Risks to our baseline: banks do not need
more central bank liquidity at the moment and even if they did, the ECB's refinancing operations continue to be conducted through fixed rate, full allotment procedures until at least end - 2017.
Not exact matches
But, over time, the longer
central banks create
liquidity to suppress short - run volatility, the
more they will feed price bubbles in equity, bond, and other asset markets.»
Would this article be published if TSLAs market cap was 1billion instead of ~ 50 billion.Of course not.TSLA is much less a story of innovation and technology and much
more one of a stock where rampant speculation resulting from
Central bank liquidity has pushed its stock to levels completely unrelated to its prospects as a company.Its silly stock market valuation allows it raise cash to keep the charade going much longer than the economics of its business would ever suggest.
Thereby, the increased dependence on
central bank liquidity may have weakened the resilience of markets, making them
more prone to a (small) shock, such as an adjustment of market expectations on monetary policy.
In recent years,
central banks have used quantitative easing to inject
more liquidity ostensibly into the economy.
It will, instead, manifest itself as a desire to hold
more of something with near - cash - like
liquidity that is not subject to arbitrary devaluation by
central banks and governments.
Step 1 is really the most basic and traditional element of
central banking, as
liquidity, broadly speaking here, is currency elasticity in its
more...
During a CNBC interview on Sept. 24, 2010, Tepper predicted that either the market would rally on strong fundamentals or the
central bank would inject
more liquidity into the financial system to boost equities.
What was supposed to be a
liquidity crisis soon turned into a full - blown solvency crisis due to the lack of a lender of last resort, or to be
more precise: the unwillingness of the European
Central Bank (ECB) to fill this void.
Overall, we think global growth, fiscal policy and organically derived forms of
liquidity will likely
more than offset the slow pace of
central bank tightening this year.
She believes current investment risks stem from a myriad of issues:
central banks starting to take out
liquidity, interest rates starting to go up,
more uncertainty in regards to economic numbers, tensions with growth, returning inflation and macroeconomic uncertainties.