"When the Federal Reserve gets out of the Treasury market on June 30th, the question becomes who will buy them at these yields, and I don’t know who would." Gross, incidentally, has put his money where his mouth is by making a big and very public play against Treasurys.I'd take the Fed even though Gross is a player. The Fed can print money without an ensuing wage-price inflation spiral and the US government can raise taxes very easily if it has to. There are a lot of profitable US businesses. It could even stick it to China which would hurt some politcally-connected US firms and yet benefit the national economy as a whole.
Added:
Stocks, Flows, and Pimco (Wonkish) by Krugman
... If you believe that it is obvious that rates will spike as soon as QE2 ends, you have to ask why investors aren’t moving out of US debt now in anticipation; you don’t have to believe in efficient markets to believe that totally obvious gains or losses will be anticipated.
I’d also add that if flows matter a lot -- if it’s hard to persuade investors to buy a suddenly increased quantity of newly issued Treasuries per month, as opposed to being willing to hold the total amount of Treasuries outstanding -- the big shift into budget deficits and the corresponding increase in Treasury issuance should have led to sharply rising interest rates.
And as you may recall, some people did predict just that -- and ended up not just with egg on their faces, but losing a lot of money for their investors.
So I don’t buy the notion that rates are low only because the Fed is doing QE2; if there were really a problem with the marketability of US debt, rates would be high regardless. And so I don’t expect rates to spike when QE2 ends unless there’s good economic news that gives us a reason to believe that the zero-rate policy on short-term rates will end sooner than expected.My estimation of Bill Gross just took a hit.
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