Quote from 10yr_DONK:
tell you what these are very tough markets...haven't made a dime in 3 weeks. The only days I can make money around here are fed/nfp days so you know what that means...Im gonna be 10k richer or poorer Friday. This trade you're witnessing right now is for the birds!
Quote from Martinghoul:
Well, data HAS improved, arguably, so I think Uncle Ben is probably a bit relieved.
Quote from benwm:
It's not clear what the exit strategy is here. Suppose 10 year yields back up another 1% to 4% in response to commodity inflation. Then what?
(1) Print more money to double, quadruple,..etc their bets for the greater good of homeowners.
(2) Withdraw liquidity to ward off inflation by selling off $1-2 Trillion of bond holdings at a loss?
(3) Sit on their bond holdings until maturity and leave all the newly created money in the system, running the risk of currency collapse and hyperinflation?
If long yields fall then no problem. But if not, which is it? (1), (2) or (3)?
I don't know, I ain't a Fed guv'nor. It's a tough spot they're in. Personally, I wouldn't think rising commodity prices and money supply are by themselves necessarily inflationary. We'll just have to wait and see, I guess.Quote from benwm:
It's not clear what the exit strategy is here. Suppose 10 year yields back up another 1% to 4% in response to commodity inflation. Then what?
(1) Print more money to double, quadruple,..etc their bets for the greater good of homeowners.
(2) Withdraw liquidity to ward off inflation by selling off $1-2 Trillion of bond holdings at a loss?
(3) Sit on their bond holdings until maturity and leave all the newly created money in the system, running the risk of currency collapse and hyperinflation?
If long yields fall then no problem. But if not, which is it? (1), (2) or (3)?