less in reserves (since 2020: 0%)
  5. Money spreads through system

    • Interest rates fall (more demand for bonds)
    • Asset prices rise (more money chasing same assets)
    • Eventually consumer inflation (money reaches real economy)

The Key Insight

QE increases the money supply (M in MV=PQ) without increasing production (Q).

Result: Asset inflation first, consumer inflation later.

Historical QE Programs

ProgramDatesAmountReasonResult
QE1Nov 2008 - Mar 2010$1.7TFinancial crisis, bank failuresPrevented depression, stock recovery
QE2Nov 2010 - Jun 2011$600BWeak economy, low inflationStock rally, dollar fell
QE3Sep 2012 - Oct 2014$1.6T”Unlimited” QE until employment improvedStock market tripled from 2009
COVID QEMar 2020 - Mar 2022$4.8TPandemic, economic shutdownStocks +100%, housing +40%, then inflation

Total QE (2008-2022): ~$9 trillion

For context: This is more money than existed in the entire US economy in 1980.

COVID QE: The Biggest Money Printing Ever

The Numbers

DateFed Balance SheetMonthly PurchasesWhat Happened
Feb 2020$4.2T$0Before COVID
Mar 2020$4.7T+$500BEmergency QE starts
Apr 2020$6.6T+$1.9TUnlimited QE announced
Peak (Apr 2022)$9.0T$120B/monthMassive ongoing printing
Today (2024)$7.5T-$60B/monthQT (shrinking)

In 8 weeks (March-April 2020), the Fed printed more money than in 100 years of its existence.

The Predictable Outcome

TimelineAsset ClassPerformanceWho Won
Mar-Dec 2020Stocks (S&P 500)+68% from bottomAsset owners
2020-2021Housing+40%Homeowners, investors
2020-2021Bitcoin+1000% (10k→10k → 69k)Crypto holders
2021-2022Consumer goods+20% inflationNobody (everyone loses)
LifetimeCash savings-20% purchasing powerSavers destroyed

Pattern: Assets rise immediately, consumer prices rise 12-18 months later.

Why QE Creates Inflation

Via MV = PQ:

Before QE:
M = $4T, V = 1.5, Q = $20T
MV = $6T = PQ
P = 1 (baseline prices)

After QE (+$5T):
M = $9T, V = 1.2 (falls initially, people scared)
MV = $10.8T
If Q stays at $20T, then P = 1.54

Result: 54% inflation eventually

In practice:

  1. QE happens (M increases)
  2. Velocity falls initially (V drops - people save, don’t spend)
  3. Asset prices rise first (money flows to stocks/housing)
  4. Velocity recovers (economy reopens, people spend)
  5. Consumer inflation hits (18-24 months after QE starts)

QE vs QT (Quantitative Tightening)

Quantitative Easing (QE)

  • Fed buys bonds β†’ Creates money
  • Balance sheet grows β†’ M2 increases
  • Interest rates fall β†’ Borrowing is cheap
  • Assets rise β†’ Stocks, housing boom
  • Bullish for markets βœ…

Quantitative Tightening (QT)

  • Fed sells bonds β†’ Destroys money
  • Balance sheet shrinks β†’ M2 decreases
  • Interest rates rise β†’ Borrowing expensive
  • Assets fall β†’ Stocks, housing decline
  • Bearish for markets ❌

Current status (2024): Fed doing QT (shrinking balance sheet by $60B/month)

The Fed Balance Sheet: Your Leading Indicator

Fed Balance Sheet = Total assets Fed owns = Money created through QE

How to Read It

Fed Balance SheetWhat It MeansMarket Implication
Growing (QE)Fed printing moneyBuy stocks, real estate, risk assets
FlatNeutral, waitingHold positions, watch closely
Shrinking (QT)Fed destroying moneyReduce risk, raise cash, defensive
Accelerating growthPanic mode QEMaximum risk-on, huge bull market
Accelerating shrinkageAggressive tighteningSell everything, recession incoming

Track it here: https://www.federalreserve.gov/monetarypolicy/bst_recenttrends.htmΒ 

Historical Correlation

Fed Balance Sheet vs S&P 500: 0.92 correlation

When Fed balance sheet goes up β†’ Stocks go up (with 3-6 month lag)
When Fed balance sheet goes down β†’ Stocks go down (with 3-6 month lag)

This isn’t a coincidence. It’s cause and effect.

How To Invest During QE

When QE Is Announced

Asset ClassExpected ReturnWhyRisk Level
Stocks+20-50%Liquidity flood, lower ratesMedium
Real Estate+10-30%Low mortgage rates, asset inflationMedium-High
Bitcoin/Crypto+100-500%Fixed supply vs infinite dollarsVery High
Gold+20-40%Inflation hedge, currency debasementLow-Medium
Cash/Bonds-10-20% realInflation eats purchasing powerGuaranteed loss

The QE Playbook

Phase 1: QE Announcement (Day 1-30)

  • Buy growth stocks (tech, high beta)
  • Buy Bitcoin/crypto (inflation hedge)
  • Sell bonds (yields will fall, but real returns negative)

Phase 2: QE Ongoing (Months 1-12)

  • Ride the bull market (stay long stocks)
  • Add real estate exposure (REITs, physical property)
  • Dollar-cost average into crypto
  • Don’t hold cash (losing 10-20%/year real)

Phase 3: QE Ending Warning Signs (Months 12-24)

  • Watch for β€œtaper tantrum” (Fed hints at slowing)
  • Take profits on most speculative positions
  • Rotate to defensive stocks (utilities, consumer staples)
  • Build cash position (for eventual QT buying opportunity)

Phase 4: QT Begins

  • Sell growth stocks (first to fall)
  • Raise cash to 30-50% of portfolio
  • Short-term Treasuries (safe, positive real yield)
  • Wait for bottom to buy aggressively

Common Misconceptions

❌ β€œQE is printing physical money”

Wrong: QE is digital. Fed creates bank reserves electronically.
Right: No physical bills printed. Just database entries.

❌ β€œQE doesn’t cause inflation”

Wrong: Look at asset prices (stocks +100%, housing +40%)
Right: QE causes inflation, but assets inflate first, consumer goods later.

❌ β€œQE helps the economy”

Wrong: QE helps asset owners, not workers.
Right: Creates wealth inequality (Cantillon Effect). Rich get richer.

❌ β€œFed can do QE forever”

Wrong: Eventually causes hyperinflation or currency collapse.
Right: Short-term boosts, long-term destruction of purchasing power.

❌ β€œQE is β€˜stimulus’”

Wrong: Stimulus would put money in people’s pockets directly.
Right: QE gives money to banks and asset owners first.

The Uncomfortable Truth

QE is the biggest wealth transfer in history.

  • From: Savers, workers, fixed-income retirees, the poor
  • To: Banks, asset owners, stock holders, the wealthy

How it works:

  1. Fed prints money β†’ Banks get it first
  2. Banks buy assets β†’ Stocks, real estate prices rise
  3. Wealthy own most assets β†’ Their portfolios soar
  4. Eventually inflation β†’ Workers’ wages lag, purchasing power falls
  5. Savers destroyed β†’ Cash loses 10-20% real value per year

Result: Wealth inequality explodes during QE periods.

Data:

  • During QE era (2008-2022): Top 1% wealth increased by $20 trillion
  • Bottom 50% wealth increased by $3 trillion
  • Most of bottom 50% increase was home equity (already owned homes)

Next Steps

Live Data Sources:

Recommended Reading:

  • β€œThe Price of Tomorrow” by Jeff Booth
  • β€œLayered Money” by Nik Bhatia
  • β€œThe Bitcoin Standard” by Saifedean Ammous

Bottom Line: QE = Money printing = Asset inflation = Buy assets, don’t hold cash. The Fed will always print in a crisis. Position accordingly.