-
Recent Posts
Archives
Tags
401(k) Alan Greenspan Ben Bernanke Bond Market Budget Deficits China Chinese Yuan Consumer Price Index CPI Crude Oil Depression Economic Growth Economic Stimulus Euro Zone Federal Debt GDP Government Spending Green Shoots Harry Markowitz Hedge Funds Inflation Interest Rates Jobs Leverage Liquidity Modern Portfolio Theory Money Printing President Bush President Obama Quantitative Easing Real Estate REITs Reserve Currency Risk Risk Management Social Security Subprime TARP The FED TIPS Unacceptable Outcomes Uptick Rule US Dollar US Stock Market US TreasuryCategories
Meta
Tag Archives: Bond Market
Bonds: A Good Place Not to Invest Now
When the US stock market hit its initial 21st Century trauma phase in 2002, Merrill Lynch sought to boost its tanking retail business by blitzing television sets with a simple tag-line: “Buy bonds”, they said. Although at the time that campaign seemed to be more aimed at Merrill’s revenue than investment advice, it proved sound for both purposes. Through September 2010, the Barclays US Long Treasury Index had returned an annualized 8.2% for the past ten years. That figure trounced all popular US and world stock indexes (except emerging markets) by a significant margin. The more generalized Barclays US Aggregate … Continue reading
Posted in White Papers
Tagged Bond Market, Interest Rates, Quantitative Easing, The FED, US Dollar
Comments Off
An Upside Down Interest Market?
All eyes (should be) on US bonds in 2006 As 2005 came to a close, the bond-trading world was scratching its collective head about the current interest rate relationship-anomaly between long- and short-maturity investment paper. Where’s this bus going in 2006? As shown in the chart below, it is clear that: (a) the 10-year Treasury rate has been on a collision course with money market rates and (b) 30-year mortgage rates have (as usual) moved in lock-step with 10-year Treasuries. An upside-down interest market? This scenario is very unlikely to persist, because, if bondholders are not compensated for the very … Continue reading