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Finance & Stock Groups Forum Index » Stock Investments » What does 30% yield on junk bonds mean? Inflation (Bill Gro
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| phil scott |
Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 4:54 pm |
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On Nov 22, 7:48 am, Blash <bla...@comcast.net> wrote:
Quote: raylopez99 wrote on 11/22/08 9:43 AM:
Listening to a NY Times podcast by Bill Gross, who points out the
unprecedented 30% yields being given today. What does this mean? It
could be inflation, as Gross points out, and that's what I believe it
points to. Gross also fears deflation, but IMO that's a very short
term phenomena.
RL
The high yield on "junk bonds" is probably due to a combination of the
economy(sucks) and their inability to borrow money to fund their daily
operations......IOW, investors are betting that they're going to tank
soon.....
err... blush? I think its the 200 trillion derivitives bubble that
has their teeths all gritted up. |
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| phil scott |
Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 5:01 pm |
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On Nov 22, 9:02 am, d...@noospam.com (d.) wrote:
Quote: Blash <bla...@comcast.net> wrote:
raylopez99 wrote on 11/22/08 9:43 AM:
Listening to a NY Times podcast by Bill Gross, who points out the
unprecedented 30% yields being given today. What does this mean? It
could be inflation, as Gross points out, and that's what I believe it
points to. Gross also fears deflation, but IMO that's a very short
term phenomena.
RL
The high yield on "junk bonds" is probably due to a combination of the
economy(sucks) and their inability to borrow money to fund their daily
operations......IOW, investors are betting that they're going to tank
soon.....
Agreed, what extremely high rates usually means is nothing more than
extremely high risk of default. The big boys wouldn't be pouring into
treasuries at yields of 4.5% or less if they feared rampant inflation.
Seems to me like they definitely fear deflation and economic collapse
which could last years.
Apparently a wave of municipal and state bankruptcies are looming as
well. Orange County' default doesn't even hold a candle to what looks
to be on the horizon this time.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
thiis mess has not even begun to roll...
and sadly my hopes that Obama would be uncompromised suffers in light
of the absolute moron woman he selected for finance.... simply
stunning...
beyond all beleif her remarks on what caused the 30's depression...
she had to be a pay back position in my estimation... installed by the
fed to fruther that agenda...
an agenda that is leaving them holding real assets now for all the
funny money they issued that we are paying interest on (the fed is
private banks, mostly EU for those new to this mess that dont know)..
same result in the 30's btw....b of a ended up with hundreds of
billions in real property it got for a song.
Phil scott |
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| phil scott |
Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 5:19 pm |
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On Nov 23, 1:55 pm, raylopez99 <raylope...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: On Nov 23, 1:24 pm, phil scott <p...@philscott.net> wrote:
.Ive seen more than a few guys in their mid 80's doing this.. no way
you can compare them... strong and fit. fully retired is a much
worse situation regardless the money.
Well said, though I'll add where I'm posting from (south Europe) I've
seen many guys in their mid 80s to mid 90s who have never worked a day
in their lives, at least by US/UK "nine-to-five" standards. They say
the stress kills you, and if these people are anecdotal evidence of
that, I believe it.
RL
there is the stress aspect also...and ive mentioned it on rare
occasions before...
with the hard work comes two other crucial factors...not over work,
and a lot of rest..... and..... you do not put up with any crap from
anyone, any agency or any entity at any time ... you learn how to cut
it off at the knees, cleanly and before you can be assaulted, taxed to
ruins, or screamed at.....or indeed the stress is fatal...and entirely
comon.
I accomplish that by making it a point to sort out what is exactly
going on at all tines (its usually messy) and by looking people hard
into their eyes when in those sorts of discussions.... that precludes
about half of the crap...the other half is addressed with triplicate
memo's pointing out impending disaster in very polite, very chatty,
and exceedingly well documented terms.
finally, a lack of significant seizable assets provides pleasant sleep
at night.
**
I didnt know if that nasty little plan would work as I first thought
10 years ago, those were hard won realizations..especially as everyone
else was driving new cars, and buying new homes and screwing up on
their hot air jobs... I was plowing fairly hard ground.
it has proven itself now though as I age across all aspects of life...
failing though if one considers wealth and luxury a necessity. I
dont. I see most in that class into various stages of intellectual
or physical rot.
the reason? If I cut a board or a pipe too short...Im screwed.
Instantly, what I do at least 10 hours a week by plan is physical
work. any errors, loopy thinking, dim wittedness, physical decline
bites me in the ass that very instant.. I have self correction.
those that do not produce hard goods, or work... have no need for self
correction.. lacking that degradation goes exponential apparently....
some exceptions of course.
Not the case with me though, when i was doing straight engineering and
consulting for 15 years, my mental and physical aspects suffered very
marked and very steep declines.. no self correction.
and I notice those are common. digging out took 10 years of
struggle...such degradation goes to the core...a person can loose
almost all of it by my experience.
Phil scott |
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| phil scott |
Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 5:33 pm |
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On Nov 23, 8:33 pm, John Galt <kady...@gmail.com> wrote:
Quote: phil scott wrote:
On Nov 23, 2:38 pm, John Galt <kady...@gmail.com> wrote:
phil scott wrote:
On Nov 22, 6:52 am, John Galt <kady...@gmail.com> wrote:
raylopez99 wrote:
Listening to a NY Times podcast by Bill Gross, who points out the
unprecedented 30% yields being given today. What does this mean? It
could be inflation, as Gross points out, and that's what I believe it
points to. Gross also fears deflation, but IMO that's a very short
term phenomena.
RL
I heard a stat the other day that if you take the negative CPI number
from last month (-2.8%, IIRC), and if you BACK OUT gasoline, you have a
very manageable deflation rate of .4%.
And, since the big % deflation of oil is over (deflation will likely
continue, but at a smaller rate) we'll likely be back to inflation by
Q109, albeit at rates translating to less than 1% per year.
JG
with the national debt at 10trillion now and growing fast, and
derivitive mess at hundreds of trillions in the red, and govt issuing
money... its a hyperinflatonary scenario over the long term... with a
deflationary dip going on now that cant last for those reasons.
Yea we can, actually. It may work out as you believe, but if everything
in a tradeable market worked out the way you believe, you wouldn't be
posting on USENET -- you'd own an island in the Caribbean and be there
drinking pina coladas right now.
thats a facetious argument.. you can do better.
No, it's highly relevant. If you're unwilling to admit that you may be
wrong, then there's no grounds for discussion.
JG
I am pointing out the history of fiat money and the demographic
drivers. a person gets rich on timing... thats a but up in the air
imo... I personally think (gut feel) it will go down fast...but it
could easily be stretched out for 5 years o more...so any bet made
today on my notion that its going to be a fast collapse would indeed
be in error.
same with my ragging on your ass about the real estate bubble last
year...I turned out to be correct...nowever that should not really
prove much, the mess could easily have gone on for another year or
two...so there again selling then or whatever could have been a bad
idea.
I simply post what I see of the macro economics, cite the historical
patterns... after that timing etc...even accuracy is not assured.
A note of currency, no longer backed by any sort of metals standard, is
essentially a share of ownership in a nation's economy. It will
fluctuate in value relative to the holders' opinion of the state of that
economy, AND relative to the holders' opinions of the state of OTHER
economies.
I hear you, and I could argue that range of issues in your favor
also... but I dont think its going to work out that way. reasons the
demographic drivers etc that ive mentioned.
Im not trying to prove anything with my posts or influence anyone...Im
saying what I think and giving the reasons is all... and yes recently
Ive been quite accurate, that is not my historical trend though... I
thought this mess would collapse 8 years ago. it didnt.
the demographic drivers though remain in place. so I post what I do.
I truly and earnestly hope that your view turns out to be the case and
that I am absolutely incorrect... I suppose I have a lot of company in
that wish, including yourself...but I dont think we are staged for
that outcome.
So -- we dilute by a trillion dollars. Is that a lot? Well, it depends
on the amount of money in circulation, eh? If a nation has 10T in
circulation, yea, that's a 10% dilution, and the dilution will show up
in the buying price of the note. However, if the nation has 1000T in
circulation, that 1/10 of 1%, and not that big of a deal.
You have presented one of the most salient arguments for your
position...I really hope it adds that way in the end... yes we are so
deeply in dept, and the derivitives market is so bogus, hundreds of
trillions...that a few trillion in bailouts is a mere drop in the
bucket....and if those work, it will be the bargain of he
century...and Im sure Paulson, Bernake et all are hoping like wise...I
sure as hell am.
I just dont see it happening if history of fiat money and those
national patterns are any indicator... no exceptions so far in world
history. we could be the first, but I dont think the national
demographics supports such a reversal.
your view might be that negative think will exaerbate the probem so
you are trying to talk the mess straight...and indeed those are valid
factors... I just think its too late for that by a wide margin.
We have a LOT of money in circulation, more than the Euro, for example..
If Germany (which they did) tosses in euros equal to 600B $ against that
much smaller base of notes in circulation, they've diluted their
currency more than we have, relatively speaking.
these relativity issues are indeed important, if it were not for china
as a massive exception Id have great hope for your views in this
regard.
Now, I agree that we have an inflationary scenario over the long term.
Is it "hyper"? Well, depends a lot on what other countries do as they
respond to the current distress, eh? It also depends a lot on how fast
these economies recover, or IF they recover. It's quite possible that in
the gyrations over the next few years, most other nations dilute more
than we have, and their economies get much worse than ours. If THAT
scenario plays out, you may actually have further dollar appreciation --
long term.
thats a good argument.... relative to national debt etc. the current
mess is not itself on a hyper inflation track. I sincerely hope as
many do that you are correct.
You know my other argument though. ..I hope it has holes in it.
Nothing is for certain. Well, death and taxes, of course.
actually the bit about taxes is greatly exagerated.
Im gonna hold you to that 1% you know
What does that mean? Are you trying to be a prick?
no... Im just going to hold you to your 1% estimate. I think its off
by a factor of 10x at least...just my view. again I hope your 1%
figure is closer to reality than mine.... it will mean I do well and
will not suffer greatly as I would were my estimation of this mess
accurate.
, remember we had a similar
discussion two years ago about the real estate mkt
Personally, I wasn't using "John Galt" two years ago.
maybe it was a year ago or whatever... many people were pushing real
estate right up until the crash, with some saying its a buying oppty
today... ... I think its going clear to hell in a hand basket as 80
million retire and drop deader than hell over the next decade or so.
Yours in limitless optimism, Phil Scott
JG
... it ended up
crashing, and will get worse fast, a lot worse... then stocks...and
then bonds will tank, out the bottom...... the underlying drivers bode
for continuing crash, not recovery..
this is not a statistical or chart issue, its driven by the macro
economics involved, and for the US those are nasty.
Phil scott- Hide quoted text -
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Hold it raight thar John.... you have me mistaken entirely....not
only will I admit that i am wrong, but further as I tell all of my
clients, (and Ive had major ones).... on a scale of absolutes (thats
a scale of everything known now and that will be known in the future,
corrected).... I am not just wrong, Im wrong 99.999% of the time at
least.... and right only 0.0000001 percent of the time at best.
and that is true for the specialty areas for which they hired me to
solve their snitty little problemo's.. often in the billion dollar
range...these days, 'retired' not so big.
From that base of emphatically described, well documented, and proven
complete ignorance we then proceed to solve their problems...every
damn time.
from a base of complete ignorance... thats my chosen base at all
times, on all projects, most especially my own specialty areas.
***
so now....regarding my posts. I post my *views, recall of
history... etc. for anyones consideration... at no point do I post or
expect that Im right or that anyone should adopt my views.
on the contrary I recommend that one and all reject all of what the
read everywhere, use that for the purpose of investigation only (such
as noticing the errors in an authors thinking, mine for instance)....
and then noticing which
comport with observable reality, currently and back through recorded
history.
and then.... after that...one has potentially somewhat of an accurate
view...sometimes. The individual viewpoint, is restricted... we
see only our own thin slice of what we think is relevant to us, and
are thus biased...and at least 99% blind to the rest of reality.
I hope that answers anyones concerns regarding my personal veracity.
Phil scott |
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| Blash |
Posted: Wed Nov 26, 2008 8:04 pm |
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phil scott wrote on 11/26/08 11:54 AM:
Quote: On Nov 22, 7:48 am, Blash <bla...@comcast.net> wrote:
raylopez99 wrote on 11/22/08 9:43 AM:
Listening to a NY Times podcast by Bill Gross, who points out the
unprecedented 30% yields being given today. What does this mean? It
could be inflation, as Gross points out, and that's what I believe it
points to. Gross also fears deflation, but IMO that's a very short
term phenomena.
RL
The high yield on "junk bonds" is probably due to a combination of the
economy(sucks) and their inability to borrow money to fund their daily
operations......IOW, investors are betting that they're going to tank
soon.....
err... blush? I think its the 200 trillion derivitives bubble that
has their teeths all gritted up.
That's one of the reasons that they can't borrow money....... |
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