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by mitthrowaway2 1180 days ago
IMO? Overnight term rates should have been zero from 2020 to about July of 2021, then allowed to rise by 0.25 per month to perhaps about 3.5%. Long-term rates should have been left to float with the market, pricing in the expected risk of inflation. Not that my opinion matters, since I wasn't in charge.
1 comments

That still leads to losses on long term treasuries. That's what it means to raise rates.
Yes, of course it does. But there are losses, and then there are losses. 10-year yields going from 1.56% in 2021 to 4% in 2023 is equivalent to a price drop of 17% (given maturity in 2031). If 10-year yields had only been, say, 3% in 2021 before rising to 4%, the bond price drop would have been closer to 7%.