Re: Bank of America issues `bond crash' alert on Fed tightening fears
EJ what is your perspective on Wall Street's tendency to pitch the flight out of bonds as a bullish story under the label of a "great rotation"? It seems to me that a bond "flight" can happen in a number of ways:
- spontaneous quantity- (rather than price-) expansion on the part of the domestic private sector; people getting put back to work, etc, output gap closing in the positive direction (imo, won't happen without major growth of private debt)
- output gap closing in the negative direction (falling potential output) due to hysteresis, iatrogenic damage and endogenous supply shocks (would involve a move from bonds to stocks, but this only nets out the otherwise negative trend)
- flight out of the ENTIRE domestic economy due to newly exposed structural problems
My guess is we're not looking at the first of these three and yet this is what is implied in a lot of the stories coming from Wall Street analysts.
EJ what is your perspective on Wall Street's tendency to pitch the flight out of bonds as a bullish story under the label of a "great rotation"? It seems to me that a bond "flight" can happen in a number of ways:
- spontaneous quantity- (rather than price-) expansion on the part of the domestic private sector; people getting put back to work, etc, output gap closing in the positive direction (imo, won't happen without major growth of private debt)
- output gap closing in the negative direction (falling potential output) due to hysteresis, iatrogenic damage and endogenous supply shocks (would involve a move from bonds to stocks, but this only nets out the otherwise negative trend)
- flight out of the ENTIRE domestic economy due to newly exposed structural problems
My guess is we're not looking at the first of these three and yet this is what is implied in a lot of the stories coming from Wall Street analysts.
Comment