T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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880.1 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Mon Jun 26 1995 18:49 | 14 |
| > The congress has the balanced budget half way to become
> law. If it is signed by President, it should lower the
> interest rate.
How will the budget lower the interest rate? The Interest
rates that you refer to are set by an independent agency.
Congress can not force that agency to lower rates. If the
budget itself assumes lower interest rates in order to meet
it's goal of being balanced then it's doomed to fail .......
FWIW, I don't think the President will sign the Republicans budget.
President has already said what he wants in the budget (less
tax cuts for the rich) and recent polls show Americans favor the
Presidents budget than the Republicans budget.
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880.2 | That was then, this is now, tomorrow is another day | EVMS::HALLYB | Fish have no concept of fire | Tue Jun 27 1995 09:30 | 13 |
| Interest rates are set by the market, though the Fed can influence
short-term rates via the discount rate and open market operations.
In case you haven't noticed, interest rates have come down significantly
in the past few months. The market believes \something/ will be done to
curtail future spending, even though the particulars have yet to be
ironed out.
The market works on anticipation. People have been buying "cheap" bonds
for some time now, expecting some fiscal reform. Don't look for further
interest rate declines on that news, it's old hat.
John
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880.3 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue Jun 27 1995 09:59 | 21 |
| > The market works on anticipation. People have been buying "cheap" bonds
> for some time now, expecting some fiscal reform. Don't look for further
> interest rate declines on that news, it's old hat.
The NBR and W$W guests they have on seem to believe the lower
interest rates and the bond rally are based not on expecting
some fiscal reform from Congress, but on expecting the Fed
to lower it's interest rate(s) (and when I say interest rates
in the context of the Fed it's implied I mean those short-term
rates the Fed does set [such as the interest banks charge
each other for overnight loans] :-)).
Some of these guests and/or analysts say the markets are in
for a correction even if the Fed does lower rates because
the markets have factored in that the Fed will be making
a large cut (like 1.5 points?) and such a large cut is
unlikely.
Of course I'm just repeating what I've heard, it doesn't make
any of it true (especially considering most of these guests
were very bearish at the start of the year!!).
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880.4 | The market had shot up 800+ points. | SOLVIT::CHEN | | Tue Jun 27 1995 13:13 | 14 |
| re: .0
The market has been breaking records and setting new all-time-high's.
(30+ times so far this year?) Definitely it's reacting to something.
And like John had pointed out, long-term interest rates are dropping.
You must've missed something.
Now, I have a question for next year. A presidential election year
usually is a uncertain year for the market. What do you people think
the market will do in 1996? Do you anticipate an up year, down year or
a boring year with alot of side-way moves? Do we have any statistics
for the past presidential election years?
Mike
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880.5 | | LABC::RU | | Tue Jun 27 1995 15:21 | 17 |
|
RE: .4
>Definitely it's reacting to something.
> And like John had pointed out, long-term interest rates are
>dropping. You must've missed something.
I know it has dropped for some time, but it is reacting to the
prospect of recession now(caused by the Fed raising rate last
year). I don't think the market is reaction to the effect of
budget cut yet. I don't think the Fed will cut rate next week
because of budget cut in congress. Fed is concern about the
recession now.
Do you really think Fed will cut rate on July 5? If it does,
the stock will fly even more. I won't if I was in the Fed.
By the way, the stock is up today.
|
880.6 | | NETRIX::michaud | Jeff Michaud, That Group | Tue Jun 27 1995 18:10 | 9 |
| > Do you really think Fed will cut rate on July 5? If it does,
> the stock will fly even more. I won't if I was in the Fed.
I wouldn't either at this point given what it will do to our
already weak dollar ......
> By the way, the stock is up today.
Which stock(s)?
|