Markets have been pricing strong growth and higher inflation lately. So logically we are returning to a normal yield curve until one of these two things happen:Quote from gharghur2:
Are we returning to a normal yield curve ?
Any thoughts?
Quote from landboy:
Do you think we could ever be back in the heady days of the 80s, with short term rates in the teens?
Quote from daddyeaux:
4 year car loans in 1980 were 19.5% and that's if you had good credit...
that's when oil was at $35 a barrel....
now with oil at $66, you can get a zero interest car loan from GM...
sleep tight
Quote from landboy:
The end is never pretty, it ends with blood in the streets...
It's a little wacky, but who woulda thought in the eighties we'd see the long bond yields eventually in the single digits, let alone below 5%... now THAT's crazy...
Quote from steveosborne:
Markets have been pricing strong growth and higher inflation lately. So logically we are returning to a normal yield curve until one of these two things happen:
<p>a. The Fed changes its rethoric to prepare us for tighter monetary policy; or</p><p>b. Commodity prices go down and the inflation risk premium starts to melt again.</p>
Another round of successful auctions for long-term maturities in the US and overseas would temporarily flatten the yield curve.
That would make sense because US growth is what is keeping markets from dumping the dollar but if other economies perform well, there will additional incentives to look for alternatives to the dollar as a reserve currency.Quote from gharghur2:
Hi Steve,
I'm getting the impression, as I'm been following Gold lately. That Gold is not directly related to inflation, but to the world's economies. They seem to move in sync.
