Pensions funds, etc., lots of buyers, even of 10yr bonds yielding 0%.
Note that as yields have fallen, bond prices rise, so these buyers have done well.
Yes I get that, but whats been happening for so long is the reverse so that the coupon has now fallen to zero but the bond price has still risen so a german 100 euro bond with 0% coupon is selling for +100euros in the bond market now . Therefore if as you say you wait the 10 years to maturity you still only get 100 euros back even though you paid +100 euros , 10 years ago.So, if bond coupons rise that axiomatically means that bond prices have fallen. But the yield (income) has increased! So, provided you hold to maturity, it's pretty much a wash.
Yup.Therefore if as you say you wait the 10 years to maturity you still only get 100 euros back even though you paid +100 euros , 10 years ago.
Yup.
But that doesn't necceasarily mean that bonds are in a bubble. What if inflation is negative over that 10-year period? Think of Japan.
The ECB will increase interest rates by 'whatever it takes' to stamp out inflation. The ECB's main task is to maintain an annual inflation rate of below 2% in the medium term.This is now what pension funds are doing with your money, they are predicting that this trend continues, but what if they are wrong, what if inflation comes roaring back like in the 70s.
The ECB will increase interest rates by 'whatever it takes' to stamp out inflation. The ECB's main task is to maintain an annual inflation rate of below 2% in the medium term.
The ECB will increase interest rates by 'whatever it takes' to stamp out inflation. The ECB's main task is to maintain an annual inflation rate of below 2% in the medium term.
thats what they say, but they cant because of the gargantuan size of the bond market now, they will crush the wealth effect on all those pensioners with so much overpriced bonds in their portfolios, thats why we have negative yielding bonds now because the ECB has been buying all these bonds .
If inflation comes back they will pretend its not happening, they will probably then try and exclude oil prices from the cpi index using green washing and greenhouse gases as the reason. In other words they will pretend that reality is not happening until it is realised that the emperor has no cloths
The ECB has been trying to stoke inflation for how many years now?
All the QE has gone into assets, increasing stocks, property, bonds. But such increases are, inexplicably not included in calculating inflation.
but thats the strange thing. they have printed lots of euros out of thin air, its just that it all went back into bonds which is effectively government spending. Are we looking at a slow burn zimbabwe or venezuala afterall they did the same thing printed their currency which bankrolled their governments for a few years but then almost immediately hyperinflation. I think bonds are the key because they are allowing european governments to keep spending even though they are over indebted, strangely however these very bonds are seen as a "safe haven" and investors (of course forced buyers, pensions ,banks and insurance companies) are voraciously buying them even at negative interest rates. But this game will end and lagarde is not an economist or a financial expert, (remember john hurley head of the irish central bank during financial crash, got there not because of phds in economics but because of seniority in the civil service).n economic terms you cannot stoke inflation with monetary deflation, all the QE went into government bonds and nothing to do with the economy at large.
Interesting article here https://www.economist.com/buttonwoods-notebook/2014/11/06/bubble-history
on the bond bubble. Its from almost 5 years ago, but really we have just advanced further down the road that the article references.
Unlike other bubbles this bond bubble does not promise spectacular returns, indeed negative returns are offered. While stocks and property may be overvalued, they are not in the same zone as bonds.
Be careful here, bond returns have been strong this year, not negative.
Bond prices have risen.
My father's bond fund is doing very well.
But yes, I fear it's a bubble.
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