Bloomberg:
- The spread between the rate to exchange floating for fixed interest payments and Treasury yields for two years fell to the lowest level since the global credit market rout began as risk aversion eases. The 2-year swap spread narrowed to 46.85 basis points, the lowest since August 2007, when the collapse of the subprime mortgage market triggered the worst financial crisis in decades. The spread, which is based in part on expectations for the London interbank offered rate, or Libor, and a gauge of investor perceptions of credit risk, reached a record 167.25 basis points in October. “The plunge in the two-year swap spread is very good news for risk assets,” said Michael Darda, chief economist at MKM Partners LP in Greenwich, Connecticut. “Swap spreads tend to lead the structure of other credit spreads over time. Forward Libor spreads are also collapsing and the Libor rate itself has moved to a record low of below 1%.”
- U.S. stocks may continue their two- month rally as investor appetite for risk returns, said Richard Bernstein, the former chief investment strategist at Bank of America Corp. “What’s happening is that we’re seeing a real rally and the world is not coming to an end,” Bernstein, 50, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview. “This rally has removed a lot of the risk aversion.”
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