>>21631268
repost, needs eyes on, could use some help here - corp
ARCHIVING - THE B.I.S HAS RELEASED ITS QUARTERLY REVIEW LEADING UP TO THE USA ELECTION, 94 PAGES OF VERY COMPLEX LANGUAGE AND GRAPHICS.
Note: This is going to take a while to summarize and figure out what they are planning, but overall, the coming elections with trump coming in has prompted jerome powell yesterday to tighten the bond market. this in it self is a massive move for the global central banksters, in the short term he has dropped the interest rates by 50 points to help the kamala get elected on false job market figures and fake msm reporting.
posting for anons with a knowledge of financial global markets to help decipher this whilst anon will also do the same.
for now below, just the b.i.s conclusion and text including source link below.
>>21621009, >>21621011 jerome powell drops 50 points interest rates and the b.i.s quarterly report as of 16th sept 2024 - sources b.i.s direction on bond markets (dig called)
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BIS Quarterly Review
September 2024
International banking and financial
market developments
https://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt2409.htm
https://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt2409.pdf
Conclusion
Our analysis suggests that global trade has become increasingly fragmented in recent
years due to geopolitical tensions. We find evidence that countries that are more
geopolitically distant tend to trade less with each other, all else equal. The risk this
poses to individual countries varies: countries whose growth depends heavily on trade
with geopolitical adversaries are especially vulnerable. This is not only because they
face a greater need to divert their trade from current trading partners, but also
because they may have more limited options to do so.
Going beyond the analysis in this feature, trade fragmentation is just one aspect
of a more general pattern of international economic interactions being increasingly
shaped by geopolitical considerations, sometimes referred to as “geoeconomic
fragmentation” (Aiyar et al (2023)). In addition to trade, developments in investment
and technology are also fragmenting. IMF (2023) shows that FDI flows are increasingly
concentrated in geopolitically aligned countries, leaving some emerging market and
developing economies especially vulnerable to capital relocation.
Geoeconomic fragmentation has implications for economic welfare. When
geopolitical factors play a stronger role in economic decisions, this comes at the cost
of a smaller role for comparative advantage and market efficiency. While some
countries may come out winners from these changes individually, the world as a
whole suffers as the gains from economic integration dwindle.