Deflation By Any Other Name Would Smell As Foul

Over the weekend, the BIS came with a curious number on the losses, as quoted by Reuters: The BIS said in its annual report that a rise in bond yields of 3 percentage points across the maturity spectrum would inflict losses on U. S. bond investors – excluding the Federal Reserve – of more than $1 trillion, or 8% of U. S. gross domestic product. Markets have simply been undead for the past 5 years – or so -, as long as central banks have issued stimulus. Moreover, in the $82 trillion or so global bond markets, a $1 trillion loss looks very low in comparison, certainly when you see the BIS claim that France, Italy, Japan and Britain can see their bonds lose a third of their value. Today's stimulus is self-defeating simply because it is unleashed in a toxic financial environment, ridden with hidden debt. [.. ] … it can only function when debts are properly restructured, defaulted upon, their holders bankrupted where applicable. Signs of concern about high-flying assets like emerging markets can be seen in the options market, where more than 1. 35 million contracts in the iShares MSCI Emerging Markets exchange-traded fund traded on Thursday – 82% of which were put options, generally used to protect against losses.
Deflation By Any Other Name Would Smell As Foul (via Market Shadows)

Courtesy of The Automatic Earth Russell Lee Family Car February 1939 "White migrant and wife repairing clutch in their car near Harlingen, Texas" Over the past two weeks or so, we've been seeing a very clear portrait of how sick our economies are. Not…

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