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<blockquote data-quote="TechnicalPossum" data-source="post: 169972" data-attributes="member: 1648"><p>QE never should have been started and the economy should have been allowed to recover on its own. This would have caused a slower, but more sustainable recovery. </p><p></p><p>In a shorter term, QE money should have been eased out starting in January and the interest rate bumped mid-spring. This likely would have caused a market correction, but it would be a correction with a discernible cause. Now we have a market correction with no change in US monetary policy driving the the correction, a market flooded with overvalued currency, and near zero interest rates. This means that more QE would have diminishing returns and a cut to the interest rate is not possible to stimulate the economy if this turns into a recession the at feds feel compelled to screw around with and not just a market correction.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="TechnicalPossum, post: 169972, member: 1648"] QE never should have been started and the economy should have been allowed to recover on its own. This would have caused a slower, but more sustainable recovery. In a shorter term, QE money should have been eased out starting in January and the interest rate bumped mid-spring. This likely would have caused a market correction, but it would be a correction with a discernible cause. Now we have a market correction with no change in US monetary policy driving the the correction, a market flooded with overvalued currency, and near zero interest rates. This means that more QE would have diminishing returns and a cut to the interest rate is not possible to stimulate the economy if this turns into a recession the at feds feel compelled to screw around with and not just a market correction. [/QUOTE]
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