10 sats \ 1 reply \ @supertestnet OP 2 Oct 2023 \ parent \ on: Please add a sub called "macro" or "economics" or similar meta
ok cool this makes more sense to me
So rather than "buy" a country's bonds you want to "sell" them.
Buying a bond isn't "taking up credit" -- it's giving it out. It's giving the country a loan. You want to take out a loan -- you want that country to give you money that you have to pay back later, once it's depreciated. If, instead of "buying" a bond from that country you sell a bond, you get some of their money right away (just like what happens in a loan), but it's not money you have to pay back later, so that's even better. Sell the bond, take the proceeds, and buy a stronger currency with it.
But this part still confuses me: doesn't the act of selling a bond increase interest rates on that country's bonds and therefore strengthen the currency that you want to fall?
Yes, the ECB needs to compensate for the ongoing bond-selling by bying them up and so stabilizing the yields. But that way they are doing it with new created euro that weakens more and pushes up inflation
reply