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Interest rates in the US will remain near zero, could go negative

Interest rates in the US will remain near zero, could go negative

Money Life with Chuck Jaffe · Money Life with Chuck Jaffe

March 31, 20201h 0m

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Show Notes

Steve Friedman, senior macroeconomist at MacKay Shields, says the global fixed-income picture is such that investors are going to see rates near zero and potentially going negative in the U.S., an unprecedented move that is necessary because 'the economy is coming to a sudden stop,' forcing central bankers to maintain liquidity and income investors to diversify broadly. Before that Big Interview, however, Mark Newton of Newton Advisors says the market's technicals indicate that the market's recent upswing tick is a 'short-term rally within an existing downtrend' meaning another leg down is in the offing, particularly if the market can't rally to and hold 2,792, a key support level on the Standard and Poor's 500. Also on the show, Ted Rossman of CreditCards.com talks about the existing level of credit-card debt faced by Americans entering the coronavirus economy and how that will hold challenges and change behaviors as financial pressures mount, and, in the Market Call, Eric Boughton of Matisse Capital says that closed-end fund discounts are at record levels, making 'nearly everything' a buy for investors who can stomach heightened risks.