It is a transcribed excerpt of the “Bitcoin Journal Podcast,” hosted by P and Q. On this episode, they’re joined by James Lavish to speak about gross home product, the bond market and the way currencies are measured.
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James Lavish: GDP (gross home product) is so necessary to see simply how a lot debt your nation has versus how a lot you are producing, and that is changing into a evident and actually major problem in Europe. It is change into a tremendously major problem in Europe they usually realize it. That is why the European Central Financial institution simply raised charges for the primary time in 11 years.
They have been unfavourable that entire time. So now they’re at zero. They’re at a zero rate of interest they usually have this downside. What do you assume is gonna occur? The union has to interrupt up. The writing’s on the wall. It is clear. You are seeing each a flight of capital from Europe into the U.S. greenback as a result of each the yield — the U.S. Treasurys offer you way more yield than you get in European Treasurys and German Treasurys, even). There is a flight to security. You need your cash in {dollars}. You do not need your cash in euros in case you’re a serious investor. So, for these traders, and people establishments which have the leeway to personal a certain quantity of foreign-denominated securities and debt, they’re going to do as a lot as they’ll as a result of it is a flight to security and a flight to yield.
You are seeing the identical factor occur in Japan. We have talked about that earlier than, the place Japan is doing the identical factor, unabashedly. They’re shopping for their 10-year treasuries and protecting that yield at 25 foundation factors. They’re protecting that yield low so as to preserve energizing the economic system. The issue is, as you retain that yield artificially low, then you might have traders taking a look at yields elsewhere, just like the U.S. and saying, “Okay, nicely I can get a greater yield there. And so why am I going to remain right here, proudly owning these treasuries, when the Financial institution of Japan will purchase them up, preserve their yields low and I might as an alternative go get 3% in a 10-year Treasury within the U.S.?”
Properly, that forces you to promote yen-denominated bonds. Take your yen, promote these for {dollars} and purchase the U.S. Treasurys. So it places large stress on the yen.
You have seen the yen simply spike, that means it’s an inverse quote. So, once you see it go up from 120 or 115 as much as 137, that is the yield getting weaker. That is the yen getting weaker; that is the variety of yen per greenback. One of many issues with currencies — I wrote one thing about this too — is that they are quoted in all other ways. You have bought inverse quotes in a few of them, like GDP and yen.