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Re: DiscoverGold post# 553389

Wednesday, 12/17/2014 12:31:09 AM

Wednesday, December 17, 2014 12:31:09 AM

Post# of 648882
Financial Markets: Déja Vu

* December 16, 2014


Earlier this year our Global Investment Strategy service invoked the experience of the second half of the 1990s as the key reference point for what might happen in global financial markets. The rationale is that there are many economic and financial market parallels between today and the second half of the 1990s:



> Then, the U.S. economy was significantly stronger than the rest of the world. Today, a similar phenomenon is being repeated.

> Then, the Fed was the only central bank to start hiking rates, while the Bundesbank and the Bank of Japan were either cutting rates or holding rates steady. Monetary cycles between the U.S. and the rest of world clearly diverged. This is being repeated today.

> Back in 1997, Japan was the first major industrialized economy to fall into price deflation. Excess savings from Japan deluged world financial markets, dragging down bond yields everywhere. Today, it is the euro zone’s turn to deflate. Bund yields are rapidly converging to JGB yields.

> In the 1990s, a strong U.S. dollar dominated world financial markets. It compressed inflation in the U.S., undercut the Fed’s tightening efforts and caused U.S. bond yields to melt, which in turn fuelled an investment boom. Stocks soared into a massive bubble, which did not top out until 2000. Commodities, oil and emerging markets were crashed by a surging dollar.
Events that have transpired during the past six months suggest this roadmap turned out to be correct: the dollar continues to strengthen on diverging monetary policy between the Fed and the rest of the world. Bond yields have come down. The U.S. stock market has made a series of new highs but oil prices have collapsed. With U.S. equity multiples having expanded, bond yields having dropped and the dollar near five-year highs, what’s next?

http://blog.bcaresearch.com/financial-markets-deja-vu

George.

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Information posted to this board is not meant to suggest any specific action, but to point out the technical signs that can help our readers make their own specific decisions. Your Due Dilegence is a must!
gtsourdinis

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