九刺客
vip
Lately, there has been a lot of discussion about whether the Fed will cut interest rates in September or October, and also about whether it will be a 25 basis point cut or a 50 basis point cut.
Being entangled in these meanings is not significant. These are actually just phenomena. The key is to understand the 'trend' behind the phenomena - the arrival of the global pump-priming era!

First of all, the United States has a debt of over 35 trillion, and it's a struggle just to pay the Interest every year.
How can such a large volume still? point shaving is the best answer for debt restructuring.

For example, if you owed someone 2,000 yuan in 1990, you might have thought you would never be able to pay it back in your lifetime. But now? 2,000 yuan may not be a big deal. The only option is to continue with loose monetary policy, further interest rate cuts, and continued quantitative easing.
In addition, Europe has been plagued by the US dollar's interest rate hikes, the Russia-Ukraine conflict, and the Israeli-Palestinian issue in recent years. In order to seek safe havens, capital has been drained, and public debt remains high. Germany has announced a 50% reduction in aid to Ukraine, and the French Olympic Games are also being frugal. The European Central Bank has already cut interest rates ahead of the United States.
In the past two days, there has been a significant amount of funds buying in at the end of the trading day.
Before the leading index supporting the accelerated adjustment, such as the leading in electricity, the three barrels of oil, the four major banks, the operators, the expressways... The dumping of these strong group stocks seems more like creating the final panic, and then collecting another wave of unstable chips. Of course, a key constraint on the market's stabilization now is insufficient confidence, with a trading volume of less than 500 billion in the two markets enough to indicate the current market's pessimism. Excessive optimism is a risk, and so is excessive pessimism.

It's difficult to sell in a crowded market, and it's equally difficult to buy when there is no interest. However, this is often the difficult but correct choice.
What do you think of the interest rate cut?
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