This is happening all over the world. Are you we going to witness the word crash ever? Even Swiss bonds are in the shitter.
>>1371274
holy fug, brb liquidating
BUMP. THIS IS A SERIOUS MATTR, ANONS
>four fund portfolio
holy shit good thing i didnt fall for this
Reaction to DBank?
>>1371274
Both of these countries are killing their bonds to make the population spend more. There is no world crash when interest rates in these countries are approaching 0.
http://www.tradingeconomics.com/netherlands/interest-rate
http://www.tradingeconomics.com/netherlands/bank-lending-rate
With rates this low, it encourages companies to take out loans and consumers to get leveraged and create more wealth in the country.
This is not a world crash, this is a stimulus package.
>>1371274
A falling yield means a rising price, actually. Unless you mean, "their yield is in the shitter," in which case you'd be correct.
BUY BUY BUY
It can only get bigger at this point. Buy some and forget about it
>bonds are in the red
>shows chart of bond that is hitting all time highs
someone doesnt know about inverse relationship between price and yield
>>1371274
Stock market collapse incoming, tons of companies aren't going to be able to take the heat. This could be a boon for the indestructible Dow Jones Industrial Average though.
>>1371403
>With rates this low, it encourages companies to take out loans and consumers to get leveraged and create more wealth in the country.
>This is not a world crash, this is a stimulus package.
Markets are limited and saturated so low rates encourage malinvestment. Consumption in the west is already reaching a zenith so the added demand won't increase growth in a meaningful and sustainable way, it'll just sustain real estate bubbles.
It may be a stimulus package but the design will result in stagflation. If/when gold value starts skyrocketing you can expect a decade long inflationary period of low growth and this will foster civil unrest. The exclusivity of speculation will increase while the number of high paying jobs will stagnate, stock market returns will diminish and then eventually the real estate bubble will pop. This scenario is more than just plausible.