Do asset correlations
rise near peaks for risky assets?
Not exact matches
The cryptocurrency
rose more than 1,300 percent last year, reaching a
peak near $ 20,000 in December.
In the third quarter, the ratio of household debt to disposable income
rose to another record high of 165 %,
nearing the
peak of U.S. borrowing prior to the financial crisis.
After
rising steadily for two years, the chain's stock price
peaked near $ 58 last May and hasn't recovered since.
However, Tang notes that additional trends — such as
rising inflation and tightening monetary policy — suggest we're already
near a market
peak.
The Federal Housing Finance Agency reported that mortgage contract rates on purchases of newly built homes
rose by 11 basis points over the month of February to 4.14 percent,
near its last
peak level of 4.18 percent established one year ago in February 2017.
Lightly cover (with plastic wrap or a damp tea towel) and let
rise in a warm, draft - free place for 1 hour, or until it has
risen to
near a full loaf size, and the crown of the dough is
peaking about an inch above the pan.
If you take on more risk as the market
rises, you'll wind up owning your riskiest portfolio just when the market is
near a
peak.
Think of 1979 - 82: by the time bond yields were
nearing their
peak levels, bond managers were making money in nominal terms with rates
rising because the income from the coupons was so high, and it set up the tremendous rally in bonds that would last for ~ 30 years or so.
This article published on Space.com does show the 1500 year solar cycle does indeed affect world wide weather and with the last mini-ice age just 600 years ago it would seem logical that we are getting
nearer to a warming temperature
peak and thus world wide avgerage atmospheric temperature that is quoted so often «Should Be
Rising» now and for the next 100 to 300 years.
Most interesting is that the about monthly variations correlate with the lunar phases (
peak on full moon) The Helsinki Background measurements 1935 The first background measurements in history; sampling data in vertical profile every 50 - 100m up to 1,5 km; 364 ppm underthe clouds and above Haldane measurements at the Scottish coast 370 ppmCO2 in winds from the sea; 355 ppm in air from the land Wattenberg measurements in the southern Atlantic ocean 1925-1927 310 sampling stations along the latitudes of the southern Atlantic oceans and parts of the northern; measuring all oceanographic data and CO2 in air over the sea; high ocean outgassing crossing the warm water currents north (> ~ 360 ppm) Buchs measurements in the northern Atlantic ocean 1932 - 1936 sampling CO2 over sea surface in northern Atlantic Ocean up to the polar circle (Greenland, Iceland, Spitsbergen, Barents Sea); measuring also high CO2
near Spitsbergen (Spitsbergen current, North Cape current) 364 ppm and CO2 over sea crossing the Atlantic from Kopenhagen to Newyork and back (Brements on a swedish island Lundegards CO2 sampling on swedish island (Kattegatt) in summer from 1920 - 1926;
rising CO2 concentration (+7 ppm) in the 20s; ~ 328 ppm yearly average
Recent
peaks in that
near - constant
rise (1880, 1940, and 2000 - 2010 have always been followed by a flattened curve or decline, then a new
rise.
Among illustrative irreversible impacts that should be expected if atmospheric carbon dioxide concentrations increase from current levels
near 385 parts per million by volume (ppmv) to a
peak of 450 — 600 ppmv over the coming century are irreversible dry - season rainfall reductions in several regions comparable to those of the «dust bowl» era and inexorable sea level
rise.
Home prices, which are still below their 2006
peaks, have been
rising in the past couple of years, and economists do not see much risk of a significant drop in the
near term.