galway_blow_in
Registered User
- Messages
- 2,020
Well if I was to look at the chart in this article Link I would guess the Spanish 10 Yr. I describe it as domino because investors want to match their maturity needs first, 5yr, 10yr etc.
I am assuming institutional longterm bond investors are insruance companies / pension funds needing to match long term liabilities so they are seeking a relatively low risk yield, they Target the least risky countries first. Those yields start declining, they now have to shorter maturity or change country. That is why the riskiest debt in Europe is now pretty much the only yielding positive.
The U.S is a different kettle but is already seeing yields moving down.
Hang on Galway, are you making a new prediction?Which yields do you think have further to fall?
Which wasn't really true, at least in euro terms.My four year old plus instinct has proven to be spot on
Hang on Galway, are you making a new prediction?
I thought you were bragging about a call you made four years ago -
Which wasn't really true, at least in euro terms.
Again, how so?...my thoughts in early 2015 have proven correct to date...
Correct. The yield to maturity on bonds in e.g. USD should not differ from the YTM of equivalent and equal grade bonds priced in e.g. EUR. Capital markets are perhaps not that efficient but they will over time adjust exchange rates accordingly. So as you correctly point out the returns, when converted back to EUR, are not dramatically different, i.e. there is no such thing as a free lunch. Otherwise you could arbitrage between equivalent bonds denominated in USD and EUR. You may get away with it in the short term but soon exchange rate changes will wipe out arbitrage possibilities.When converted back to euro, the return on a US treasury fund hasn't been dramatically different to the return on a Euro government bond fund over the last four years.
Again, how so?
How would an investor based in the Eurozone have benefitted from investing in a U.S. treasury fund over a Eurozone government debt fund in 2015? In Euro terms, they would have ended up in pretty much the same position.
Maybe you'll be right this time. Maybe not.
Surely the recent past proves definitively that there is no point beyond which bond yields can fall? Zero is not a floor.
Regardless, you are forgetting the relative real term value of currency.
But hey, carry on. I'm sure you've picked up on something the smartest guys (bond traders) in any investment bank have all missed.
Like I said, maybe you'll be right this time. Or not.
Right or wrong about what exactly?Tell you what, I won't contribute to this thread again for a year and we can see if I was right or wrong.
I'd wager the U. S is seen as more of a safe haven than Spain, hence further scope to fall in my view
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?