For the first time in history, Germany issued long term bonds with a zero percent coupon rate on Wednesday. The demand reveals the deep concerns investors have about the euro zone and their desire for a safe place to park their capital -- even if it costs them money to do so.
Germany's Bundesbank successfully issued two-year bonds offering a zero pecent interest rate.
Бунт (посредством польск. bunt — то же (с XVII в.) от нем. Bund — соединение, союз, связка)
?
Ne tas.
×buntãjyti, -ija, -ijo (plg. l. buntowác?) tr. paikinti, vilioti, gundyti, suvedžioti: Jinai buntãjijo, kol išbuntãjijo savo sesę, mano vaikus ir šeimyną J.
Deutsche Bundesbank bus subuntajinęs tarptautinių rinkų investuotojus, ne kitaip, jei jau anie savo sąskaita į jojo bondus investuoja.
Kur jau mums su savo obligacijom...
You might think that record low bond yields in the U.S. and in Europe’s safer nations would have a floor of zero percent. Afterall, you cannot have a negative bond yield. Or can you? Reports were out earlier this year that a Treasury TIPS auction, the bonds and notes that adjust with inflation through time, managed to go off with a yield of just under zero percent. Now we have seen that German bund (bond) yields went under the zero-point-zero mark.
Gal kam under the zero-point-zero ir neįprasta.
Pripras.
Investors are also nervous about the macro picture.
Keista.
Ko nervuotis?
Europos centrinis bankas – finansuojamas Vokietijos padengtomis euroobligacijomis, paprasčiausiai.
Laikraščius reikia skaityt.
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