Home » Posts tagged 'bond market crash'

Tag Archives: bond market crash

Olduvai
Click on image to purchase

Olduvai III: Catacylsm
Click on image to purchase

Post categories

Post Archives by Category

A historic global bond-market crash threatens liquidation of the world’s most crowded trades, says BofA

A historic global bond-market crash threatens liquidation of the world’s most crowded trades, says BofA

‘If the bond market does not function, then no other market functions, really,’ say Ben Emons of Medley Global Advisors 

A newspaper headline is shown after the Treaty of Versailles was signed in 1919. Global bonds are in one of their worst bear markets since the treaty went into effect in 1920, establishing the terms for peace at the end of World War I.

SOURCE: UNIVERSITY OF DENVER

Global government-bond markets are stuck in what BofA Securities analysts are calling one of the greatest bear markets ever and this is in turn threatening the ease with which investors will be able to exit from the world’s most-crowded trades, if needed.

Those trades include positions in the dollar, U.S. technology companies and private equity, said BofA strategists Michael Hartnett, Elyas Galou, and Myung-Jee Jung. Bonds are generally regarded as one of the most liquid asset classes available to investors. If liquidity dries up in that market, it’s bad news for just about every other form of investment, other analysts said.

Financial markets have yet to price in the worst-case outcomes for inflation, interest rates, and the economy around the world, despite tumbling global equities along with a selloff of bonds in the U.S. and the U.K. On Friday, the Dow industrials DJIA, -1.62% sank almost 500 points and flirted with a fall into bear-market territory, while the S&P 500 index SPX, -1.72% stopped short of ending the New York session below its June closing low.

U.S. bond yields are at or near multiyear highs. Meanwhile, government-bond yields in the U.K., Germany, and France have risen at the fastest clip since the 1990s, according to BofA Securities.

…click on the above link to read the rest of the article…

 

Today Is the Last Day of Trading on Wall Street Before Shemitah Ends… What Will Happen This Time?

Today Is the Last Day of Trading on Wall Street Before Shemitah Ends… What Will Happen This Time?

This isn’t meant to be another one of those scary September 2015 stories, but we can’t just completely ignore history either.

Today isn’t just the 14th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks. It also happens to be the last day of trading on Wall Street before this Shemitah cycle — a seven-year period on the Jewish calendar — ends on Sunday.

Why should that matter, you might ask?

Look at how the end of each Shemitah cycle has played out in the past (via The Times of India):

chemitah

See what I mean? Some immense financial disaster has occurred after each Shemitah has ended in recent history.

Not featured on that graphic are 1980 and 1973. In 1980, the Savings and Loan crisis was going on and the Fed raised interest rates (which they are currently discussing doing right now actually) and we ended up in a really deep recession. Ten days after Shemitah ended in 1973, the Yom Kippur War started which resulted in the 1973 oil crisis.

Think about it. It’s kind of like a totally manipulated, self-fulfilling prophecy, isn’t it?

So… What do you think will happen this time?

Investors Start To Panic As A Global Bond Market Crash Begins

Investors Start To Panic As A Global Bond Market Crash Begins

Panic Keyboard - Public DomainIs the financial collapse that so many are expecting in the second half of 2015 already starting?  Many have believed that we would see bonds crash before the stock market crashes, and that is precisely what is happening right now.  Since mid-April, the yield on 10 year German bonds has shot up from 0.05 percent to 0.89 percent.  But much of that jump has come this week.  Just a couple of days ago, the yield on 10 year German bonds was sitting at just 0.54 percent.  And it isn’t just Germany – bond yields are going crazy all over Europe.  So far, it is being estimated that global investors have lost more than half a trillion dollars, and there is much more room for these bonds to fall.  In the end, the overall losses could be well into the trillionseven before the stock market collapses.

I know that for most average Americans, talk about “bond yields” is rather boring.  But it is important to understand these things, because we could very well be looking at the beginning of the next great financial crisis.  The following is an excerpt from an article by Wolf Richter in which he details the unprecedented carnage that we have witnessed over the past few days…

On Tuesday, ahead of the ECB’s policy announcement today, German Bunds sagged, and the 10-year yield soared from 0.54% to 0.72%, drawing a squiggly diagonal line across the chart. In just one day, yield increased by one-third!

Makes you wonder to which well-connected hedge funds the ECB had once again leaked its policy statement and the all-important speech by ECB President Mario Draghi that the rest of us got see today.

…click on the above link to read the rest of the article…

Abenomics Creates “Potential For Economic Collapse Triggered By Bond Market Crash”, Warns Richard Koo | Zero Hedge

Abenomics Creates “Potential For Economic Collapse Triggered By Bond Market Crash”, Warns Richard Koo | Zero Hedge.

While Richard Koo is an employee of Nomura, or a bank which is among those who stand to benefit the most from the BOJ’s doomed Banzainomics experiment, he has less than kind words to say about this latest and greatest demonstration of sheer desperation by Japan’s Prime Minister, whose tenure may not be all that long – something which perhaps he is not very much against, as Abe is hardly looking forward to being named in the history books as the person who dealt Japan’s economic death blow.

To wit:

When evidence meets faith, it doesn’t stand a chance

When a year and a half of aggressive quantitative easing failed to produce a recovery in private demand for funds, the government should have realized that the answer to the economy’s problems was not in monetary policy and shifted its focus to the second and third arrows of Abenomics.

But the reflationists in academia and bureaucracy who are unable to accept thatmonetary policy is powerless in a balance sheet recession have basically said that if one pill doesn’t cure the patient, try two, and if two don’t work try four, 16, 256….

Most patients would start to question the doctor’s diagnosis before they agreed to swallow 256 pills. But such voices have been erased from Japan’s policy debate.

ECB President Mario Draghi quipped in a press conference on 6 November that “when evidence meets faith, it doesn’t stand a chance.” For those who believe monetary policy is always effective, no amount of evidence that there are times when monetary policy does not work will convince them otherwise.

…click on the above link to read the rest of the article…

Olduvai IV: Courage
Click on image to read excerpts

Olduvai II: Exodus
Click on image to purchase

Click on image to purchase @ FriesenPress