ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Principles of Finance: Unit 2, A Semi-Interesting History of Interest Rates 6 Views
Share It!
Description:
A semi-interesting history of interest rates.
Transcript
- 00:02
principles of finance a la shmoop a semi interesting history of interest
- 00:09
rates well some of this has already review for you people but it's so [Man discussing interest rates]
- 00:14
important to have an anchored understanding and risk and return that [Anchor falls from ship into ocean]
- 00:18
well we're gonna repeat ourselves like a bad episode of How I Met Your Mother
- 00:23
all right well here's the starting point yep the US Treasury bond you have an [The Fed building appears]
Full Transcript
- 00:27
essentially risk list investment in bonds backed by the US government's
- 00:32
ability to tax its hard-working citizens ie if those bonds go bust while the
- 00:38
world has likely been nuked so we have bigger things to worry about [Woman appears from drain hole]
- 00:42
alright well those bonds in this example yield a whopping 10 percent yeah
- 00:47
different part of history you know that historically the stock market over
- 00:50
decade-long periods with dividends reinvested and maybe stupidly ignoring
- 00:55
taxes in the above calculations because of all they just cloud things for now [Taxes float by projector screen]
- 00:59
but historically the stock market's returned about 10 percent a year over a
- 01:03
long period of time but you also know the stock market's risky the US [Car drives off fiscal cliff]
- 01:09
government bond market is not so why on earth would you ever invest in the stock
- 01:15
market if you could get 10 percent return on government bonds way less [Car reverses from cliff edge]
- 01:20
risks same reward mm-hmm well if you were smart and had taken this course you
- 01:24
wouldn't invest in the stock market you would risk lessly
- 01:28
happily collect your 10 percent interest from government bonds paid twice a year
- 01:33
like all bonds and while you go golfing or surfing or skiing or basically [People golfing and surfing]
- 01:37
whatever hakuna is your Matata and interest rates have done some crazy
- 01:42
things in modern US history so take a look here's a chart yeah post-world War
- 01:48
two well here's what interest rates did and went up a whole lot and then then [Post World War 2 interest rate graph appears]
- 01:54
they came to down a whole lot that's what they did so what's happening with
- 01:58
that giant spike there well after World War two the world had incurred a ton of [Man stood by Bob's Plane Sales appear with Uncle Sam]
- 02:02
debt you know buying stuff to beat back the Nazis and to a lesser extent feed
- 02:07
back to Japanese it was a crushing amount of debt so if we didn't figure
- 02:12
out something clever the debtor nations were never gonna pay off their debts and
- 02:17
well then they'd feel bad but let's say that dad carried a five percent interest
- 02:21
and let's say inflation at the time was two percent well then the real interest
- 02:26
rate you were paying was three percent because the dollar got cheaper by a [Interest and inflation rates appear]
- 02:31
couple percent year after year and you had the same interest payment got it it
- 02:35
got two percent easier in a year to pay that five percent because while a carton
- 02:41
of milk went from being a dollar to being a dollar in two cents and a week's [Cartons of milk appear]
- 02:45
wages went from a hundred bucks to one hundred and two bucks that's a inflation
- 02:51
101-102 but what happens if inflation suddenly takes off and becomes eight
- 02:56
percent and well then the real rate of interest on those bonds five percent
- 03:01
debts is what well it's five minus eight and yeah that's negative three percent
- 03:07
that means the debt gets cheaper to pay off each year so if you're an in
- 03:13
detonation well your first ask of your government and their finance people is [Man ringing bell in Venezuela]
- 03:18
gonna be go get me some more of that inflation please
- 03:22
well the swing makes the debts dramatically easier to pay off for the [Girl on a swing]
- 03:27
Debt in nations and the load can be made very easy or at least easier for those
- 03:33
nations you know to handle so who does it screw over when we have high
- 03:36
inflation and fixed rate debt well the people who loaned the money in the first
- 03:40
place if a dollar used to buy a carton of milk and now with inflation it takes [Cartons of milk appear]
- 03:45
a dollar eight and week wages have gone from a hundred bucks to
- 03:48
a hundred eight while that debt gets a whole lot cheaper to pay off
- 03:54
and note there's a curveball in here we've denominated everything in dollars [Baseball thrown to boy with bat]
- 03:59
thus far but let's just imagine that the US loaned Britain a billion dollars to [The Queen and Uncle Sam sitting either side of cash]
- 04:05
buy weapons to go fight Hitler in his buddies
- 04:07
well they'd owe us their 5% interest in loans to them payable in dollars but what if we
- 04:14
wanted to be you know stupid nice strategic depending on how you view it
- 04:20
because the Brits did lose well half their strong young men and trying to [Boot tramples on Das Boot]
- 04:24
stamp out the Nazis so like come on give me a break
- 04:27
so what if we made our loans to them payable back to us in either dollars or
- 04:33
spot rate pounds you know the British currency that's the British Pound and [Muscley man walks to cash register]
- 04:39
spot rate this means that well on the spot if you stopped at a street vendor
- 04:43
or major commercial bank and asked for the ratio of dollars to pounds and they [Man at a desk of world currency]
- 04:48
quoted you a number like two dollars for every pound well that would be the spot
- 04:52
rate to convert your pounds into dollars so if we gave Britain the right to pay
- 04:56
us back in either pounds or dollars well then the Brits could in fact create [The Queen takes basket of GBP]
- 05:01
their own inflation sort of but how well think of the consortium of banks as
- 05:07
being the caretaker of the smores fire of love in the world they need to keep [Money thrown onto marshmallow over fire]
- 05:12
the flames burning just enough to singe the marshmallows which are fragile by
- 05:16
Nature anyway and not too hot to nuke them into charcoal raising borrowing [Marshmallow explodes and burns]
- 05:21
costs has in essence a multiplier effect and makes the cost of renting money
- 05:26
higher which in turn makes people buy less and certainly less things on credit
- 05:31
like homes and cars and stuff at the mall it's a cooling function when you [Man stood by Swarovski store]
- 05:35
raise interest rates got it lowering the cost of money does the opposite when the
- 05:40
cost of borrowing is almost free like it is today like with 2% government paper
- 05:45
people will be incentivized to borrow freely and they usually do if they did
- 05:51
borrow and buy a bunch of stuff and cars and homes well then the economy would [Man sitting in living room watching sports]
- 05:56
presumably heat up the vehicle that the US government uses to try and control
- 06:00
inflation is called the FOMC or Federal Open
- 06:04
Market Committee funk the easiest way to affect interest rates is to play with
- 06:09
the supply of money in the system more money equals lower interest rates and [Uncle Sam using laptop]
- 06:14
the reverse also applies just like jiggling the toilet handle the Fed [Toilet handle jiggled]
- 06:19
jiggles the money supply until it gets it to the desired rate or cost that it
- 06:24
wants for people to rent that money the Fed does this by buying and selling
- 06:28
Treasuries of which it owns a lot Grok this, yes if it's selling Treasuries
- 06:35
that means it's draining money from the system and pushing up interest rates got [Money goes down the toilet drain]
- 06:41
it it's collecting cash or liquidity out there so making money more precious if
- 06:45
it's buying well then it's using its cash and sprinkling it all over the
- 06:49
place and injecting cash or money or liquidity [Money waterfall appears down the stairs]
- 06:52
into the system well then interest rates will fall there's a lot more supply of
- 06:57
cash hole out there got it well most of the rest of the developed
- 07:00
world has more or less the same system so governments try to find middle [Dog on a toilet seat]
- 07:04
grounds and this is where history is a useful guide after World War 2 the world
- 07:09
was swimming in debt and there was an odd confluence of an overheated economy [Water in pan boiling]
- 07:14
driven by the manufacture of weapons and planes and well you know war babies lots
- 07:20
of inflation but the surviving Western government sort of shook hands and let
- 07:25
the inflation ride for a while to let debts get paid down more easily of most [Inflation walks into car]
- 07:31
dramatic interest was the inflation hitting in the middle of the Cold War
- 07:35
where Vietnam was the playground of new weaponry toys from both them and us well
- 07:42
Jimmy Carter was elected president in 1976 and the newspapers which were [Jimmy Carter appears]
- 07:46
actually on paper back then and not bankrupt decried stories of little old
- 07:51
ladies living in their cars because they had put all their savings and safe [Old lady in car with cats]
- 07:56
low-interest government bonds yielding 3% and inflation was prancing along at 7
- 08:02
or 8% a year well those little old ladies were forced to eat dog food
- 08:06
bathed in dirt and washed their clothes in the river according to the
- 08:09
journalists in the paper yeah well Jimmy wanted to stamp out this inflation [Inflation balloons and Jimmy Carter pops them]
- 08:14
nemesis lots of old people had voted for him
- 08:17
and so he leaned on the Fed to raise interest rates and it did and it did and
- 08:22
it did and it continued to do so for half a decade it was bad news for all
- 08:26
the dumb
Up Next
How are risk and reward related? Take more risk, expect more reward. A lottery ticket might be worth a billion dollars, but if the odds are one in...
Related Videos
How do credit card companies work? Credit card companies are, in a way, lenders. They give consumers a rectangular piece of plastic that allows the...
How do some accountants “cook the books”? Cooking the books refers to accountants making company’s financials look much better than they are....
How do you become incorporated? Go to Legal Zoom. Pay $150, file with the state of Delaware or whoever each year. Pay another $150. Most file as LL...
How do you get a startup funded? Depends if we're talking about a tech startup, or a non-tech startup. If you've got a promising, budding tech comp...