
“Traders have been piling into the nation’s debt ever since European Central Bank President Mario Draghi announced his intention to commence U.S.-style quantitative easing, a debt-buying program aimed at keeping yields low and goosing the financial markets with liquidity. ‘It’s just a question of when,’ Gross said during an interview on CNBC’s ‘Power Lunch.’ ‘It’s certainly a trade that doesn’t cost you anything in the short term, because it doesn’t yield anything and it has the ultimate potential of a 10 or 15 percent (return) over a one- or two-year period of time.'”
http://www.cnbc.com/id/102605761
Related posts:
San Francisco arrests under review after officers' slur-filled texts revealed
Cop's victim gets $795K after sexual assault in back seat of police car
Idea is floated for a start-up colony anchored in the Pacific Ocean
German court rules that ECB's 2012 bond-buying plan is legal
Virginia judge sentenced to 30 days for growing 41 marijuana plants
Britons with data on Amazon, Apple and Google cloud servers in America can be snooped on in secret b...
Are giant bubbles the key to beating Beijing’s pollution?
Neglect and decay threaten historic Algiers Kasbah
Muskogee Police Officer Arrested For Kidnapping, Sexual Assault
Principal, sheriff’s deputy sued after arresting student having seizure
Syria rebels fracturing as the Free Syrian Army condemns jihadists
Kids in solitary confinement: State-sponsored child abuse
Visa, Mastercard welcome Beijing's plans to free bank cards market
Man spends 2 years forgotten about in solitary after DWI arrest
Woman who killed officer in 1973 added to FBI’s ‘most wanted terrorist’ list