"Thought a 25-year lock-up was a long-term investment? How about 100 years?
Ok, it’s not quite the same, but BlackRock’s Peter Fisher is recommending the US Treasury start selling 100-year bonds.
His reasoning? From Bloomberg:
“If you issued a 100-year bond and had principal and interest pay down smoothly over the last 50 years, you create a great borrowing device for the Treasury that would let us move this hump of borrowing over the generational retirement that’s coming up,” Fisher, managing director and co-head of fixed income at BlackRock in New York, said in a Bloomberg Radio interview.
Note that these would be different to the war bonds discussed here yesterday. The war bonds, or perpetuals, issued by the British government, have no maturity date — they continue paying coupons forever. Fisher’s bonds, as outlined above, would start really paying out (interest and principal) after 50 years. The US government will have moved the debt burden from one generation to the next.
Will Fisher, currently in his 50s, be around in another 50 years? Probably not. But much of the FT Alphaville team will (hopefully) — possibly still paying taxes, so we’re none too enthused about this particular idea. Mish at Mish’s Global Economic Trend Analysis is not very impressed either:
Sadly, I am confident that many Keynesian and Monetarist currency cranks will be quick to support Fisher’s perpetual motion idea on the grounds ‘we will owe the money to ourselves’ or some other nonsensical reason. In fact, they will probably want to spend the ’savings’ in interest for other proposals. The whole thing makes as much sense as me sticking an IOU in my piggy bank for $1 billion and attempting to spend it."
Of all the nerve. Let's mash Mish, if you don't mind. Her whole line of argument is a mishmash. It's a deucedly fine idea to get people buying bonds and funding the government to pay for its expenses, in a time of zero, I repeat, zero interest. Well, we're almost there. Turns out we've been keeping our powder dry.
"Fisher of course, besides being MD of fixed income at BlackRock, was also Treasury undersecretary from 2001-2003. During that time, he eliminated auctions of 30-year bonds — currently the US’s longest-dated security, to help reduce government borrowing costs following four years of surpluses. Interestingly, the US hasn’t had a surplus since — even after reviving 30-year sales in 2006.Also of note, is that 100-year bonds have been here before, notably among corporates like Walt Disney, Coca-Cola, Ford and the Canadian Pacific Corporation (which, amazingly, actually did a 1,000-year bond). They’ve been popular too — Ford’s sold out within 25 minutes, according to the Bloomberg story.
So will the Treasury’s be as successful? Yields on shorter-term bonds are collapsing and there’s still a general flight to “safe investments,” suggesting investors –those with a very long-term view– might well look upon the idea favourably. Pity us youngsters if it does. "
Pity us old codgers who believed that the younger generation would appreciate all the sacrifices we've made for it. Running up bubbles just so you could buy the things that the ads told you that you needed.
Here's my comment:
Posted by Don the libertarian Democrat [report]Firstly, Does anyone know if I can buy Perpetuals?
Second, I want everyone behind this 100 yr bond idea because I want to buy some.
Third, I'd like the Fed to create US Perpetuals, because I'd like to buy some.
Are you all telling me you're more frightened of the future than the generation that was fighting WW I?
By the way, I'd buy them because I plan on sticking around for a very long time indeed. That's why I want Perpetuals.
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