fjlip . . . welcome to the world of
negative interest rates if deflation
really kicks in. This was Japan in the
1990's. It is already present in the
U.S. as fees effectively generate
negative returns.
There is no hope-in-hell (IMO) of higher
interest rates for a long, long time.
Central banks (like ours) threatening to
hike rates is likely more a scare tactic
to get consumers to rein in their debt.
And if the BOC was actually serious,
that is a scary thought of how out-of
tune-politicians are on the global
crisis.
negative interest rates if deflation
really kicks in. This was Japan in the
1990's. It is already present in the
U.S. as fees effectively generate
negative returns.
There is no hope-in-hell (IMO) of higher
interest rates for a long, long time.
Central banks (like ours) threatening to
hike rates is likely more a scare tactic
to get consumers to rein in their debt.
And if the BOC was actually serious,
that is a scary thought of how out-of
tune-politicians are on the global
crisis.
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