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Ex-Goldman Chairman John Whitehead worries that "tomorrow is the day Moody's and S&P will announce a downgrade of U.S. government bonds."Ha. Then again the flight to USD is still well established so the old world order of capitalism still plays out. Time will tell.
'Remember former Goldman Chairman John Whitehead? He "sees" a tragic ending: This Reagan Deputy Secretary of State and former New York Fed chairman "sees" America burning through trillions, over many years: "Nothing but large increases in the deficit ... worse than the Depression." See previous Paul B. Farrell.
He worries that "tomorrow is the day Moody's and S&P will announce a downgrade of U.S. government bonds." Politicians and public are delusional, promising huge new programs plus tax cutting: "This is a road to disaster.' Like Sartre's existential tragedy, "No Exit," he says: "I don't see a solution." '
(source: Marketwatch, Farrell column. He is one 'doom & gloom' merchant that one but has the odd useful snippet amongst the prozac and bourbon.)
In mid (northern) summer, we had a new entry on the table for the first time since Gold topped the $US 1000 level in March. On July 17, Gold rose to 103233 Yen. That was a new 2008 high for the metal in terms of the Japanese currency. Then the Fannie/Freddie bailout plan went to work. Three weeks ago, on October 8, with the announcement of co-ordinated interest rate cuts by SIX major world central banks (including the Fed), Gold hit new all time highs in terms of the Australian Dollar, the Euro and many other major world currencies. That situation was reversed with the onset of savage global deleveraging which is still going on. How much longer? Watch the US Dollar exchange rates. And watch US Treasury yields
U.S. Treasuries prices fell steeply early on Monday, extending the previous session's sell-off on prospects for a swelling supply of government debt that will be underscored by auctions this week.
Despite the tentative sell-off in ultra-short dated government securities, deep-seated fears about the crippling blow the global financial crisis is dealing to the world economy could swiftly reignite a flight-to-quality stampede.
That mass buying last year lifted Treasuries to their strongest performance since 1995.
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the bond bubble has to burst. it cant stay the current way....can it??
All bubbles burst eventually .... that is the one thing I do know. See 'US housing market' for a topical example. It took longer than some expected but pop it went.
Treasury has expanded its balance sheet exponentially over the last three months post Lehman. They do not want deflation, they do not want a 'flight to safety, they want to save the US empire! It is a basic demand, supply and risk scenario and it is a fricken time bomb for those long treasuries.
My 2c...
so what will happen when that bubble bursts?
That flank is the bond market. With the supply of dollars and dollar-denominated debt set to explode, you'd expect the appetite for U.S. bonds to fall. And yesterday, it began to do just that. In December, 30-year U.S. bond yields were hovering at 2.51%. By the close of yesterday's action, they were above 3%.
the daily reckoning.
a bubble is when something rises above what could ever possibly be considered 'sensible'. what could keep the bond yields down? fed buying perhaps?
wasn't it the general understanding that it's all the other countries are buying US bonds? so much so that where 'flight into security' is concerned, the Bonds were well in front of the POG, for quite some time.
it is a bit of a riddle, because Bonds are backed by the Dollar which, as we all know, is supposed to be heading for disaster.
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