Back on topic...
http://www.marketoracle.co.uk/Article34978.html
A inflationary depression appears to be our future.Bottom Line - All Euro-zone citizens should pile into German Bund's ahead of Euro Collapse because they would make a huge profit when their new currency collapses against the Deutschmark and even if by some miracle the Euro-zone does not collapse, at least you can sleep easy knowing that your money is relatively safe.
So Where Does that leave Britain?
Britain continues to benefit hugely at the Eurozone's expense despite on many measures being just as bankrupt as states on near triple the interest rates. Britain is a very temporary safe haven that will have now choice but the ramp up the inflationary money printing presses again to meet the immediate consequences of Financial Armageddon as the UK desperately attempts to prevent it's big banks from collapsing from the hundreds of billions that would be defaulted on owed to British banks from across the euro-zone.
A sub 2% bond yield on an 3% inflation rate is not a sign of health it is a sign that any resolution to the eurozone crisis either good or bad could result in the evaporation of much of Britians safe haven status and the problem for bond investors is that during financial armageddon this switch in market sentiment could literally take place within a matter of hours, so rather than a safe-haven British government bonds are more akin to people jumping from sinking euro-zone life boats onto the British Titanic.
In reality Britain at best should be on par with France in terms of bond yields, so whilst the gap between UK and French bonds has narrowed, there remains a significant risk of the gap evaporating (falling UK bonds) on euro-zone breakup.
The Inflationary Depression
The bottom line is that all roads lead to only one solution as voiced at length in the Inflation Mega-trend ebook of near 2.5 years ago, in that at the end of the day governments have only one choice which is to print money and inflate and that is exactly what all the countries outside of the euro-zone
Oh dear.