Saving Hawaii
Well-Known Member
Hmm... So S&P has decided to issue frenzied warnings that savings invested in US treasury notes are no longer as safe as we once thought they were. Caveat emptor.
What does the market think about this? Since S&P's "downgrading", prices on treasury debt have soared (higher prices = lower yields... if you're unfamiliar with this jargon, think about it this way: if the price of your credit card debt soared, the interest rate you have to pay would plunge). This is a completely paradoxical movement. If investors were making their decisions based on the judicious opinions of Standard and Poors they would be wary of investing in treasury notes, causing prices to drop and yields to increase. The exact opposite of that is happening right now. Savvy investors are making a bet that directly goes against the advice of S&P.
This should tell you something: the media circus beating the drums of the S&P "downgrade" sounds pretty reasonable, but nobody who's got money on the line believes any of this garbage. Far from offering respect for their sober judgments, serious investors are laughing at S&P's "downgrading" stunt as a carnival of political hackery.
For those who want to buy S&P's warnings hook, line, and sinker... caveat emptor.
What does the market think about this? Since S&P's "downgrading", prices on treasury debt have soared (higher prices = lower yields... if you're unfamiliar with this jargon, think about it this way: if the price of your credit card debt soared, the interest rate you have to pay would plunge). This is a completely paradoxical movement. If investors were making their decisions based on the judicious opinions of Standard and Poors they would be wary of investing in treasury notes, causing prices to drop and yields to increase. The exact opposite of that is happening right now. Savvy investors are making a bet that directly goes against the advice of S&P.
This should tell you something: the media circus beating the drums of the S&P "downgrade" sounds pretty reasonable, but nobody who's got money on the line believes any of this garbage. Far from offering respect for their sober judgments, serious investors are laughing at S&P's "downgrading" stunt as a carnival of political hackery.
For those who want to buy S&P's warnings hook, line, and sinker... caveat emptor.
Upvote
0