Bond Market

mlk_man

Banned
Someone mentioned that the 30-year didn't do so well. I say draw your own conclusions:

2:08 pm - CNBC has a Treasury representative on saying they are "ecstatic" with the 30-yr auction results.
1:41 pm - 30-yr After Auction: The new long-bond (when-issued) grabbed a firm bid post-auction as yields dipped as low as 4.500% from 4.570% just prior. Trade has drifted off somewhat to hang around its auction price at 4.520%.
1:15 pm - Fed Speak: Chicago's Fed pres Moskow says he sees little slack in labor market as low jobless rate may put upward pressure on wages. He adds 'neutral' does not necessarily mean end of rate increases though inflation expectations remain contained. Moskow's comments come a week before Bernanke's first appearance as top dog before congress & any interim Fed speak is likely to be well-tempered until the new chief gets his footing.
1:05 pm - Ta Da!: The $14B 30-yr auction hits with a 4.53% draw, a mediocre 2.05 bid-to-cover & an enormous 65.4% indirect bidder participation rate! The market may take a few minutes to really digest the results but the less than stellar cover will be balanced by the nice indirect bid.
12:56 pm - Long-Bond to Fly: Trade is bracing for the auction, with the 30-yr potentially responding violently, although to which components it is hard to say. The market heads into the results on the $14B 30-yrs going off today mixed. The draw, bid-to-cover & indirect bidder participation numbers all carry weight, but the response will be led by the most out-of-whack input, "rock crushes scissors...but paper covers rock," notes one long-time dealer. Speculation regarding the auction is all over the map, with rationalizations from all sides also varied but tilting toward a cheerleader attitude. The optimists are countered by the heft of some of the more pessimistic, who point out that the expected global demand may disappoint, but seeing as how there has not been a US 30-yr issue in since 2001, there is not a whole heck of a lot to go on. Put buyers have been showing up in the options on 10-yr futures, with one player stepping up now to buy 15K Apr 107 puts.
12:40 pm - Bond Investors Shrug off Deficit: Today's WSJ points out that although government borrowing has ballooned in the last 4 years, interest rates have remained relatively low. The theory & "The fear: Investors would demand lower prices for an increasing supply of government debt, which would drive up yields and borrowing costs across the economy," has not materialized. As Charles Parkhurst, a fixed-income portfolio manager at hedge fund Archeus Capital, points out "I don't think the market is focusing on deficits right now... nobody cares" as he contrasts the current period with the mid-90's when prices were highly sensitive to deficit data.
12:18 pm - Treasuries Stutter Step into Supply: The market picked itself up off its lows though remains slightly underwater heading into the auction. The 10-yr yield pulled back near unchanged at 4.553% after drifting higher early on to 4.577%, while the 30-yr yield traded in similar fashion back to 4.685% from 4.712%. The 2-10-yr yield spread has been choppy as curve trade dominates pushing & pulling yields around, though ending up just slightly steeper at -3.5 from its mosre inverted level of -4.1. The 2-30-yr yield spread flattened to 6.0 from a peak of 8.0. The market will be thankful to get today's auction out of the way & enjoy a brief break from supply though anticipation of 2's & 5's down the pike may yet keep some pressure on prices. There is talk of Asian buying being seen this morning in the Bund market, leading to questions regarding Asian participation rates. In the same vein, CNBC's Rick Santelli points out there will be more interest in straight demand versus foreign demand (bid-to-cover versus indirect bidder participation) as there is long-term foreign supply out there & those who want the 30-yrs will have plenty of opportunity to pick them up in the secondary market. Currencies are treading water ahead of the last leg of refunding, backing off slightly against the buck, with the euro sitting at 1.1964 & the yen slipping to 1.187300. Markets in general are skittish in front of the 30-yr results, spot gold has been an overall beneficiary of general uncertainty, pushing higher hard & recovering the bulk of the past 2-days losses, tagging 551.45 before backpedaling to 559.50 (+8.00). Crude is also seeing a corrective resurgence as the front month contract gains 1.6% 63.45 (+0.90) as the contract begins to roll into expiration.
 
The bond story is not going to have a happy ending. People have been tripping over their own feet to rush into (most likely) PIMCO bond mutual funds even though Bernanke has given investors a gift of the US Dollar Carry trade rally. I did consider buying some bonds to hedge a possible correction in the upcoming weeks, but after further review, it wasn't worth the risk/reward.

Weekly flow of funds data from ICI:
Equity funds had estimated outflows of $1.36 billion for the week...Bond funds had estimated inflows of $8.22 billion, compared to estimated inflows of $10.12 billion during the previous week.
http://www.ici.org/research/stats/flows/flows_12_02_09

When has the retail investor ever been right when they pile into an asset at record numbers? Think tech bubble, 2007 top, housing, oil.... Investors are probably buying junk and high yield bonds for the interest, but how many will hold to maturity? This bond market has turned into a casino with the greater fool theory setting the tone.
 
Looks like the 10 Year Treasury Yield made a significant technical move to the upside which I attribute to intervention by the BoJ in the Forex markets. I still believe the BoJ is selling US Treasuries because they have no other alternative than a weaker Yen. I wonder what plan our leaders concocted this weekend in the war room. What a joke. It's kind of like two kids when one has an idea and the other steals it from them and they argue back and forth.

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I'm still of the belief that the Yen Carry Trade is alive and we will see a some kind of carry trade continue in either the Dollar or Yen, either way.
 
Bullitt:
Looks like the 10 Year Treasury Yield made a significant technical move to the upside which I attribute to intervention by the BoJ in the .......

...which means as the T goes up the AGG goes down, am I remembering that correctly? ....which means I should'a followed Squalebear a little more closely & dumped more F than I did.....:(
 
I'm starting to think that no matter how tempting bonds may be to hedge a loss in stocks, they probably only have one more umph higher left. The 25 year bull market probably had its blowoff top last December.
 
Looks like a breakout of yields, breakdown of prices to me. Somebody is selling bonds and this is what I believe will lead to the next leg up- not some headline concept called 'the Santa Rally'. Should be interesting to see how investors react next week after having all weekend to examine their charts. Bonds are a losing proposition as long as the retail investor continues to pile into them hand over fist as a 'safety play'.

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Bond yields are trying to break out to 52 week highs. This isn't good news for buyers of treasuries in the past year. Maybe buyers will come back when yields hit 4%, but that's if inflation is under control.

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30 Year either consolidating to move higher or making a ST top here. The dollar lies in the employment report which I believe should move the dollar higher still. Beware the High Yield Market which could be making a blow off top here. Rising yields will crimp the bull and it's not going to take a rise of much to make a difference.

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With the US Dollar ready to resume its rally, I'm wondering if this was a head fake breakout. Bond yields should stay low when the dollar is strong.
Looks like there is a lot of support near 44.75 - 45.

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I almost feel like Oscar whenever I look at the $TYX. I can't help but to see H&S patterns everywhere. The only difference is, the ones I'm seeing are reverse H&S patters.
 
Talk this morning on CNBC about Greece, Spain etc. involved who should bail them out...Germany can't do them all, Jamie Diamond reluctant, and it may mean the US. The discussion mentioned that many maturities are coming due in June, and the probability that the problem would be papered over for awhile....until June......

Recall that was Birchtree's timeframe.....
 
TV talk this AM on the California bond issue. Since bad news on it would not be good for the good news message required nowadays, how will it be manipulated to show investors are not worried enough to require premiums? Big bank participation in hidden partnership with fed?:suspicious: It's said they have the same credit rating as a Stan.
 
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