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4#
发表于 2011-7-11 18:38
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markCFAIL Wrote:
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> Didn't you just argue against yourself? You just
> told me that A would cause an inverted yield
> curve.
>
> I do understand that the liquidity preference will
> cause yields to rise in the long term, but they
> are combining an inverting factor "demand >
> supply, price up, yields down", with an upward
> sloping factor, whereas choice B does only the
> first part, so it must invert too. The question
> asks for UPWARD sloping, wtf?
yeh i had to read it a few times myself. its a dumb question. i think your just seeing it differently to me.
It can't be B. that will invert the yield curve as price increases.
when economies boom, you get the inflationary gap, likewise when slowing, inflation falls back. I interpret C as implying that because inflation is backing off, the view is the economy is slowing down. Further this with the flight to quality, by seeking more liquid and less risky bonds, thus creating the inverted yield curve. Thus i don't think C.
That leaves A
If you look at it over the general long term trend, the yield curve will be upward sloping, going on what's above. I did imply inverted initially due to the supply shortage, but over the long term, i think it would be upward sloping.
Its a toss up between A and C, but i think the key part is the slowing inflation. 'A' just implied the price is too high, thus people are shifting to the shorter term securities.
Also, if your paying, say 15% for 10 years, but can borrow 10 lots of 1%, there's an arbitrage opportunity. Thus it would be more costly to 'borrow' at the 10yr 15% then borrow at the 1yr, 1%, 10 times. A 'rational' investor would shift to ST securities, pushing the yields down, LT yields up.
let me know. crap Q but interesting discussion.
also did you figure the options bit out? i was thinking European, but they only discount the put side. for a call, the maximum price is the strike price. Like you say though, its work for FRA's... |
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