Close Proximity
“I’ll take it”.
“I’ll take it”.
“I must confess the notion of buying the SPX near 3000 sounds silly”.
Let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
If you were already offended by the Fed’s purported “transgressions”, you can pretend to be even angrier now.
“Moral hazard!”, everyone shouted, in unison.
“The Fed must be happy”, TD’s Priya Misra said this week. “Well, at least pleased
Is $2 trillion on the horizon for investment grade supply?
“It would be helpful if you soon began buying in size.”
The tsunami continues.
“Red lines”.
“…the perfect answer for a central bank dealing with a credit crunch”.
As ever, the whole thing is a bit of a paradox.
What happens after that? How do you sort that out? Spoiler alert: You can’t.
Flow reversals and the “cost of cash”.
Everyone knows people go to Wendy’s for the Frostys.
Critics will be critics, though.
Go ahead, everybody – indulge yourself in Fed jokes.
“…a recession like the one we’re currently in is unprecedented.”
“Yeah, sport, I know there’s a blizzard.”
“Whether the stimulus is remotely enough remains to be seen”.
“I have numerous concerns”…
“Most of us believe in the free-market system as the best allocator of resources.”
Call it a requiem. Or a pseudo-lament. Or maybe just an obituary dressed up as
“…as investors’ focus turns to the real economy a reality check or two remains in the cards.”
Amid the worst crisis “since the dawn of the jet age”, America’s airline industry needs a bailout. And we’re going to give them one.
“Maybe direct Fed buying of the S&P might break the link.”
You must be logged in to post a comment.