Rates have been a lot higher in the past, and no one thought that it was unstable. If you drew line through the middle of the 10yr over time, it would about 6-7%. No one thought that was unstable, and it has been even higher than that.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is the theory, but present day reality is the opposite as far as bond yields go. Even w/ the “big beautiful bill” expected to add trillions to the total debt, rates are lower compared to Jan. 1. There is no panic in the bond market. Go figure.Anonymous wrote:Bond yields rise and dollar falls. Inflation increases. At that point it depends on the fiscal policy response. Higher yields increases government borrowing costs and hence the deficit. If they take credible action to contain the deficit then the situation stabilizes. If not we enter a negative spiral that involves the same elements of rising interest rates, spiraling deficits, falling dollar, increasing inflation etc.
I suspect that it means that the market doesn’t think the bill will be passed as is. There is also some move to bonds as nervousness about equities persists. Look at how the cost of credit default swaps on US government debt have increased for evidence that all isn’t well in the bond market.
But I don’t disagree with you. The point is that it is an unstable equilibrium. Once things start moving, they could move quickly.
Anonymous wrote:This is the theory, but present day reality is the opposite as far as bond yields go. Even w/ the “big beautiful bill” expected to add trillions to the total debt, rates are lower compared to Jan. 1. There is no panic in the bond market. Go figure.Anonymous wrote:Bond yields rise and dollar falls. Inflation increases. At that point it depends on the fiscal policy response. Higher yields increases government borrowing costs and hence the deficit. If they take credible action to contain the deficit then the situation stabilizes. If not we enter a negative spiral that involves the same elements of rising interest rates, spiraling deficits, falling dollar, increasing inflation etc.
Anonymous wrote:Check this out for an idea what can happen to our bond market:
“UK Gilt Market Crisis of 2022”. Very similar to what is currently being proposed for taxes and cuts in the BBB that got passed in the house.
This is the theory, but present day reality is the opposite as far as bond yields go. Even w/ the “big beautiful bill” expected to add trillions to the total debt, rates are lower compared to Jan. 1. There is no panic in the bond market. Go figure.Anonymous wrote:Bond yields rise and dollar falls. Inflation increases. At that point it depends on the fiscal policy response. Higher yields increases government borrowing costs and hence the deficit. If they take credible action to contain the deficit then the situation stabilizes. If not we enter a negative spiral that involves the same elements of rising interest rates, spiraling deficits, falling dollar, increasing inflation etc.
Anonymous wrote:We will purposely tank the world economy as well. The US will never let it economy tank while the rest of the world thrive no way.
Anonymous wrote:With deficits and government debt skyrocketing, exacerbated by continuation of tax cuts, we’re hearing more handwringing about a crisis in the bond markets. For those who are more savvy about macroeconomics, what would a bond market crisis look like here in the US, and what would be the effect on normal, middle class citizens? I know the story of the Argentine default in the 1990s, but the US economy is orders of magnitude larger, so I don’t know if that’s a good model.