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    Usa "government bonds" in una frase

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    government bonds


    1. In fact, since government bonds are considered so low-risk, the asset you sell might be expected, though there are no guarantees, to earn more than the interest charges on the debt


    2. Indians stopped buying government bonds, set up community based arbitration tribunals and stopped going to government run courts for legal disputes


    3. • Collection of Government Bonds


    4. So back he went to the bank with all his instructions: cheques for the broker and Darlington's, and his traveler’s cheques, most of the rest to go into Government and Semi Government bonds at the manager's earliest convenience


    5. I invested most of it in government bonds


    6. government bonds of varying maturities (short-, intermediate-, and long-term)


    7. Yet operations of a definitely speculative nature may be carried on in United States government bonds (e


    8. This 3½% return appears substantially higher than the 2½% obtainable from long-term United States government bonds and also more attractive than the 2 or 2½% offered by savings banks


    9. Objectively considered, investment experience of the last decade undoubtedly points away from the fixed-value security field and into the direction of (1) United States government bonds or savings-bank deposits; or (2) admittedly speculative operations, with endeavors to reduce risk and increase profits by means of skillful effort; or (3) a search for the exceptional combination of safety of principal with a chance for substantial profit


    10. We believe that United States government bonds, carrying exemption from corporate income taxes, are almost the only logical medium for such business funds as may properly be invested for a term of years

    11. 7 A parallel situation existed in the case of Davis Coal and Coke Company prior to the distribution of $50 per share to stockholders out of its large holdings of government bonds in 1937–1938


    12. guarantee, and virtually the only tax-exempt issues that are equivalent to government bonds


    13. This sounds like a plan, but to entice China and other foreign countries to continue sending money to the United States, the interest rates must increase on the government bonds


    14. But now that we’ve had Greece, Spain, and other nations teetering on default—or, like Argentina, plunging over the edge—foreign government bonds have become a riskier deal


    15. When it comes to the All Weather approach, the biggest question from the bloggers is: What happens when interest rates go up? Won’t the government bonds go down and cause a loss to the portfolio because of the large percentage allocated to bonds?


    16. ” Why the sudden death? Because when the rule came into existence, government bonds were paying over 4%, and stocks were riding the bull! If you retired in January 2000, and you followed the traditional 4% rule, you would have lost 33% of your money by 2010, and, according to T


    17. 2:• Starting with the asset class perspective, I will cover all traditional asset classes (equities, government bonds, credits) plus many alternative ones (including real estate, commodities, hedge funds, and private equity)


    18. 4%) higher than that of long-term government bonds (short-dated Treasury bills)


    19. Conversely, safe haven assets (such as long-term government bonds, at least since the late 1990s) that smooth portfolio returns in bad times deserve a low risk premium


    20. The message from these valuation measures in early 2009 was that corporate bonds were historically cheap and government bonds historically expensive, while equities and real estate were rather normally valued

    21. Hedged global government bonds had an SR near one, partly due to the yield decline, but also because they enjoyed several structural benefits


    22. Adjusting for the annualized gains from sharp yield falls between 1985 and 2009, the SR for hedged global government bonds would be close to 0


    23. In most countries, government bonds still have the lowest yields, but it is no longer unthinkable to see government yields rising above high-quality corporate yields


    24. , government bonds) may even have negative risk premia over cash


    25. The most common are promised coupons and principal payments of bonds, and dividends of equities:• Government bonds are typically assumed to be default free; thus their expected cash flows equal promised cash flows


    26. It is harder to explain the performance of government bonds since the 1980s as an equilibrium outcome, given the combination of a high Sharpe ratio and a wonderful diversification/hedging role


    27. This chapter will not cover asset-pricing theories tailored for particular asset classes, such as government bonds (term structure of interest rates), credits, real estate, commodities, and currencies


    28. Government bonds have been excellent safe haven assets since the late 1990s, but they were anything but safe havens during the inflationary recessions of the 1970s (see Chapter 7)


    29. 8 shows the relative return volatility of 10-year government bonds and of the stock market index, measured by 15-year moving standard deviations


    30. • The stock–bond correlation tracks government bonds’ hedging ability almost in real time

    31. Then, during the past decade, the stock–bond correlation reached its most negative level ever, reflecting government bonds’ role as the ultimate safe haven assets (see Figure 9


    32. We cannot be sure that negative correlation will prevail but we do know that it has sustained government bonds’ high valuations in the past decade


    33. Evolving perceptions of the credit risk of swaps and government bonds over time have also played a role


    34. Recently some observers have emphasized swaps’ off-balance-sheet nature, a factor that could justify swaps’ richness against government bonds that require capital outlays


    35. ) As expected, equity markets and other risky assets respond positively to news of strong economic growth, while government bonds benefit from news of weak growth [3]


    36. Nominal government bonds have a consistently negative inflation beta


    37. inflation-indexed government bonds, had been introduced in the early 1980s): the IRP should make BEI exceed survey-based inflation expectations


    38. Nominal government bonds are the most obvious hedges—but even they may be less than fully effective if a deflationary recession raises market concerns about sovereign creditworthiness


    39. As a good approximation, corporates can be financed at deposit rates (such as LIBOR) while government bonds can be financed at repo rates, which are lower: either the general collateral (GC) rate or the even lower special repo rate


    40. For government bonds (and interest rate swaps), the implied forward curve next year shows how much the yield curve has to shift to make all bonds earn the same return as a one-year bond (presumably deemed riskless by an investor with a one-year time horizon)

    41. In unpublished analysis, I find that the results for German Bunds (government bonds) are comparable with those for U


    42. Government bonds are expected to deliver near 0% annual real returns, but 2


    43. In contrast, government bonds have earned low returns early in the year and high returns in the autumn


    44. It is not clear what will work in the 2010s; I stress the possibility that government bonds will lose their safe haven status


    45. government bonds earned only modest returns over the past 82 years, turning $10,000 into $60,942 and $64,028, respectively


    46. These funds are chiefly invested in mortgages in the city and State of New York and in Government bonds


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