Discussion thread.
Why does this matter?
The ability of the US government/Fed to drop the US 10 year government bond rate further represents the only opportunity to revitalize, or at least defer losses in US real estate.
The present non-GFC related (though perhaps Euro crisis related) flirtation with 2% thus represents a potential inflection point a number of activities (as EJ alluded to in his Puplava interview):
1) The end, or beginning of the end, of real estate reflation - certainly successful reflation.
2) An inflection for the stock market. The indisputable end to the bond market bull means the money sitting on the previous easy ride must move elsewhere
3) An inflection for the stock market, plus the prospect of an interest rate bottom, has implications for PMs and commodities
As a note, Japan experienced briefly a 0.5% 10 year bond rate in 2003. Since then, it has fluctuated between 1% and 2%.
There are clear structural differences between the Japanese economy and the US economy, as well as structural differences between the source savings of US and Japanese debt, the US dollar as reserve currency, etc.
But it seems clear that the bottom in Japan was reached.
Is 2% right now the bottom in the US, with any further dip only an anomaly?
Why does this matter?
The ability of the US government/Fed to drop the US 10 year government bond rate further represents the only opportunity to revitalize, or at least defer losses in US real estate.
The present non-GFC related (though perhaps Euro crisis related) flirtation with 2% thus represents a potential inflection point a number of activities (as EJ alluded to in his Puplava interview):
1) The end, or beginning of the end, of real estate reflation - certainly successful reflation.
2) An inflection for the stock market. The indisputable end to the bond market bull means the money sitting on the previous easy ride must move elsewhere
3) An inflection for the stock market, plus the prospect of an interest rate bottom, has implications for PMs and commodities
As a note, Japan experienced briefly a 0.5% 10 year bond rate in 2003. Since then, it has fluctuated between 1% and 2%.
There are clear structural differences between the Japanese economy and the US economy, as well as structural differences between the source savings of US and Japanese debt, the US dollar as reserve currency, etc.
But it seems clear that the bottom in Japan was reached.
Is 2% right now the bottom in the US, with any further dip only an anomaly?
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