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Law Capping interest rates
muandiwambeu
#1761 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 3:43:26 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 8/28/2015
Posts: 1,247
josimar wrote:
In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.
,Behold, a sower went forth to sow;....
obiero
#1762 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 6:13:37 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/23/2009
Posts: 14,251
Location: nairobi
muandiwambeu wrote:
josimar wrote:
In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...tive-interest-rates.html

muandiwambeu
#1763 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 6:56:05 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 8/28/2015
Posts: 1,247
obiero wrote:
muandiwambeu wrote:
[quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Yawa my lord. I said this person known as @obiero is a smart chap, but now look. Interest rates can be any numeral, but to a Kenyan, your figures would cause a bank run. Would cause small banks to be in for it. Does that make sense? It will kill the credit in this mugai's nation. It will leave your stocks seriously beaten.
Maragua people are very good potters and they know places.
,Behold, a sower went forth to sow;....
obiero
#1764 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 8:32:16 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/23/2009
Posts: 14,251
Location: nairobi
muandiwambeu wrote:
obiero wrote:
muandiwambeu wrote:
[quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Yawa my lord. I said this person known as @obiero is a smart chap, but now look. Interest rates can be any numeral, but to a Kenyan, your figures would cause a bank run. Would cause small banks to be in for it. Does that make sense? It will kill the credit in this mugai's nation. It will leave your stocks seriously beaten.
Maragua people are very good potters and they know places.

Graham, Buffer's mentor did the study and found that no correlation exists between bank rates and the stock market.. The only positive correlation even applicable to Kenya is between the bills market and the exchange i.e higher Tbills, lower exchange prices and the inverse is true

Swenani
#1765 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 8:52:30 PM
Rank: User

Joined: 8/15/2013
Posts: 13,237
Location: Vacuum
obiero wrote:
muandiwambeu wrote:
[quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Do you understand the meaning of negative interest rates and why it's used? FYI it doesn't apply to borrowings but deposits and it's mainly used by central/federal banks to force banks to lend
If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
obiero
#1766 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 9:09:33 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/23/2009
Posts: 14,251
Location: nairobi
Swenani wrote:
obiero wrote:
muandiwambeu wrote:
[quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Do you understand the meaning of negative interest rates and why it's used? FYI it doesn't apply to borrowings but deposits and it's mainly used by central/federal banks to force banks to lend

@swenyani let me take you to school http://www.investopedia....-interest-rates-work.asp

Swenani
#1767 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 9:25:21 PM
Rank: User

Joined: 8/15/2013
Posts: 13,237
Location: Vacuum
obiero wrote:
Swenani wrote:
obiero wrote:
[quote=muandiwambeu][quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Do you understand the meaning of negative interest rates and why it's used? FYI it doesn't apply to borrowings but deposits and it's mainly used by central/federal banks to force banks to lend

@swenyani let me take you to school http://www.investopedia....interest-rates-work.asp[/quote]

Asante sana

Quote:
Negative interest rates are an unconventional monetary policy tool first deployed by Sweden's central bank in July 2009, when it cut its overnight deposit rate to -0.25%. The European Central Bank (ECB) followed in June 2014, when it lowered its deposit rate to -0.1%. Other European countries and Japan have joined the negative-rate club, resulting in $10 trillion worth of government debt carrying negative yields, according to Fitch


It only applies to deposit. Soma uelewe sio kumaliza.

From my limited understanding, negative interest rates apply when banks are not willing to lend to wanjikus and prefer "hoarding" or parking the money with central bank. The central bank then punishes them by charging the commercial banks(not wanjiku's) a negative interest rate on their deposits in order to encourage commercial banks to lend to wanjiku's like you but not at a negative interest rate ofcourse.

Investopedia is not an authority on such matters though!

If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
obiero
#1768 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 9:46:59 PM
Rank: Elder

Joined: 6/23/2009
Posts: 14,251
Location: nairobi
Swenani wrote:
obiero wrote:
Swenani wrote:
obiero wrote:
[quote=muandiwambeu][quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Do you understand the meaning of negative interest rates and why it's used? FYI it doesn't apply to borrowings but deposits and it's mainly used by central/federal banks to force banks to lend

@swenyani let me take you to school http://www.investopedia....interest-rates-work.asp[/quote]

Asante sana

Quote:
Negative interest rates are an unconventional monetary policy tool first deployed by Sweden's central bank in July 2009, when it cut its overnight deposit rate to -0.25%. The European Central Bank (ECB) followed in June 2014, when it lowered its deposit rate to -0.1%. Other European countries and Japan have joined the negative-rate club, resulting in $10 trillion worth of government debt carrying negative yields, according to Fitch


It only applies to deposit. Soma uelewe sio kumaliza.

From my limited understanding, negative interest rates apply when banks are not willing to lend to wanjikus and prefer "hoarding" or parking the money with central bank. The central bank then punishes them by charging the commercial banks(not wanjiku's) a negative interest rate on their deposits in order to encourage commercial banks to lend to wanjiku's like you but not at a negative interest rate ofcourse.

Investopedia is not an authority on such matters though!


New concepts are sometimes hard to comprehend.. We will take it slowly http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-32284393

muandiwambeu
#1769 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 9:58:51 PM
Rank: Veteran

Joined: 8/28/2015
Posts: 1,247
obiero wrote:
muandiwambeu wrote:
obiero wrote:
muandiwambeu wrote:
[quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Yawa my lord. I said this person known as @obiero is a smart chap, but now look. Interest rates can be any numeral, but to a Kenyan, your figures would cause a bank run. Would cause small banks to be in for it. Does that make sense? It will kill the credit in this mugai's nation. It will leave your stocks seriously beaten.
Maragua people are very good potters and they know places.

Graham, Buffer's mentor did the study and found that no correlation exists between bank rates and the stock market.. The only positive correlation even applicable to Kenya is between the bills market and the exchange i.e higher Tbills, lower exchange prices and the inverse is true

Wachana na graham, masomo yake ni ya kale. Let's look around here at home, pre-interest caps equity was trading at forties. Post caps, lower interest rates now trades at twenties.
Lakini nitakupea assignment ya Leo jioni.
Examine the impact of interest rates capping on kenya's top ten banks pre and post caps and give explanation to you observation. (Minimum ten pages) 1mark.
,Behold, a sower went forth to sow;....
Swenani
#1770 Posted : Tuesday, January 24, 2017 10:08:24 PM
Rank: User

Joined: 8/15/2013
Posts: 13,237
Location: Vacuum
obiero wrote:
Swenani wrote:
obiero wrote:
Swenani wrote:
[quote=obiero][quote=muandiwambeu][quote=josimar]In developed economies such as Japan , mortgage rates are offered at 1% and tenor is 30 Years .

That's untrue. And if it is, to mi and fellow wanjiku, its like preaching gospel to pharaoh. Eti 1% say per month and not per year.

Hii ndio ubaya ya kuishi Maragua au Yala and not being interested in global finance.. Its a fact that rates in Asia and Europe are at about 2 to 3 percent per annum with countries such as Japan having negative interest on borrowing!
https://mobile.nytimes.c...ive-interest-rates.html[/quote]

Do you understand the meaning of negative interest rates and why it's used? FYI it doesn't apply to borrowings but deposits and it's mainly used by central/federal banks to force banks to lend

@swenyani let me take you to school http://www.investopedia....interest-rates-work.asp[/quote]

Asante sana

Quote:
Negative interest rates are an unconventional monetary policy tool first deployed by Sweden's central bank in July 2009, when it cut its overnight deposit rate to -0.25%. The European Central Bank (ECB) followed in June 2014, when it lowered its deposit rate to -0.1%. Other European countries and Japan have joined the negative-rate club, resulting in $10 trillion worth of government debt carrying negative yields, according to Fitch


It only applies to deposit. Soma uelewe sio kumaliza.

From my limited understanding, negative interest rates apply when banks are not willing to lend to wanjikus and prefer "hoarding" or parking the money with central bank. The central bank then punishes them by charging the commercial banks(not wanjiku's) a negative interest rate on their deposits in order to encourage commercial banks to lend to wanjiku's like you but not at a negative interest rate ofcourse.

Investopedia is not an authority on such matters though!


New concepts are sometimes hard to comprehend.. We will take it slowly http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-32284393[/quote]

I asked you to read to understand the articles you are posting not to finish reading them. These articles are basically saying the same thing I'm telling you.

Quote:
Perhaps the first thing worth stating is that negative interest rates are probably not coming to a High Street near you in the near future


As you can see, it doesn't apply to a wanjiku even in EU

Quote:
One point worth spelling out is that we are not talking about negative real interest rates. That is where you have an interest rate that may be above zero but it is lower than inflation. That means that a borrower's total repayments have less purchasing power than the amount they first borrowed.


I hope this is not what you are referring to

Quote:
That is not so unusual. As long as there is at least moderate inflation, central banks can get real rates below zero to stimulate economic recovery and there have been many episodes of that.
No. We are talking here about what economists call nominal interest rates below zero, making no allowance for rising (or falling) prices.
The reason it is so strange is this: normally a potential lender can choose not to lend and just sit on the funds. That is equivalent to getting a nominal interest rate of zero. Not great, but surely better than an interest rate of less than zero. That is the basic idea behind the concept of the zero lower bound.


Lenders refusing to lend to a wanjiku thus central bans introduced negative interest rates on commercial banks deposits held by central bank to force them to move money out and lender to wanjiku to stimulate economic recovery/growth

Quote:
Some examples are central bank policies. In the eurozone, in Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland and Japan, central banks have decided to have a negative rate on commercial banks' excess funds held on deposit at the central bank. In effect, private sector banks have to pay to park their money


As you can see, the central banks are charging commercial banks a rate on deposit held with central banks aka negative interest rates on commercial banks deposits. So as-refer to above paragraphs -stimulate economic recovery...by encouraging banks to lend to wanjiku instead of hoarding the money with central banks

Quote:
Some examples are central bank policies. In the eurozone, in Denmark, Sweden, Switzerland and Japan, central banks have decided to have a negative rate on commercial banks' excess funds held on deposit at the central bank. In effect, private sector banks have to pay to park their money


Quote:
Low interest rates are of course unwelcome news to savers. Negative central bank rates have started to lead to some bank customers being charged a negative rate on their accounts, mainly businesses with large balances


Rationale is the same, the primary objective is to stimulate economic growth because a rational investor would prefer his money to be invested in other sectors of the economy than to be deducted charges on his deposits.

Now give me a link where borrowers(wanjiku's) have borrowed money and the banks keep on paying them an interest every month or year
If Obiero did it, Who Am I?
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