sherpa Posted April 23 Posted April 23 Just bought a 100k CD for our vol fire dept. Six months. 4.1%. Yield curve still inverted. Nothing close to 5% available unless you go full lunatic, and even then, not available.
Joe Ferguson forever Posted April 27 Posted April 27 (edited) On 4/23/2025 at 6:44 PM, sherpa said: Six months. 4.1% we were discussing 10 year. big difference. https://ycharts.com/indicators/10_year_treasury_rate 4.79 in Jan 25. Edited April 27 by Joe Ferguson forever 1
Joe Ferguson forever Posted April 27 Posted April 27 (edited) 6 hours ago, Big Blitz said: perhaps that's because rates are still quite high and trump is caving on many fronts, most importantly the fed chair and China... https://www.wsj.com/politics/elections/the-never-surrender-president-retreats-9b82807e Edited April 27 by Joe Ferguson forever 1
US Egg Posted April 27 Posted April 27 …..if caving is what it takes, so be it. Last couple months have reshaped my immediate future plans. 1
Joe Ferguson forever Posted April 27 Posted April 27 28 minutes ago, US Egg said: …..if caving is what it takes, so be it. Last couple months have reshaped my immediate future plans. it would be much better for the economy if he had a coherent, consistent plan. but hopefully he sees the error in the tariffs. ridiculous plan. navarro belongs in a psych hospital. 1
US Egg Posted April 27 Posted April 27 1 minute ago, Joe Ferguson forever said: it would be much better for the economy if he had a coherent, consistent plan. but hopefully he sees the error in the tariffs. ridiculous plan. navarro belongs in a psych hospital. Things are bad. That’s putting it mildly. My financial “pain threshold” isn’t what I thought….and what kind of advice is that? First time I saw/heard Navarro I thought uh-oh! 1
AlBUNDY4TDS Posted Monday at 05:04 PM Posted Monday at 05:04 PM 4 minutes ago, Homelander said: Ah yes, axios. The beacon of truth.
sherpa Posted Monday at 05:21 PM Posted Monday at 05:21 PM i often wonder if people who post here actually follow markets. Moodys should have done this years ago, and certainly no later that the "Inflation Reduction Act." Treasuries are fine. The bond market is fine. 1
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