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Treasuries

Government debt

Bond Market Matters

Tue, 05/03/2011 - 7:13am -- editor

[[wysiwyg_imageupload:2232:]]By Levente Mady

The bond market retained its solid bid again last week.  Another Fed meeting and another Treasury debt auction cycle could do not a thing to dent the spirits of Treasury Bond buyers.  While the QEII program continues to sop up some of the supply and - contrary to popular belief - the foreign Central Banks continue to buy bonds, at the end of the day there were more than enough additional buyers to keep the prices moving higher.  Excess liquidity still seems to be abundant as stocks, bonds, precious metals, foreign currencies, etc. all continue to march higher.

Bond Market Matters

Tue, 04/19/2011 - 9:36am -- editor
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[[wysiwyg_imageupload:2181:]]The bond market continues to trade in a tight range – finishing the week very close to unchanged.  I am looking for more of the same going forward.  Buy the dips, sell the rallies in a 3-4 point range remains the general theme again for the next week.

Bond Market Matters

Tue, 03/29/2011 - 8:48am -- editor
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[[wysiwyg_imageupload:2018:]]By Levente Mady

The bond market gave up its recent gains and finished dead smack in the middle of its recent 118 to 122 trading range.  I am looking for more of the same going forward.  As mentioned in the wrap up last weekend, the massive liquidity injection by the Bank of Japan is restlessly sloshing around looking for a place to be put to work as an alternative to sitting in cash with a zero percent return.  As a result – in spite of ongoing problems in Europe, the Middle East and the Far East – stocks recovered nicely, the Australian Dollar screamed from 96 to 102 cents US and precious metals continue to forge higher.  Although bonds pulled back to the middle of their recent trading range and I am still leaning toward further downside, I do not expect the market to fall off a cliff.

Bond Market Matters

Tue, 03/22/2011 - 2:47pm -- editor
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[[wysiwyg_imageupload:1975:]]By Levente Mady

The bond market proved again last week that in spite of all the bashing that Treasuries take, they remain the safe haven of choice among investors.  Every time the Japanese stock market suffered a 5+% loss, Treasuries moved up decisively.  This happened even in the face of a surprisingly weak US Dollar.  Volatility exploded on a number of fronts last week as problems worldwide have escalated.  This was especially evident in stocks and currencies.

Long Term Treasury Bonds: Very Positive Backdrop

Thu, 03/17/2011 - 9:40am -- editor
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By Guy Lerner

When I last looked at long term Treasury Bonds, I stated the following:

    "While the bottom for TLT (or top for TBT and yields) appears to be in, it is not clear whether this will lead to a sustainable move that would cause price to break the down sloping trend line seen in figure 2. My hesitation in making the call is my (yet to be presented) intermarket bond model. This model is still bearish on bonds, but it is not unusual for it to lag the technicals at this point. If the model turns bullish on bonds while the technical set up is developing, then I will have greater confidence in the sustainability of this price move."

Bond Market Matters

Mon, 03/14/2011 - 1:24am -- editor
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[[wysiwyg_imageupload:1940:]]By Levente Mady

The bond market traded with a bullish tone early in the week, but could not break through resistance.  As a result it settled back into the middle of the recent trading range and looks content to continue to chop sideways.  The roaring commodity markets have certainly had a muted impact on bonds as the market appears to believe Ben Bernanke’s remarks that the upheaval in oil, silver, cotton, etc. should be just a temporary blip.  Last I checked, the Fed had a less than perfect track record predicting market impacts.  I am not sure if we should expect a higher success rate this time.

Bond Market Matters

Sun, 02/27/2011 - 7:53pm -- editor
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[[wysiwyg_imageupload:1823:]]By Levente Mady

The bond market traded with a bullish tone all last week in spite of a busy auction calendar.  The pullbacks after mediocre auctions and/or negative economic headlines were short and shallow.  It eerily reminded me of the stock market action of the past 3 months.  The seasonal headwinds remain negative, but that did not make any difference to the buyers that were lined up last week.  So it looks like the bonds are happy to join the liquidity party at this point.  There is nothing but daylight if they can break out of the recent trading range.

Bond Market Matters

Tue, 02/15/2011 - 1:35pm -- editor
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[[wysiwyg_imageupload:1726:]]

By Levente Mady

The bond market traded in a choppy range last week only to finish pretty much unchanged.  The seasonal headwinds remain negative, and most rally attempts have been met with solid selling.  In the mean time the risk trade in most sectors seems to be intact in spite of worrisome events in the Middle East.  Strangely, in spite of the political upheaval in the region, crude oil remains one of the few commodities that are manifesting negative price action.

Later Is Now: Profiting from Rising Interest Rates

Mon, 02/14/2011 - 7:23am -- editor
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By Terry Coxon

In the fall of 2008, the Federal Reserve responded to the Lehman bankruptcy by igniting a rapid expansion in the U.S. money supply. It did so because, by its lights, the immediate and obvious menace to the economy was a deflationary collapse, with one giant bankruptcy breeding another. And it went about the task without compromise; the monetary base more than doubled in less than a year, and the public's M1 money supply (checkable deposits plus hand-to-hand currency) jumped by 20%.

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