3chordcharlie
Diamond Member
- Mar 30, 2004
- 9,859
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Originally posted by: BansheeX
If expected inflation increases, what happens to the value of existing bonds?
They lose value because the old nominal yield becomes overwhelmed by depreciation. But what's the difference between a debtor not paying and paying counterfeit? Inflation from government debtors is akin to private default, it's two sides of the same coin. Clearly, if that were to happen, it exposes the fact that interest rates at the time were not sufficiently calculating the future risk of default/inflation. How could all that lending at a centrally fixed 1% possibly result in anything less? Everything that our government borrowed from foreign savers via bond sales was being spent on imports and domestic goods and services. How do you repay a loan that way unless you (a) borrow more or (b) counterfeit the repayment? If a loan is enabled by forgoing immediate consumption of a certain amount of present goods, the repaid loan should be capable of buying even more goods, otherwise the loan would be of no greater benefit than immediate consumption. Higher rates or hyperinflation was inevitable. Which is exactly why the bond market right now is a massive bubble, because the effects of quantitative easing will soon make themselves known and point out how idiotic it was to be purchasing treasuries at these rates.
Believe it or not, there are a lot of factors that affect inflation.
There is also no single, correct interest rate, or even 'real rate of return' which you're alluding to in your post.
