Stocks and News
Home | Week in Review Process | Terms of Use | About UsContact Us
   Articles Go Fund Me All-Species List Hot Spots Go Fund Me
Week in Review   |  Bar Chat    |  Hot Spots    |   Dr. Bortrum    |   Wall St. History
Stock and News: Hot Spots
  Search Our Archives: 
 

 

Wall Street History

https://www.gofundme.com/s3h2w8

AddThis Feed Button

   

05/15/2015

QE in the Eurozone, Part II

[Posted 5/11 PM...but dated differently for archival reasons]

QE in the Eurozone

Update on my 4/3/15 piece on eurozone bond yields over the past year, as well as the change since the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing (QE) program formally went into effect on March 9. [So I’ll note the yield the Friday before, March 6] I include non-euro Britain, the U.S. and Japan for comparison.

The reason for the update is the extreme volatility we have witnessed the past 10 days or so. Thursday, 5/7/15, in particular was wild, so I list the intraday high yields for that day, and then the close for Monday, 5/11/15.

10-year yields...3/31/14...3/6/15...I-5/7/15*...5/11/15

*Intraday

Germany 1.57 (3/31/14)...0.39 (3/6/15)...0.96 (I-5/7/15)... 0.61 (5/11/15)
France 2.08... 0.69... 1.08... 0.90
Italy 3.29... 1.31... 2.04... 1.76
Spain 3.22... 1.29... 2.00... 1.74
Portugal 4.06... 1.74... 2.73... 2.33
Netherlands 1.91... 0.43... 0.93... 0.79
Greece 6.25... 9.09... 11.23... 10.56

Britain 2.74... 1.95... 2.07... 1.95
Japan 0.63... 0.39... 0.44... 0.39
United States 2.73... 2.24... 2.31... 2.26

You can see how rates moved down across the eurozone (save Greece) in anticipation of QE, but since the actual launch, rates are now rising.  As in so much for QE!!!

Greece, of course, is an outlier due to the renewal of its debt crisis.

*The euro yields may vary by a few basis points depending on your stat source. Mine is largely Bloomberg.com, as well as Investing.com.

Wall Street History will return in two weeks.

Brian Trumbore

 
 



AddThis Feed Button

 

-05/15/2015-      
Web Epoch NJ Web Design  |  (c) Copyright 2016 StocksandNews.com, LLC.

Wall Street History

05/15/2015

QE in the Eurozone, Part II

[Posted 5/11 PM...but dated differently for archival reasons]

QE in the Eurozone

Update on my 4/3/15 piece on eurozone bond yields over the past year, as well as the change since the European Central Bank’s quantitative easing (QE) program formally went into effect on March 9. [So I’ll note the yield the Friday before, March 6] I include non-euro Britain, the U.S. and Japan for comparison.

The reason for the update is the extreme volatility we have witnessed the past 10 days or so. Thursday, 5/7/15, in particular was wild, so I list the intraday high yields for that day, and then the close for Monday, 5/11/15.

10-year yields...3/31/14...3/6/15...I-5/7/15*...5/11/15

*Intraday

Germany 1.57 (3/31/14)...0.39 (3/6/15)...0.96 (I-5/7/15)... 0.61 (5/11/15)
France 2.08... 0.69... 1.08... 0.90
Italy 3.29... 1.31... 2.04... 1.76
Spain 3.22... 1.29... 2.00... 1.74
Portugal 4.06... 1.74... 2.73... 2.33
Netherlands 1.91... 0.43... 0.93... 0.79
Greece 6.25... 9.09... 11.23... 10.56

Britain 2.74... 1.95... 2.07... 1.95
Japan 0.63... 0.39... 0.44... 0.39
United States 2.73... 2.24... 2.31... 2.26

You can see how rates moved down across the eurozone (save Greece) in anticipation of QE, but since the actual launch, rates are now rising.  As in so much for QE!!!

Greece, of course, is an outlier due to the renewal of its debt crisis.

*The euro yields may vary by a few basis points depending on your stat source. Mine is largely Bloomberg.com, as well as Investing.com.

Wall Street History will return in two weeks.

Brian Trumbore