The week ended May 13th was the second largest ever increase , $34.735 billion, in marketable securities held in custody for foreign official and international accounts.
The week just ended was the 13th largest ever.
336 weekly data points, starting December 18th, 2002.
- Credit Default Swaps: What Are the Social Benefits and Costs?
- Summer Doldrums
- The International Role of the Euro
- Chronicle of Currency Collapses: Re-Examining the Effects on Output
- The Paradox of Toil
- Links
- What the Fed Did and Why
- Markets and Government Before, During and After the 2007-20xx Crisis
- Detecting and Interpreting Financial Stress in the Euro Area
- Are We Building the Foundations for the Next Crisis Already? The Case of Central Clearing
- Links
- Links
- OIS Discounting
- Multimarket Trading and the Cost of Debt: Evidence from Global Bonds
- Is Economics Coursework, or Majoring in Economics, Associated with Different Civic Behaviors?
- China’s High Saving Rate: Myth and Reality
- Oil Spill
- Eurozone €440 Bln SPV Aid Fund
- ECB Financial Accounts and ECB Financial Strength
- Central Bank Swap Networks
- DTCC Posts CDS Market Activity Snapshot
- ECB: Financial Stability Review (June 2010)
- Global CDO Issuance by Transaction Structure
- Links
- TBAC Minutes: Sovereign CDS and Swap Spreads
- Goldman Sachs Underwriting Market Shares in Subprime RMBS and CDOs
- Abacus for Dummies
- The World’s Safest and Riskiest Sovereign Debt (Update)
- Increased Sovereign Risk Behind Negative Swap Spreads
- Haircuts
- Markets, Religion, Community Size, and the Evolution of Fairness and Punishment
- Beyond the Dollar: Rethinking the International Monetary System
- Links
- Amazing Discovery
- ABCP Outstanding: Still Crashing
- Greek Government Bond Market
- Links
- Sterling Today
- Sovereign Risk Jolts Markets
- Monthly Trading Volumes in Greek Government Bonds
- Eurostat Statement on Greece’s Use of Derivatives
- The Bank Lending Channel Revisited
- The Future of Public Debt
- Systemic Risk: How To Deal With It?
- Links
- Papers => FRBNY
- Links
- Scariest Chart EVER: Loss Severity, Subprime First-Lien
- Google CDS => AAA
- Empty Creditor Claim
“This doesn’t seem logical.” It’s partly a flight to quality but mostly central bank buying (i.e., Brazil, Russia, etc.) in an effort to stem the rapid assent of their respective currencies. Expect the trend to continue but central bank intrevention seldom has a lasting affect.
Where else to go for seeming safety in size? Later it will be, “seemed like a good idea at the time…”
This doesn’t seem logical. Can someone explain why anybody would be buying treasuries now?