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Emerging countries like Thailand and Indonesia feared that falling Treasury yields would send money flooding their way in search of higher returns. Those markets could be left vulnerable to a crash if investors later decided to pull out and move their money elsewhere. In the months since the bond program began, however, Treasury yields have risen. In his November speech, Bernanke warned China that it and other developing nations were putting the global economy at risk by keeping their currencies artificially low. Bernanke struck a more professorial tone in his remarks Friday. He stressed that countries must collaborate to confront financial threats. And he didn't specifically discuss the Fed's bond-purchase program. Looking back at the global financial crisis, the Fed chief said the United States and other countries share blame. Countries with trade surpluses plowed money into mortgage and other investments in the United States, helping escalate their value. Bernanke said a paper he co-wrote and presented to the financial stability forum in Paris confirms this. But he also said the United States failed to safely absorb money flooding in from emerging nations like China, Middle Eastern oil countries and industrialized countries in Europe. U.S. financial companies turned risky loans into highly rated investments through inflated credit ratings. Mortgage securities of low credit quality ended up with high ratings, Bernanke noted. The Fed chief said the run-up in global commodities prices reflects strong demand from China and other fast-growing countries.
[Associated
Press;
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