Venkatesh Rao@vgrHow commonplace is this condition? Is it weird?Quote TweetArdavan Homayounfar@ArdavanH·Apr 18, 2018The amount of negative-yielding debt has grown by nearly $1.4 Trillion since February to about $8.3 Trillion. #NIRP2:37 AM · Apr 23, 20181 Quote Tweet4 Likes
pprglvsta (8/1000 semicolons)@babarganesh·Apr 23, 2018Replying to @vgrIt’s strange. Back in the day though people had to pay a percentage to have their gold insured
Howard@hayeah·Apr 23, 2018Replying to @vgrIt's been the norm in China (inflation adjusted). Cash depreciation is like subsidy to real estate and banking industries.3
Tom MullalyLife Expansion@wagefreedom·Apr 23, 2018Replying to @vgrHistorically unusual, though it was 11 or 12 trillions a couple of years ago.1
Mathieu Hélie@mathieuhelie·Apr 23, 2018Replying to @vgrWhen you’ve lost trust in banks and have billions in cash to stash somewhere, negative yields are a legitimate alternative to deposit fees in potentially fraudulent institutions.