We’re with the conventional wisdom of no QE3, no massive flight to quality, or a miracle long-term budget agreement. We therefore expect continued upward pressure on interest rates. We recently posted our Flow of Funds analysis showing that the Federal Reserve and foreign flows effectively funded 100 percent of the U.S. budget deficit in Q4 2010. Interest rates need an upward adjustment to attract new non-official buyers, which could also put a short-term lid on commodities, in our opinion. We’re on the same side as the Bond King..."
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhOdRbYj4g_7FGQfI2NwbNder8JcHismY-_IfRiwO8nYOcWRD7WZQ3Vzq6VyyetfCT-pmzmouuszGABdrTob5oEBaPNMhU2Klii2q8UYcIXghQ2dP2td-9dve-fsT02axREKG06hHf0KSI/s1600/fedownershiptreasury3.jpg)
at http://www.ritholtz.com/blog/2011/04/chart-of-the-day-fed-ownership-of-the-yield-curve/
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