Historically, I know that in the 70s inflation did a similar thing to today where it felt then bullwhipped right back.
Recent rise in yields are seeing long duration treasuries in the 4-4.5% range. Add to that the recent uplift in GDP forecasting and the re-acceleration of home purchases, and oil volatility with OPEC continuing production cuts and a war with Russia that doesn’t seem to end that’s constraining supply of commodities comparative to Russia being open to the world.
How are we not headed for a bullwhip affect forcing a Volcker style response? Someone please prove me wrong because I want to be badly as a heavy investors in bond ETFs.
[link] [comments] https://www.reddit.com/r/stocks/comments/15t6at1/are_we_headed_for_another_1970s_style_great/
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