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salaciousoly t1_ir2zslp wrote

Two things:

  1. Why is this animated? I don’t see that adding any value.

  2. Why does every x-axis label call the data out as 2022? You already did that in the title.

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lucky_ducker t1_ir3aawp wrote

I would like to see this with a more intermediate bond index fund like AGG or BND. Very few investors would consider TLT - which is US Treasuries with maturities of 20+ years - to be a suitable proxy for "bond funds."

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RotisserieChicken007 t1_ir3e736 wrote

Not very interesting or convincing without showing some of the previous years with inverse correlation.

That's like saying "Most Mongolian pears (imaginary fruit) are red but this one is yellow, and then only showing a yellow one."

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maplebacon8792 t1_ir3iut3 wrote

The title couldn’t be more boring but the data actually represents something really interesting

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JupiterWalk t1_ir3ok32 wrote

I read a lot of unappreciative comments around here. I just wanted to let you know this is great and thank you for sharing. Continue to improve upon constructive feedback :)

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ScaleLongjumping3606 t1_ir3zdjx wrote

My theory: People who look at data graphs on Reddit are often on the spectrum for OCD / autism and nuanced diplomacy is not our strong suit. Some people’s brains are just trained to find the flaws in everything.

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BobMcFail t1_ir49wt7 wrote

Nice amateur psychology you got going on there or hear me out.

People who subscribe to a subreddit that is about displaying data in a beautiful are passionate about it because it is part of their job/hobby and are critical because this isn’t just r/data

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Trixxr t1_ir4j7j2 wrote

So if stocks are falling, so are bonds, despite the inverse correlation? Hmmmmmm

0

857477458 t1_ir5et5w wrote

There's nothing very confusing happening here. The Fed wants to destroy wealth to reduce inflation via the wealth effect. To that end they are raising rates and selling bonds. The graph you see is exactly as planned.

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F8Tempter t1_irbgps0 wrote

typically fed is lowering rates to offset a recession.

This year we get recession with rising rates.

1