@themarket: Global Interest Rates Rise, Global Stocks FallBy Bill Schmick, 11:05AM / Saturday, July 08, 2017 | |
It is something we really haven't seen in quite some time. Back in the day, before the financial crisis, interest rates and stocks most often moved in opposite directions. This week investors got a taste of what the future might hold.
U.S Treasury yields on the 10-year note (the benchmark average) ticked up to 2.39 percent at one point. Across the pond, the German Bund (their benchmark) rose .5 percent. Those were big moves in the debt world. Why are interest rates on the rise all of a sudden after years of declines?
Some would say it just had to happen. Global central bank policy has just been too loose for too long. I don't necessarily agree with 0 Comments Read More >> |
The Independent Investor: The Market's Half-Time ReportBy Bill Schmick, 12:56PM / Friday, July 07, 2017 | |
Financial markets worldwide ended the first six months of the year much better off than they started. Here in the U.S., the Dow and the S&P 500 Indexes both gained 8 percent, while NASDAQ delivered 15 percent.
The Russell 2000, the small cap index, underperformed (up 4 percent) and the Transports gained 5 percent. All-in-all, it paid to be in large-cap, especially the large cap growth sector for the first half. At the same time, the Volatility Index continued to make new lows, despite the fact that at least half the investing population was/is worried and fearful of our new president's agenda.
All of the top 20 economies around the world are growing 0 Comments Read More >> |
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