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Mean Reversion and Chronic Low Interest Rates
Mean Reversion and Chronic Low Interest Rates Chronically low interest rates are a reflection of macroeconomic trends. Care must be exercised in making assumptions regarding mean reversion.- Authors: Robert Crompton
- Date: Feb 2017
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge>External forces and business performance
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics
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What Makes the Yield Curve Move?
What Makes the Yield Curve Move? What Makes the Yield Curve Move? Discount rates=Interest rates;Inflation;Macroeconomics;Yield curve=Term structure; 11005 10/1/2003 12:00:00 AM ...- Authors: Tau Wu
- Date: Oct 2003
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics
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Taking Stock: What Ever Happened to the "Invisible Hand"?
Taking Stock: What Ever Happened to the "Invisible Hand"? The article makes reference to how the intervention by government agencies and institutions into the financial marketplace ...- Authors: Nino A Boezio
- Date: Feb 2016
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge; Strategic Insight and Integration>Big picture view; Strategic Insight and Integration>Effective decision-making; Strategic Insight and Integration>Influence decisions; Strategic Insight and Integration>Strategy development; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving>Innovative solutions; Technical Skills & Analytical Problem Solving>Problem analysis and definition
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Financial economics; Economics>Financial markets; Economics>Macroeconomics; Enterprise Risk Management>Strategic risks; Enterprise Risk Management>Systematic risk; Enterprise Risk Management>Systemic risk
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A 99-Year Prospective Test of an Interest-Rate Theory
A 99-Year Prospective Test of an Interest-Rate Theory The author describes a theory of long-term interest-rate trends, originally propounded in 1899 by actuary Charlton T. Lewis, and how well the ...- Authors: Daniel Case
- Date: Oct 1998
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics
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What One Can Learn from the Bank of Canada
What One Can Learn from the Bank of Canada In this article the author argues that a falling currency is a symptom of a country’s economic problems and discusses Canada’s experience through late ...- Authors: Nino A Boezio
- Date: Oct 1998
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics; Public Policy
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Negative Externality: A Framework for Contemplating Systemic Risk
Negative Externality: A Framework for Contemplating Systemic Risk Applies the economic concept of negative externality (where firms profit but create unacceptable social costs) to systemic of ...- Authors: Richard Gorvett
- Date: Sep 2012
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge>Actuarial theory in business context; Professional Values>Public interest representation
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics; Enterprise Risk Management>Systemic risk
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Pension Accounting & Personal Saving
Pension Accounting & Personal Saving This article discusses how pension accounting has an impact on the personal savings rate. Capital gains;Capital markets=Stock market;Defined benefit ...- Authors: Annamaria Lusardi, Jonathan Skinner, Steven Venti
- Date: Oct 2003
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics; Pensions & Retirement>Pension accounting
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The Wall Street Journal 2001 Forecasting Survey:A Deconstruction
The Wall Street Journal 2001 Forecasting Survey:A Deconstruction The author discusses the review of a recent 2001 Wall Street Journal’s semiannual survey of economists’ forecasts, starting by ...- Authors: Victor Canto
- Date: Jul 2001
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge>External forces and business performance
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics; Modeling & Statistical Methods>Forecasting
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Are We In A Different Market Paradigm?
Are We In A Different Market Paradigm? This article questions the validity of long term market return expectations using macroeconomics and analytical arguments. Federal Reserve Bank;Inflation; ...- Authors: Larry Rubin, John Ryding, Leo Tilman, Christian Gilles, Ajay Rajadhyaksha
- Date: Jul 2003
- Competency: External Forces & Industry Knowledge
- Publication Name: Risks & Rewards
- Topics: Economics>Macroeconomics; Finance & Investments