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Bond markets and legal aspects of bonds. For government debt use the tag "government debt" unless the fact the the debt is in the form of bonds has significance.
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Bond Prices, Interest rates, Demand for bonds
The same goes for bonds (in those the price and the interest are the different sides of the same coin); increase in interest rate (=drop in price) does make this investment (in interest bearing assets) … However, when we talk about Liquidity Preference Theory, there we mention that an increase in interest rates leads to more demand for interest-bearing assets like bonds. …
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Why is quantitative easing compared to "money printing"?
Thus a program of QE implies that the CB needs to buy more bonds than the bonds he currently holds and set to expire. … The fact the the CB must hold an asset (bonds) against the liability of the new money created, this fact means that the CB can't "print money" (or do QE for that matter) without theoretical limit. …