I live in the USA and I am concerned about the future. I created this blog to share my thoughts on the economy and anything else that might catch my attention.
Upon further reflection, we're not that close. We actually fell off the Bondmageddon chart and are now simply back on it. We're also not all that far from May's "You Are Here" point.
I'm also looking through the news and don't see enough short treasuries for easy money ("sure thing") advice yet.
Whoever bought the 10 year 40 basis points ago is probably not taking this spike casually.
Humans count losses roughly 4 times as much as gains. It's our wiring. So, if you bought the 10 year at a 4% yield, this is a yawner. At 1.4%, this is very painful.
Bondmageddon depends, like many things, on where your point of view.
I'm not suggesting that holding 1.4% to maturity isn't or won't be painful. I'm simply saying that the majority of the pain was kind of known up front.
Put another way, it's not exactly a tropical paradise for savers. Sigh.
Hey, is it time for a Bondmaggedon 2 post? 10 year just broke 1.8, which is quite a rise from 1.46.
ReplyDeleteMr Slippery,
ReplyDeleteWe're certainly getting close. I better start working on the movie trailer, lol.
Bondmaggedon 2.0
If you thought the first one was shocking, then you better brace for the aftershocking. - [narrator]
Upon further reflection, we're not that close. We actually fell off the Bondmageddon chart and are now simply back on it. We're also not all that far from May's "You Are Here" point.
ReplyDeleteI'm also looking through the news and don't see enough short treasuries for easy money ("sure thing") advice yet.
Whoever bought the 10 year 40 basis points ago is probably not taking this spike casually.
ReplyDeleteHumans count losses roughly 4 times as much as gains. It's our wiring. So, if you bought the 10 year at a 4% yield, this is a yawner. At 1.4%, this is very painful.
Bondmageddon depends, like many things, on where your point of view.
Too big for jail! Yes, and thank goodness. Just imagine how bad things would be if our job creators were in prison.
ReplyDeleteAlso, Sears didn't disappoint! I just love the consistency!
Mr Slippery,
ReplyDeleteAt 1.4%, this is very painful.
With the intent to trade, yes.
With the intent to hold to maturity, not so much.
I'm not suggesting that holding 1.4% to maturity isn't or won't be painful. I'm simply saying that the majority of the pain was kind of known up front.
Put another way, it's not exactly a tropical paradise for savers. Sigh.
mab,
ReplyDeleteI just love the consistency!
Yes! Consistency! ;)