kevsta
RBL CHeck Failed
- Joined
- Jun 28, 2007
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uh huh. please do elaborate on my errors above and how it all works exactly.
Mods: Please add extra hard drive space.![]()
* 5-year JGB yield hits record low of 0.135 pct
* Investors rush to buy bonds before interest rate cut to zero
* Yields far below banks' funding costs
* Some analysts see ominous parallel with JGB market crash in 2003
TOKYO, Feb 7 (Reuters) - The possibility that the Bank of Japan (BOJ) will take bolder action to ease monetary policy is driving Japanese bond yields to historic lows, with the five-year yield hitting a record low of 0.135 percent on Thursday.
Prime Minister Shinzo Abe has said he would choose a new BOJ leadership more keen to take bold measures to beat deflation when the terms of Governor Masaaki Shirakawa and his two deputies end on March 19.
The catalyst for hasty buying of short-term bonds, such as two-year and five-year notes, stem from worries the BOJ will crush interest rates literally to zero as it did during most of the time during 1999-2006, when the central bank tried to reflate the sagging economy with monetary easing.
Such fever-pitched demand for low-yielding bonds, beyond the cost of funding for key players such as banks, is an ominous sign of a bubble waiting to burst, especially at a time when investors are rotating from fixed income to riskier assets as the global economy steadily recovers, some analysts say.
"I think the five-year yield has gone way too low. Is there anyone who can make money at such low yields? No," said Hidenori Suezawa, chief strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities.
Outgoing BOJ chief Shirakawa has long resisted cutting interest rates to zero, preferring a looser target band of 0-0.1 percent, saying that having rates exactly at zero would kill money markets because there would be no incentives for trading.
What you don’t seem to realize is that this equates to a higher real interest rate and higher cost of capital which suppress economic growth and opportunity. So while you may be perfectly fine with lending to low risk borrowers at a high real rate of return, the number of low risk borrowers interested in borrowing at these inflated rates quickly dries up.As far as I'm aware investors head towards bonds as things get deflationary, because it is +0.5% on top of the deflationary gain, from about as risk free source as you can get it.
Witness the pile into Treasury bonds in 2008 / 2009 which caused such dollar strength, and the same in every scare, ever since.
I’m pointing out that wealth in any form can disappear or be destroyed if you subject it to some arbitrary scenario. Unlike your arbitrary scenario of a space alien warp drive exploding, the one I gave is something actually worth considering when you assess value.well its not all your wealth, is it? it is a metaphor for "real things"
Doesn’t mean it’s worth anywhere near what it is now or that your neighbour allowed you to keep it.your land is still there, your gold is still there
Or maybe it will just return to wilderness as much of Europe did after it was hit by the Black Death. Even if it was resettled since, what value did the pervious occupants receive?in a year or two when you've all died off I'm sure some settlers might make good use of it all.
do bubbles not first inflate then deflate? we had a huge housing bubble that was not allowed to fully deflate and recognise full losses, and is still trying, was what I meant. apologies for incorrect terminology, wasn't aware it was critical.
Deflation is a specific term and refers to negative inflation across the economy which is what prompts the undesirable behaviour of people delaying expenditure and companies delaying investment because things will be cheaper tomorrow.
The collapse of a bubble is a different thing entirely.
Noun
1. The action or process of deflating or being deflated.
2. Reduction of the general level of prices in an economy.
is incorrect."my tyre/bubble/broken banking system, is deflating"
really, I could counter why, are simple mathematic calculations of how much things actually cost, then and now, ie how much the same things went up, then taken and run through different arbitrary spending pattern models to give "weightings" and different figures in every country?
how about a standard basic index that is the same everywhere in the world, just the price of a basket of the same things, as a reference point at least?
otherwise presumably you can at least see the silliness of trying to compare inflation between countries when everybody does it differently.
I know what deflation is, I just wasnt aware it had an exclusivity clause attached to the word.
but you are saying only 2 is acceptable, and usage
is incorrect.
OP said:Japan's core consumer prices dropped 2.4% in August year-on-year, the fourth successive month of record falls.
. . .
The Bank of Japan has already forecast deflation to last until the year to March 2011 and is expected to extend its deflation forecast by another year in its next set of forecasts due out in late October.
I’m pointing out that wealth in any form can disappear or be destroyed if you subject it to some arbitrary scenario. Unlike your arbitrary scenario of a space alien warp drive exploding, the one I gave is something actually worth considering when you assess value.
Doesn’t mean it’s worth anywhere near what it is now or that your neighbour allowed you to keep it.
Or maybe it will just return to wilderness as much of Europe did after it was hit by the Black Death. Even if it was resettled since, what value did the pervious occupants receive?
but life is a zero sum gain? your win is always somebody else's loss, inflation or deflation doesn't change that. everybody can never win can they, whether their money gets more or less valuable is just different challenges.
The Bank of Japan maintained its unprecedented plan to boost money supply at a policy meeting today, matching economists’ forecasts, hours after a report highlighted deflation’s grip on the economy.
Consumer prices fell the most in two years, a government release showed, underscoring the challenge facing Governor Haruhiko Kuroda as he aims to meet a 2 percent inflation target. The BOJ reiterated its commitment to enlarge the monetary base, a gauge of money that includes physical currency in circulation plus assets that financial institutions hold at the BOJ, by 60 trillion yen ($607 billion) to 70 trillion yen a year.
“We can expect more easing later this year if prices refuse to edge up,” said Junko Nishioka, chief economist at Royal Bank of Scotland Group Plc (RBS) in Tokyo and a former BOJ official. “It’s imperative for the BOJ to clearly communicate its objectives to maintain expectations that prices will rise.”
. . .
Consumer prices excluding fresh food slid 0.5 percent in March from a year earlier, the statistics bureau said today. The median estimate of 25 economists surveyed by Bloomberg News was for a 0.4 percent decline. Overall prices dropped 0.9 percent.
Absolutely not. If this were true then we would all still be just as poor and miserable as our cavemen ancestors.
in a business context, which is what we were referring to, for every awarded contract that one firm gets, there are multiple disappointed quoters.
CBs messing with the monetary base doesn't change that.
Latest news indicates that it may take some time for the new policy to work. The effects are not yet evident in prices:
Has deflation been so endemic in the Japanese economy over the last two decades that public and business behaviour has become ingrained so that they will still tend not to spend, preferring to save and so the QE won't have a measurable effect ?