Showing posts with label 10-year bonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 10-year bonds. Show all posts
Monday, June 6, 2011
Markets down, gold up
Last week's bad news on the economic indicators continue to weigh down markets. Equities, commodities, the USDollar, and the Euro are all down. 10-year US Treasury bonds are up slightly in a "slow-growth economy" mini-rally, while gold is rallying higher. Precious metals are commodities, but they are also monetary metals. Take heed.
Labels:
10-year bonds,
commodities,
equities,
gold,
USDollar
Wednesday, January 5, 2011
Federal Reserve: Money-printing will continue at "full throttle"
http://www.thedailycrux.com/content/6607/Government_Stupidity/eml
That's an interesting take on rising interest rates--that the economy is recovering. I believe the bond markets are starting to fear inflation more than anything else. We shall see.
My belief is that hyperinflation is what we should guard against most, not deflation. Americans don't complain when their heating and grocery bills decline. Again, we shall see.
That's an interesting take on rising interest rates--that the economy is recovering. I believe the bond markets are starting to fear inflation more than anything else. We shall see.
My belief is that hyperinflation is what we should guard against most, not deflation. Americans don't complain when their heating and grocery bills decline. Again, we shall see.
Labels:
10-year bonds,
inflation,
interest rates,
quantitative easing
Wednesday, July 28, 2010
Bill Gross compares deficit spending to flushing money down the toilet
http://sfgate.bloomberg.com/SFChronicle/Story?docId=1376-L69P2S6NKMZJ01-1M2S7D340JHALJ6F809MPJREDH
Pacific Investment Management Co.’s Bill Gross said deficit spending by governments that seek to maintain artificial levels of consumption “can be compared to flushing money down an economic toilet.”
Without acceleration in population growth, developed countries finance more consumption to maintain economic growth, the world’s biggest bond-fund manager wrote in his August commentary today on Newport Beach, California-based Pimco’s website. Leveraged spending, he said, is not a substitute for demand created by people.
“I will go so far as to say that not only growth but capitalism itself may be in part dependent on a growing population,” Gross wrote. “Production depends upon people, not only in the actual process, but because of the final demand that justifies its existence.”
Deficit spending will be unsuccessful in what Pimco calls the “new normal” because deleveraging, re-regulation and de- globalization produces structural headwinds that lead to slower growth and lower-than-average investment returns, Gross said.
Pimco, a unit of Munich-based insurer Allianz SE, managed $1.07 trillion of assets as of March 31.
Monday, April 5, 2010
Interest rates rising
http://dollarcollapse.com/articles/now-start-watching-interest-rates/
As you can see, the US is dumping what used to be a year’s worth of debt onto the market in four days. And because so much existing debt has to be rolled over continuously, we’ll do the same every week for, apparently, the rest of our lives.
Labels:
10-year bonds,
bond yields,
debt,
interest rates
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