Foreign Govt & banks held Greece debt. As Greece banknotes became due > debt downgraded by S&P > Interest Rates rose > To raise revenue it increased taxes, decreased spending> further slowed economy, reducing revenue & its ability to pay down debt.
The Interesting Case of Japan
In 2020, its debt-to-GDP ratio was 257%.
But most Debt is held domestically + It has large foreign assets.
Basically increase in spending after receiving a raise instead of saving the additional income.
Or if monthly loan payment got over & extra cash now not saved but spent on non essential items
Once this takes over, new cash gets spent as fast as — or faster than — it comes in.
It's normal for lifestyle spending to increase when we get a better income. We want to treat yourself after working hard to make that money. Where it becomes problematic is when the increase in lifestyle outpaces the increase in income.
@neerajgambhir says India's MPC may raise rates by as much as 100-150 basis points in the current cycle
Even if we take the repo rate to 5-5.25% over 12 months, the real yield will continue to be neutral to -ve. MPC stance of 100 -150 points would be somewhat accommodative.
10-year bond yield may settle between 7.25% and 7.50% assuming the rate hikes play out as expected
And RBI Support in first half of FY 22 - 23 by bond buying of Rs 1-1.5 lakh crore
Infosys disappoints in Q4, big miss on Rev and margins
$ Rev growth at 0.7%, CC Rev growth at 1.2% (Est 2.5% - 3%)
EBIT margins are at 21.5% vs 23.5% (est at 23.3%)
FY23 guidance
+Ve: CC Rev growth seen at 13-15%
-Ve: EBIT % seen between 21-23%