Words sometimes lose their meaning over time. This happened to the word “disinterested.” It originally meant “to be objective, not influenced by personal interest,” as in the sentence: The judge ...
In the post below, I posited that conditions were favorable for an inversion to occur. It's now a reality. Read on to gain insight into what this might mean in terms of financial planning and ...
While predicting recessions is difficult at best, the U.S. Treasury yield curve has been a relatively reliable indicator in the past. Specifically, the three-month Treasury bill and the 10-year ...
Wall Street got a wake-up call Wednesday morning as the yield curve inverted, sparking concerns the U.S. economy could be headed for recession. To understand what it means when the yield curve inverts ...
Inversion of control is a software design principle that asserts a program can benefit in terms of pluggability, testability, usability and loose coupling if the management of an application's flow is ...
An "inverted yield curve" is a financial phenomenon that has historically signaled an approaching recession. Longer-term bonds typically offer higher returns, or yields, to investors than shorter-term ...
AS NAMES for market phenomena go, “inverted yield curve” lacks a certain punch. It is no “death cross” or “vomiting camel”. But what it lacks in panache, the inverted yield curve more than makes up ...
The bond market appears to be issuing a clear warning to the broader market, but some economists say that not all fixed-income alarm bells are created equal. The 10-year Treasury note yield fell below ...