+Vote!
Mortgage News Clips (Free subscription) | 9 hours ago
... Years of Solitude , 1995. Deutsche Bank’s 100 Years of Corporate Bond Returns Revisited , by Jim Reid, Nick Burns, and Adekunle Ademakinwa, is much more than "Bonds - Just Bonds." The 53 page document (the "Report") - filled with charts and tables - provides a comprehensive review of both nominal and real returns for US Corporate Bonds, Treasuries, Equities, Property, and Oil. My much shorter...
+Vote!
CFO (Free subscription) | 10/11/2008
... year in nominal terms. So why have Treasuries done so well in relative terms? The explanation, as Jim Reid of Deutsche Bank explains, lies in reversion to the mean.Asset classes can go through long periods when they underperform, leaving them cheap and ripe for revaluation. That happened to Treasury bonds, which suffered four consecutive decades of negative real returns from the 1940s through...
+Vote!
Rock Sellout (Free subscription) | 30/10/2008
... was Mark’s doing. He and i had been writing together for a while, and he and Loz were working with Jim Reid, and then the JAMC. So when Mark was offered a solo gig in Oxford last year, he asked if we fancied doing it as a 3 piece. It sounded like fun so we did it. I think we had an hours rehearsal and went for it. A couple of the tunes from that show are on youtube. Anyway, the three of...
+Vote!
Indian Express (Free subscription) | 24/10/2008
"There is now no safe haven globally other than a deeply indebted US government,'' said Jim Reid, head of fundamental credit strategy at Deutsche Bank AG in London. "The events of the last few days are categorical evidence of the globalization of the credit crunch and its subsequent problems.'' Ex-Soviet Belarus followed Iceland, Pakistan, Hungary and Ukraine in requesting emergency loans as...
+Vote!
Market Watch (Free subscription) | 23/10/2008
... stress, U.S. equities are not a great relative value trade even after the recent declines," said Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank. After data showing Japan's trade surplus slumped 94%, the Nikkei 225 fell 2.5% in Tokyo. The FTSE 100 couldn't hold initial gains and traded 2.4% lower in London. Weekly jobless claims rose 15,000 to 478,000. RealtyTrac, an online marketplace for foreclosure...
+Vote!
Market Watch (Free subscription) | 23/10/2008
"The phrase 'flight to quality' is a bit misleading. A more appropriate description would be 'flight to least bad' at the moment," said Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank. "With most other asset classes around the world now under varying degrees of stress, U.S. equities are not a great relative value trade even after the recent declines."