9 comments

  • clearstack 11 hours ago

    5% on the 30-year raises the risk-free rate, which changes the equity discount rate. a 40x stock looks very different at 5% vs 2%. growth stocks re-rate when yields move

  • andsoitis 18 hours ago

    as debtor, you have to pay a higher price when the creditor's risk for non-payment increases. power of the market.

    • dlcarrier 18 hours ago

      The US can always print money; it's the expected inflation dictates the value of bonds.

      • nsvd2 12 hours ago

        Well, yes, but that's another way of saying the same thing. If the US can't pay and is forced to devalue their currency, thus tanking the value of your investment, you lose money. Therefore, the likelihood of this drives interest rates up.

  • ares623 18 hours ago

    What else happened in 2007?

    • dlcarrier 17 hours ago

      Nokia released the most useful phone ever sold: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maemo

      Enthusiasts were still using it a and releasing updates, over a decade later.

    • andsoitis 18 hours ago

      iPhone launch, the "Harry Potter" series finale, the Virginia Tech shooting, and the expansion of the European Union, amongst others.

      • ares623 17 hours ago

        All good omens (well except one). If history rhymes, I can rest easy.

        • lazide 13 hours ago

          Good thing ‘08 never happened eh?