Section
Economy
4449 posts
Italy's €8-billion Loss! Draghi!
by ToTheTick.com The Financial Times has revealed that Italy is facing losses of €8 billion due to derivative…
Navigating Volatility: The Case for Tactical Alpha
In today's volatile markets, alternative investments are key for diversification, resilience, and returns, but they demand expertise to navigate. Ash Lawrence, Head of AGF Capital Partners and Scott Radke, CEO and Co-CIO of New Holland Capital discuss...
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.
Will Carney Light Fireworks at Bank of England?
by Darren Williams, AllianceBernstein On July 1, former Bank of Canada governor Mark Carney will replace Sir Mervyn…
Guest Post: Paul Krugman The Marxist
Submitted by James E. Miller via The Ludwig von Mises Institute of Canada, Someone once wrote that criticizing…
Five Reasons Why Now Is The Time To Buy Bonds
Submitted by Lance Roberts of Street Talk Live blog, The recent one month spike in interest rates, along…
The Economy and Bond Market Radar (June 24, 2013)
The Economy and Bond Market Radar (June 24, 2013) Treasury yields rose very sharply this week as Fed…
The Trouble with Tapering (Minerd)
The Trouble with Tapering Rising interest rates are beginning to put pressure on the recovery in the housing…
The Road to Higher Interest Rates (Jones)
June 17, 2013 by Kathy A. Jones, Vice President, Fixed Income Strategist, Schwab Center for Financial Research Key…
Key ETF Performance and Fed Day Doldrums (Bespoke)
by Bespoke Investment Group Fed days have historically been good days for the market, but the last two…
"Hey Mr. Market, That QE Monkey On Your Back Has You By The Throat"
Submitted by Charles Hugh-Smith of OfTwoMinds blog, Mr. Market has one little problem: the Fed monkey on his…
Managing Equity Risk: Some Rules for the Road
by Kurt Feuerman, AllianceBernstein Under the surface of May’s strong equity returns were major shifts in sector leadership,…
Tail-Risk Parity: The Quest for a Crash-Proof Portfolio
by Ashwin Alankar (pictured) and Michael DePalma, AllianceBernstein By any name—Black Swan, three-standard-deviation event or negative tail event—the…
Interest Rate Policy To Impact The Dollar And Commodity Related Industries
by David Templeton, Horan Capital Advisors All eyes have been on the Federal Reserve recently as talk of…
Changing Picture? (Sonders)
June 14, 2013 by Liz Ann Sonders, Senior Vice President, Chief Investment Strategist, Charles Schwab & Co., Inc.…
TIPS yield turns positive on 10-year note for first time since 2012
by Ben Eisen, The Tell Blog Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, or TIPS, passed the latest threshold in their dramatic…