Bund, TBond e i Dannati del carry trade. (VM 91) (2 lettori)

masgui

Forumer storico
dan24 ha scritto:
Grazies Masgquiidudoa....che qui oramai è un 3d di busoni :D :D

se apre Iddu....il rekkia per eccellenza io apro un nuovo forum e faccio concorrenza a IO :D :D

VOTO absolutily..MASQGSUISIDU


:-o

Fleu è fuori per una quindicina di giorni. (mi pare)
Voto F4f....

Quindi: F4F 1 VOTO
MASGUI 1 VOTO
FLEU 1 VOTO

Forza signori votare....
 

f4f

翠鸟科
leo-kondor ha scritto:
no, non figlioli grandini, la mia ha 4 anni e 1/2... però l'ho lasciata con mamma a casa e io solo soletto, pop corn e jack sparrow :D

8 e 12
il maschiett' di 12 è bello intrippato
si va in barca a vela insieme questa estate
azz', l'anno scorso sono uscito con lui e con una tramontana ... non se lo scorderà finchè campa :lol: :lol:

perchè, una barca, ovunque vorremo andare andremo,una nave è questo che è. Non è solo uno scafo con una chiglia e un pontile,sì,la nave è fatta così,ma ciò che una nave è...ciò che la Perla Nera è in realtà...è libertà :cool:


Sono solo due le cose che contano davvero in mare: quello che un uomo può, e quello che uomo non può


dicevano i greci:
ci sono tre tipi di uomini
i vivi, i morti e i marinai :cool:


alllloraaaa
veru, Fleu un c'è per 15gg
alora .... voto per Gastro che è un pò che nun apre
mò lo ciamo :p
 

gipa69

collegio dei patafisici
Who knew that the Sundays, an English indie band that broke up in 1997, were so popular in China? On the same day that Macro Man quoted one of their songs in reference to the end of the Chinese stock market bubble, darned if the authorities didn’t raise the stamp duty on transactions from 0.1% to 0.3%, prompting a 6.5% decline in Shanghai A shares and 9% drop in B shares.

Of course, this pullback took the year-to-date gains in A and B shares to 51% and 133%, respectively- still pretty heady stuff. And when you’re playing for those kind of serious returns, does it really matter if the cost of trading rises from a fraction of a percent to a slightly larger fraction of a percent?

Macro Man would not have thought so, but history suggests otherwise. Two previous stamp duty hikes have provoked bone-crunching declines in Chinese equities. In 1992, the imposition of a 0.3% stamp duty was followed by a 70% decline. In 1997, a rise in the duty from 0.3% to 0.5% was followed by a 75% decline (as well as the Asian currency crisis, coincidentally.)

Ultimately, with Chinese equity volatility this high, and participation so widespread, the rise in the duty should have little impact. Macro Man saw one estimate based on turnover data that the rise in the stamp duty would cost punters 2.8% per year: fairly small beer for indices that move as much as China’s. Yet it is often the last straw that breaks the camel’s back, especially when risk premia are as low as they are at present. Ironically, the US market could be a (relative) star performer if the China malaise were to last for more than a day, given the large short interest on the NYSE and the market’s reported affinity for long Europe/short US spread trades.

Elsewhere, the ongoing squeeze in funding currencies (the yen excepted) certainly suggests that markets are cruising for a bruising. Fortunately for Macro Man, even the squeezes are getting squeezed, and the SGD 1 year payer position is now comfortably in profit.

As has been the case for much of the past few weeks, Macro Man is torn between tactical concerns on risky assets and more structural bullishness. News that Russia is formally drafting legislation to allow the state pension fund to purchase domestic equities, erstwhile rock stars that have fallen on hard times recently, is emblematic of the underlying demand for risky assets from sovereigns as well as private sector investors. And lest anyone doubt whether emerging markets are providers of liquidity and/or running overly loose monetary policies, have a look at Russia’s year-on-year M2 growth:


At 57% y/y, is it any wonder that Russians have so much money to play around in equities, commodities, and foreign exchange?


andamento della borsa Cinese dopo i precedenti rialzo dei costi di transazione.
1180521514b%2bshares,%2bwith%2bstamp%2buty.jpg



andamento dell'M2 russo
1180521550rus%2bm2.jpg
 

f4f

翠鸟科
gipa69 ha scritto:
Who knew that the Sundays, an English indie band that broke up in 1997, were so popular in China? On the same day that Macro Man quoted one of their songs in reference to the end of the Chinese stock market bubble, darned if the authorities didn’t raise the stamp duty on transactions from 0.1% to 0.3%, prompting a 6.5% decline in Shanghai A shares and 9% drop in B shares.

Of course, this pullback took the year-to-date gains in A and B shares to 51% and 133%, respectively- still pretty heady stuff. And when you’re playing for those kind of serious returns, does it really matter if the cost of trading rises from a fraction of a percent to a slightly larger fraction of a percent?

Macro Man would not have thought so, but history suggests otherwise. Two previous stamp duty hikes have provoked bone-crunching declines in Chinese equities. In 1992, the imposition of a 0.3% stamp duty was followed by a 70% decline. In 1997, a rise in the duty from 0.3% to 0.5% was followed by a 75% decline (as well as the Asian currency crisis, coincidentally.)

Ultimately, with Chinese equity volatility this high, and participation so widespread, the rise in the duty should have little impact. Macro Man saw one estimate based on turnover data that the rise in the stamp duty would cost punters 2.8% per year: fairly small beer for indices that move as much as China’s. Yet it is often the last straw that breaks the camel’s back, especially when risk premia are as low as they are at present. Ironically, the US market could be a (relative) star performer if the China malaise were to last for more than a day, given the large short interest on the NYSE and the market’s reported affinity for long Europe/short US spread trades.

Elsewhere, the ongoing squeeze in funding currencies (the yen excepted) certainly suggests that markets are cruising for a bruising. Fortunately for Macro Man, even the squeezes are getting squeezed, and the SGD 1 year payer position is now comfortably in profit.

As has been the case for much of the past few weeks, Macro Man is torn between tactical concerns on risky assets and more structural bullishness. News that Russia is formally drafting legislation to allow the state pension fund to purchase domestic equities, erstwhile rock stars that have fallen on hard times recently, is emblematic of the underlying demand for risky assets from sovereigns as well as private sector investors. And lest anyone doubt whether emerging markets are providers of liquidity and/or running overly loose monetary policies, have a look at Russia’s year-on-year M2 growth:


At 57% y/y, is it any wonder that Russians have so much money to play around in equities, commodities, and foreign exchange?


:eek:
apprendo or ora ( e ammetto la grave ignoranza) dei A e B shares
e commento con un amico ;) la qualità dei commenti di un certo ligure :p
ed ecco il commento ad hoc :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek: :eek:

mi hai intercettato la telefonata?
ma quante azioni Telecom hai ????? :p :p :p :p
 

f4f

翠鸟科
gipa69 ha scritto:
andamento della borsa Cinese dopo i precedenti rialzo dei costi di transazione.
Immagine sostituita con URL per un solo Quote: http://www.investireoggi.it/phpBB2/immagini/1180521514b+shares,+with+stamp+uty.jpg


andamento dell'M2 russo
Immagine sostituita con URL per un solo Quote: http://www.investireoggi.it/phpBB2/immagini/1180521550rus+m2.jpg

cioè, quazzo,
hai già le risposte per le domande che non sono stato ancora così smart da aver immaginato? :eek:

sei due 2 passi avanti a me :rolleyes:
 

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