Friday, November 20th, 2009

Posts Tagged ‘ T Bills ’

Foreign Investment in the U.S. – Going Down, Down, Down

Jul 29th, 2009 | By Bud Conrad | Category: Featured

At Casey Research, they have been watching the actions of foreign holders of U.S. dollars as closely as a Las Vegas pit boss watches a card player on a $1 million winning streak. Many of those in the deflation camp largely, or entirely, ignore the potential role these foreign holders may play in the drama now unfolding.



What’s China’s Gameplan?

Apr 24th, 2009 | By Bill Bonner | Category: Politics & Economics

Buenos Aires, Argentina Is the rally still on? We’re not sure. Wednesday, the Dow fell 83 points…after a weak bounce on Tuesday. We expected the rally to last until June and to take the Dow back to the 10,000 range. But anything could happen.



Why US Treasuries Are Not The Best Safe Haven

Jan 27th, 2009 | By Matthew Collins | Category: Politics & Economics

We’ve been in a thirty-year bull market for US Treasuries, says Matthew Collins. And near-zero yields mean little reward for the risk of potentially buying into a bubble. Matthew says investors would do better to put their capital in select high-grade corporate debt or gold.



Gold Bugs Have Fed to Thank for Recent Rally

Dec 31st, 2008 | By Don Miller | Category: Financial News

The currency markets reaction to the Federal Reserve’s recent interest rate cuts has ignited a rally in gold, as investors weigh the benefits of owning the yellow metal versus U.S. Treasuries and the dollar.



What to Buy as the Dollar Stumbles

Dec 19th, 2008 | By Adam Lass | Category: Financial News

Here are three things you can buy now to capitalize on spiking unemployment, crashing banks and the tumbling dollar. Earlier this week, Chairman Bernanke and his cronies on the U.S. Federal Reserve did the unthinkable, indeed the unimaginable.



30-Day and 90-Day T-Bill Yields Plunge to just 0.10%

Dec 8th, 2008 | By Eric Roseman | Category: Financial News

Despite signs that several segments of credit continue to improve, namely in the mortgage-backed and investment grade corporate bond market, the rest of the complex remains hostage to nervous money and the accelerated flight to safety in December.



Misguided Risk Aversion

Nov 21st, 2008 | By Chris Gaffney | Category: Financial News

Bad data pushes investors into US treasuries…  Barclay’s says the euro will rally…  SNB surprises with a rate cut…  Iceland gets their bailout… And Now… Today’s Pfennig!



Exactly When Will This Credit Crisis End?

Apr 17th, 2008 | By Eric Roseman | Category: Featured, Financial News, Politics & Economics

“Here’s Your 5-Step Checklist to Know It’s Over Before Even CNBC Does.”

“I’ve already called this credit crunch, ‘the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression’…and unfortunately, we’re not through it yet” says Eric Roseman.

It’s true the worst of this credit storm has probably passed. But banks, companies and individual investors are still facing funding pressures. That tells me the absolute bottom of this crisis has yet to arrive.



Underpriced Risk in Euroland

Apr 3rd, 2008 | By Lord William Rees-Mogg | Category: International Investing

There is a table in The Financial Times which everyone ought to follow, though it refers to fixed interest securities and moves rather slowly. It is something I regard as a thinking point. It portrays one of the core relationships of global finance, and it is always worth asking oneself why the relationships are what they are, and why they have moved as they have moved.