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Posted by Elle on June 1, 2008, 8:31 pm
> The phrase in the subject line used to come up in this
> group fairly often over the last few years, I haven't seen
> it lately.
>
> Not having cracked open an economics textbook in decades,
> I'm wondering, first: are we no longer in that situation?
According to the following two sites, for about two months
now the curve has clearly been not inverted:
http://www.smartmoney.com/onebond/index.cfm?story=yieldcurve
http://www.investinginbonds.com/
Go back to March, and the curve becomes somewhat anomalous
again.
> Second, was the inverted yield curve of the recent past
> truly the indicator it was thought to be (recession, or
> whatever)?
I think the theory that an inverted yield curve precedes a
recession relies somewhat on numerology. Or one could say it
is economics, so the rules are not hard and fast.
> It's been a long time since I've had to even think about
> putting cash in a CD with a term
> longer than 18 months, I'm kinda rusty...
The talk is that the Fed will raise rates again "soon" to
try to prevent further inflation. I think I would wait until
five year rates were back up to at least 5%. Or buy really
short term CDs. Or do the ladder (say six-month rungs,
longest, five years), since historically, the curve flattens
out again beyond five years.
If you can stand the risk, yields on some conservative
stocks look pretty good, with many having a nice rate of
increase.
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