
Liz McCormick
Chief Correspondent at Bloomberg News
Interest Rates // Foreign Exchange Reporter @Business (Bloomberg News) in New York: Views expressed are my own
Articles
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2 weeks ago |
panewslab.com | Alice Atkins |Liz McCormick
By Alice Atkins & Liz Capo McCormick, Bloomberg Compiled by: Felix, PANews Investors often flock to U.S. Treasuries to escape financial market turmoil, and they have rebounded during the global financial crisis, 9/11 and even during the U.S.'s own credit rating downgrade. Yet in early April, amid the chaos unleashed by President Trump’s imposition of “reciprocal” tariffs, something unusual happened.
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3 weeks ago |
news.bloomberglaw.com | Alice Atkins |Liz McCormick
Investors typically flock to US Treasury bondsas a haven from gyrations in financial markets. They rallied during the global financial crisis, on 9/11 and even when America’s own credit rating was cut. Yet something unusual happened in early April amid the chaos unleashed by President Donald Trump’s imposition of “reciprocal” tariffs. Instead of rising as riskier assets like stocks and cryptocurrencies tumbled, Treasuries followed them lower.
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3 weeks ago |
bloomberg.com | Alice Atkins |Liz McCormick
The US Treasury building in Washington, DC. (Bloomberg) -- Investors typically flock to US Treasury bonds as a haven from gyrations in financial markets. They rallied during the global financial crisis, on 9/11 and even when America’s own credit rating was cut. Yet something unusual happened in early April amid the chaos unleashed by President Donald Trump’s imposition of “reciprocal” tariffs.
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1 month ago |
nationalmortgagenews.com | Ye Xie |Liz McCormick |Michael Mackenzie
Billed on Wall Street as so rock-solid safe they're risk-free, US Treasury bonds have long served as first port of call for investors during times of panic. They rallied during the global financial crisis, on 9/11 and even when America's own credit rating was cut. But now, as President Donald Trump unleashes an all-out assault on global trade, their status as the world's safe haven is increasingly coming into question.
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1 month ago |
fa-mag.com | Liz McCormick |Ye Xie |Michael Mackenzie
Billed on Wall Street as so rock-solid safe they’re risk-free, US Treasury bonds have long served as first port of call for investors during times of panic. They rallied during the global financial crisis, on 9/11 and even when America’s own credit rating was cut. But now, as President Donald Trump unleashes an all-out assault on global trade, their status as the world’s safe haven is increasingly coming into question.
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RT @BloombergTV: Wall Street is starting to take notice of some buzz around what’s being called the Mar-a-Lago Accord. @mccormickliz explai…

RT @biancoresearch: Big thanks to @mccormickliz for a good synopsis of our client call today. tl:dr, is best summarized by @katie_martin_f…

RT @DanielPFlatley: After repeatedly blasting Janet Yellen last year over her department’s strategy for issuing federal debt, it’s now up t…