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Bond Market - Yields & More

Bond Market - Yields & More at Mac App Store analyse

Regency Software
5,920 ratings · Power index: 220
Version 2.2.4
Size 15.7 Mb
Updated 8 years ago
Released 11 Apr 2017

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Description

Features: * Treasury Bond Yield Curve * Municipal Bond Yields * Corporate Bond Yields * Treasury Bond Yields * CD National Rates * CD High Yield Rates BREAKING DOWN Yield Curve The shape of the yield curve gives an idea of future interest rate changes and economic activity. There are three main types of yield curve shapes: normal, inverted and flat (or humped). A normal yield curve is one in which longer maturity bonds have a higher yield compared to shorter-term bonds due to the risks associated with time. An inverted yield curve is one in which the shorter-term yields are higher than the longer-term yields, which can be a sign of upcoming recession. In a flat or humped yield curve, the shorter- and longer-term yields are very close to each other, which is also a predictor of an economic transition. * Normal Yield Curve A normal or up-sloped yield curve indicates yields on longer-term bonds may continue to rise, responding to periods of economic expansion. When investors expect longer-maturity bond yields to become even higher in the future, many would temporarily park their funds in shorter-term securities in hopes of purchasing longer-term bonds later for higher yields. In a rising interest rate environment, it is risky to have investments tied up in longer-term bonds when their value has yet to decline as a result of higher yields over time. The increasing temporary demand for shorter-term securities pushes their yields even lower, setting in motion a steeper up-sloped normal yield curve. * Inverted Yield Curve An inverted or down-sloped yield curve suggests yields on longer-term bonds may continue to fall, corresponding to periods of economic recession. When investors expect longer-maturity bond yields to become even lower in the future, many would purchase longer-maturity bonds to lock in yields before they decrease further. The increasing onset of demand for longer-maturity bonds and the lack of demand for shorter-term securities lead to higher prices but lower yields on longer-maturity bonds, and lower prices but higher yields on shorter-term securities, further inverting a down-sloped yield curve. * Flat Yield Curve A flat yield curve may arise from normal or inverted yield curve, depending on changing economic conditions. When the economy is transitioning from expansion to slower development and even recession, yields on longer-maturity bonds tend to fall and yields on shorter-term securities likely rise, inverting a normal yield curve into a flat yield curve. When the economy is transitioning from recession to recovery and potentially expansion, yields on longer-maturity bonds are set to rise and yields on shorter-maturity securities are sure to fall, tilting an inverted yield curve toward a flat yield curve.

Estimates

Monthly Downloads > 4.84k
Est. Revenue ~ $1.98k

Availability

Devices

iPad2Wifi iPad23G iPhone4S iPadThirdGen iPadThirdGen4G iPhone5 iPodTouchFifthGen iPadFourthGen iPadFourthGen4G iPadMini iPadMini4G iPhone5c iPhone5s iPadAir iPadAirCellular iPadMiniRetina iPadMiniRetinaCellular iPhone6 iPhone6Plus iPadAir2 iPadAir2Cellular iPadMini3 iPadMini3Cellular iPodTouchSixthGen iPhone6s iPhone6sPlus iPadMini4 iPadMini4Cellular iPadPro iPadProCellular iPadPro97 iPadPro97Cellular iPhoneSE iPhone7 iPhone7Plus iPad611 iPad612 iPad71 iPad72 iPad73 iPad74 iPhone8 iPhone8Plus iPhoneX

Pricing by country

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China free
France free
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Netherlands free
Portugal free
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Poland free
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India free
Japan free
Poland free
Russia free
Turkey free
USA free
Korea, Republic Of free
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