Best of the Week
Most Popular
1.Four Shocking Economic Bombshells Bernanke Did NOT Tell Congress About Last Week - Martin_D_Weiss
2.Obama Preparing to Attack Iran - Webster G. Tarpley
3.Economic Warnings From Niall Ferguson and Nassim Taleb - Gary_North
4.The Illuson of Economic Recovery, Major Indicators Point Towards Further Collapse - Bob_Chapman
5.Kindergarten Double Dip Recession Economics - Jim_Willie_CB
6.Stocks, Commodities and Financial Markets, The Shape of Things to Come - Steve_Betts
7.The Fed Flashes the Nuclear Quantitative Easing Trump Card - Gary_Dorsch
8.Stocks Bull Markets Generate Economic Growth - Nadeem_Walayat
9.European Sovereign Debt Crisis, Running Through a Minefield Backwards - BAM
10.Thoughts on the Economy - Marcus Eduardo de Oliveira
Last 5 Days Analysis
Are We Out of the Recession Yet? - 31st July 10
China Raises the Floor for Agri Food Investments - 31st July 10
Nielson: The End Game is Either Hyperinflation or Debt Implosion – Got Gold - 31st July 10
Solving the Great Disconnect Between Stock Market and Economic Reality - 31st July 10
Has Gold Correction Made a Final Bottom? - 31st July 10
BP New CEO Robert Dudley Isn't the Long-term Answer - 31st July 10
Federal Government's Trillion Dollar Deficits Crowding Out Our Future Wealth - 31st July 10
Attention, Barrelheads: Petrobras Shares Are on Sale - 31st July 10
A Cyclical Case for Gold Stocks Investing - 31st July 10
Stock Market Advances on Bad Economic News - 31st July 10
Sheffield NHS UK GP Patient Survey Results 2009-10 - 31st July 10
New Uranium Bull Market? - 30th July 10
Mega-Battle Investor Opportunities and Threats: Gold, Debt, Markets, Politics - 30th July 10
Has Economics Run Out of Ideas? - 30th July 10
Platinum and Gold Price Trend Relationship Analysis - 30th July 10
US Earnings Mixed And Japan IP Shocker - 30th July 10
Cruise Control Hedging: The Basics of Investing - 30th July 10
Ten Risk Minimization Strategies - 30th July 10
We Analyze Akamai Technologies AKAM Classical Technical Pattern - 30th July 10 -
The Agricultural Sector is Heating Up, Big Gains in Grains - 30th July 10
Robert Prechter's Deflationary Bear Market On the Slope of Hope - 30th July 10
Who Flipped The Switch On The Stock Market? - 30th July 10
Fighting to Feed the Chinese Dragon, McDonald’s Vs. Yum! - 30th July 10
Investors Profit From the Cap-and-Trade Charade - 30th July 10
Should China Dump U.S. Dollars, Treasury Bonds for Commodities? Can Global Trade Collapse? - 30th July 10
Wall Street Gets Trillions While Workers Get Bupkis  - 30th July 10
The Ruling Elite Called - 30th July 10
The Fed Flashes the Nuclear Quantitative Easing Trump Card - 29th July 10
You’ll Hate Your Gold So Much You’ll Want to Spit On It - 29th July 10
Austrian Business Cycle Theory Vs Keynesians - 29th July 10
Gold Promises and Currency Lies - 29th July 10
Investing for Deflation Part 2: More Reader Questions - 29th July 10
An Corporate Earnings Feast to Digest - 29th July 10
The Number of ETFs Exploding to Over 1,000 - 29th July 10
Stock Market Balancing on a Knife Edge... - 29th July 10
Escalating Violence From the Animal Liberation Front - 29th July 10
How to Pick Stocks in the ‘New Normal’ Economy - 29th July 10
Did BP Accidentally Tap Into the Rigel Gas Field? - 29th July 10
How Think Tanks, Foundations, Big Oil and the CIA Undermine Democracy - 29th July 10
Is WikiLeaks Release Anti-war Whistleblowing or Obama War Propaganda? - 29th July 10
Price Stability Not a Fed Priority - 29th July 10
Bill Gross Ponders "Deep Demographic Doo-Doo" - 29th July 10
Financials, Oil and Gold on the Move - 29th July 10
Kindergarten Double Dip Recession Economics - 28th July 10
Putting Money on the Junior Gold Miners - 28th July 10
Economists Miss Durable Goods Orders Slump - 28th July 10
2011: The Year Of The Tax Increase - 28th July 10
Banks Find A Bid After Basel Watered Down - 28th July 10
Profit From the Global Thirst for Clean Water - 28th July 10
Evolving Global Financial Crisis, U.S. Dollar Heading Down Again - 28th July 10
Investors Beware of Municipal Bonds as Defaults Soar - 28th July 10
Government Economic Lies, The Grossly Problematic Gross Domestic Product - 28th July 10
Economic Warnings From Niall Ferguson and Nassim Taleb - 28th July 10
Will U.S. House Prices Drive The 4.8% “Consensus” Nominal GDP Growth Forecast? - 28th July 10
Gold Counting Down to Assault on $1300 - 28th July 10
America's Vision: National Capitalism - 28th July 10
European Sovereign Debt Crisis, Running Through a Minefield Backwards - 27th July 10
Gold, Hoping for a Break - 27th July 10
Stock Market Take-Off Tuesday Already? - 27th July 10
The Unlimited Power of Suppressing the Interest Rate - 27th July 10
Should the Fed Pump Even More Money? - 27th July 10
Is the Star in Starbucks Fading? - 27th July 10
Nasty MLP ETF Indicator Flashing Investor Warning Signal Again - 27th July 10
NAFTA Has Resulted in Increased U.S. Unemployment - 27th July 10
WikiLeaks Exposes Imperialist War in Afghanistan - 27th July 10
A Decade of Falling House Prices - 27th July 10
The Continuing Crisis in the New World Order - 27th July 10
WikiLeaks and the Afghan War - 27th July 10
BP Hopes for a CEO Savior in American Robert Dudley - 27th July 10
Will China Grab the Credit-Rating Business? - 27th July 10
Unemployment is Worse Than We Know, Economic Recovery Challenge Harder Than We Think - 27th July 10
Plausible Gulf Oil Spill Scenario: Underground Blowout and Mudflow - 27th July 10
The 'I's' of the Illuminati - 27th July 10
Good Potential in Junior Gold Miners - 27th July 10

Free Instant Analysis

Free Instant Technical Analysis


Market Oracle FREE Newsletter

Analysis Topic: Interest Rates and the Bond Market

The analysis published under this topic are as follows.

Interest-Rates

Friday, July 30, 2010

New Upleg for TLT Treasury Bond ETF / Interest-Rates / US Bonds

By: Mike_Paulenoff

This morning's surge in the iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treas Bond (NYSE: TLT) reflects greater-than-expected economic deceleration from Q2 to the revised (higher) Q1, as well as disappointing figures for personal consumption, which has triggered a fierce bout of short-covering.

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Thursday, July 29, 2010

The Fed Flashes the Nuclear Quantitative Easing Trump Card / Interest-Rates / Quantitative Easing

By: Gary_Dorsch

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleOf ten people who hear the same story or speech, each one might understand it differently. Perhaps, only one of them will understand it correctly. On July 21st, Federal Reserve chief Ben Bernanke was speaking in riddles, as central bankers are apt to do, while delivering his testimony before Congress. Each word that’s uttered by the Fed chief is scrutinized by anxious speculators, who try to interpret the message correctly, before quickly placing bets in the marketplace.

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

European Banking Stress Test: Much Ado about Nothing / Interest-Rates / Credit Crisis 2010

By: Claus_Vogt

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleOn Friday the Committee of European Banking Supervisors (CEBS) revealed the results of its banking sector stress test. The objective of the test, in the CEBS’s dry words, was to “provide policy information for assessing the resilience of the EU banking system to possible adverse economic developments and to assess the ability of banks ( … ) to absorb possible shocks on credit and market risks, including sovereign risks.”

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Investors Beware of Municipal Bonds as Defaults Soar / Interest-Rates / US Bonds

By: Money_Morning

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleMartin Hutchinson writes: Of the speculative excesses that misguided monetary policy and a prolonged recession has caused, the one that poses the most danger to investor wealth is the financial bubble in state and local municipal bonds.

Municipal bonds - usually referred to as "munis" - are very popular portfolio plays because of tax advantages that, in effect, enhance their rates of return. There's also an allure because of their local nature: Investors can invest in specific bond issues that provided the money for projects such as schools, highways, bridges, hospitals or housing that actually affects the community in which the investor lives. That makes them a very tangible investment.

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

The Unlimited Power of Suppressing the Interest Rate / Interest-Rates / Economic Theory

By: Thorsten_Polleit

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleUnder today's fiat-money regimes, central banks, as a rule, control short-term interest rates. They do so by setting the interest rates on short-term loans extended to commercial banks (typically with maturities of one day, one week, two weeks, or one month).

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Should the Fed Pump Even More Money? / Interest-Rates / Quantitative Easing

By: Frank_Shostak

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleSome Fed officials and various commentators, such as Professor Paul Krugman, are of the view that the US central bank should be ready to consider additional steps to boost the US economy in the wake of a visible softening in key economic data. For instance, the yearly rate of growth of retail sales, after climbing to 8.5% in March, have fallen to 4.8% in June. The ISM manufacturing purchasing manager's index (PMI) fell to 56.2 last month from 59.7 in May.

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Will China Grab the Credit-Rating Business? / Interest-Rates / Credit Crisis 2010

By: Money_Morning

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleMartin Hutchinson writes: There's a new name in the credit-rating-agency business these days: It's Dagong Global Credit Rating Co. Ltd., and this Beijing-backed business is China's bid for a spot in the global-credit-rating oligopoly.

And Dagong's Chairman Guan Jianzhong doesn't think much of his long-established U.S. competitors.

Read full article... Read full article...

1 Comment 


Interest-Rates

Tuesday, July 27, 2010

Confirmed: U.S. Fiscal Woe Is Worse Than Greece / Interest-Rates / US Debt

By: Dian_L_Chu

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleReading the annual Long Term Budget Outlook by the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) has become an increasingly depressing experience in recent years. This year seems even more so than ever.

The latest projection puts the federal debt rising to 62% of the nation’s Gross Domestic Product (GDP) by the end of the year (from 40% pre-crisis), the highest percentage since just after World War. (See Graph)

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Monday, July 26, 2010

Money Supply Divergence TMS1 vs. TMS2 vs. M2, What does it Mean? / Interest-Rates / Deflation

By: Mike_Shedlock

Diamond Rated - Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleInquiring minds are once again digging deep into money supply questions. They are intrigued by the fact that money supply measures M2 and TMS1 are plunging towards zero, while TMS2 is still sporting a hefty 10+% year-over-year growth.

TMS stands for "True Money Supply". The suffix (1 or 2) stands for alternate measures, one including savings accounts and the other not. M2 is a widely used Fed aggregate for money.

Read full article... Read full article...

2 Comments 


Interest-Rates

Sunday, July 25, 2010

Surging Stock Markets Push Bond Yields Higher / Interest-Rates / US Bonds

By: Levente_Mady

The bond market was off slightly last week as a surging stock market knocked yields 3-6 basis points higher for the week.  The bond futures traded up to new 18 month highs on Wednesday before settling back a couple of points during the last two trading sessions before the weekend.  While stocks and commodities finished a positive week, the bond market continues to scream double dip and deflation.  With the 2 year yield just a snick north of one half percent the bond market is starting to tell us that the Fed is increasingly likely to stick with its Zero Interest Rate Policy for the foreseeable future.  Until the next wave of credit concerns hits the market, bonds will continue to have a positive fundamental backdrop.

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Sunday, July 25, 2010

U.S. is Insolvent and Faces Bankruptcy as a Pure Debtor Nation / Interest-Rates / US Debt

By: Washingtons_Blog

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleChina Calls Our Bluff: America's biggest creditor - China - has called our bluff.

As the Financial Times notes, the head of China's biggest credit rating agency has said America is insolvent and that U.S. credit ratings are a joke:

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Saturday, July 24, 2010

U.S. Need Not Fear Sovereign Debt Crisis, Unlike Greece, It Actually Is Sovereign / Interest-Rates / Global Debt Crisis

By: Ellen_Brown

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleLast week, a Chinese rating agency downgraded U.S. debt from triple A and number one globally, to “double A with a negative outlook” and only thirteenth worldwide. The downgrade renewed fears that the sovereign debt crisis that began in Greece will soon reach America. That is the concern, but the U.S. is distinguished from Greece in that its debt is denominated in its own currency, over which it has sovereign control.  The government can simply print the money it needs, or borrow it from a central bank that prints it.  We should not let deficit hawks and short sellers dissuade the government from pursuing that obvious expedient.  

Read full article... Read full article...

2 Comments 


Interest-Rates

Friday, July 23, 2010

European Bank Stress Test Politicians Desperate to hide the Truth of Insolvent Banking System / Interest-Rates / Credit Crisis 2010

By: Nadeem_Walayat

The long waited stress test of the 91 of Europe's largest Banks resulted in just 7 of the smaller regional banks failing the test including one from Germany and Greece, and five in Spain, that require capital injections of just Euros 3.5 billion, which is a drop in the ocean when compared against PIGS sovereign debt of Euros 1.2 trillion, but off course the so called stress test FAILED to test for sovereign debt default.

Read full article... Read full article...

2 Comments 


Interest-Rates

Friday, July 23, 2010

Credit Deflation Lands in Britain / Interest-Rates / Deflation

By: Adrian_Ash

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleCredit deflation just hit the UK for the first time on post-war records...

HMMMM...This looks telling.

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Interest-Rates

Friday, July 23, 2010

Mortgage Debt … Credit Card Debt … Corporate Debt — It’s all Shrinking! / Interest-Rates / Credit Crisis 2010

By: Mike_Larson

Best Financial Markets Analysis ArticleI used to love those Wendy’s commercials in the 1980s. You know, the ones that mocked the burger patties at competing restaurants with the catchphrase “Where’s the beef?”

Today, I can’t help but ask a similar question about the U.S. economy. Namely: “Where’s the credit?”

Read full article... Read full article...

Comments? 


Page << | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 10 | 20 | 30 | 40 | 50 | 60 | 70 | >>