Bond Expert: Thursday Outlook
Prices of Treasury coupon securities have surged in overnight trading and the yield curve has reversed its recent flattening trend as weak economic data has prompted a shift of funds into shorter maturity bonds. Economic data released in various venues overnight suggests pervasive global economic weakness.The yield on the benchmark 2 year note has dropped 6 basis points to 2.72 percent. The yield on the 5 year note has dropped 4 basis points to 3.45 percent. The yield on the benchmark 10 year note has declined 2 basis points to 4.09 percent and the yield on the Long Bond has dropped 1 basis point to 4.67 percent.
The 2 year/10 year spread has moved wider by 4 basis points to 137 basis points. That understates the move. The market has shifted to the new 2 year as the benchmark. So we are now using the July 2010 issue. The roll from June to July is about 5 basis points. The yield on the retired benchmark is about 5 basis points lower. If we were still comparing to that issue the spread would be 5 basis points wider at 142 basis points.
Yield curves in UK and Germany steepened even more dramatically than in the US. The 2 year/10 year spread in Germany has widened by 5 basis points led by a 12 basis point drop in the 2 year yield.
The 2 year/10 spread in the UK has widened 6 basis points led by a 10 basis point drop in the 2 year yield.
Global economic data released in the overnight session is supportive of a steeper yield curve.
In Germany the IFO Business Climate Index dropped to 97.5 in July from 101.3 in June. The consensus forecast was around 100.2.
The Eurozone composite PMI dropped to 47.8 in July from 49.3 in June. That is the lowest reading for that series since November 2001.
In the UK retail sales plunged 3.9 percent in June. It was the steepest decline for that series since record keeping began in 1986. (As an aside, I want a British reader to explain why they have only been keeping records since 1986. I want to believe it is a typo and records on retail sales have been compiled since 1886 and the reign of Queen Victoria.)
There is more gloomy news to peruse. Spanish unemployment hit a 3 year high at 10.4 percent.
Danish consumer confidence dropped to -9.7 in July from -6.6 in June.
To demonstrate than the economic weakness is pandemic and not Eurocentric I would be remiss if I did not report sliding exports in Japan and Hong Kong. Exports from Hong Kong to mainland China, Japan and the US declined for the first time in 2 years in June.
Japanese exports to the US dropped for the first time in over 4 years in June. Shipments of cars to the US dropped 14.2 percent.
I will not launch into one of my rants, but I do think that the evidence speaks for itself and even the casual economic observer will agree that higher rates are the wrong medicine for the ailment sof the global economy.
The US markets wait for data on initial jobless claims as well as Existing Home Sales today.
Some overnight flows:
Forward rollers in the 2 year.
Real money extending from 2 year sector to belly of the curve.
Specs buying Europe versus US
Central bank sellers of 5 years.
Get Seeking Alpha Free Stock Alerts by Email!
Get Free Stock Alerts by Email!
ETFs In Focus
-
Editor's Picks
-
Most Popular
- GSEs Into Conservatorship: Can Housing Stabilize Now?
- Buying Berkshire: The Ultimate No-Brainer
- PowerShares Dynamic Retail ETF Finds Bargains in Discount Retailers
- Global Stock Markets: We All Fall Down!
- American Capital Agency: Making Money the Old-Fashioned Way
- How Should Policymakers Respond to the Employment Report?
- Full list of Editor's Picks »
- Wall Street Breakfast: Must-Know News »
- Apple: Steve and I Have Been Wrong »
- What Will Fannie / Freddie Mean for Monday? »
- Gold Futures' Dirty Secret (Part II) »
- A First Look Inside the Fannie / Freddie Bailout Plan »
- Rescuing Frannie »
- Why Commodities May Be Nearing a Turning Point »
- Bill Ackman's Letter to Paulson On Restructuring Plan »
- Is Gold Getting Ready to Bounce? »
- Corning: Looking Very Cheap »
- Friday Outlook: What Phony Sell-off?! »
-
Long Ideas
-
Short Ideas
-
Cramer's Picks
- $300/Barrel Oil Is Coming - Barron's Interview
- Nokia Is the Smart(phone) Bet - Barron's
- Geologix Explorations: Another Mexican Monster Miner?
- Don't Recycle Schnitzer Steel Yet - Barron's
- Antigenics: Insider Buying Alert
- Discover Financial: A Creditable Investment - Barron's
- American Capital Agency: Making Money the Old-Fashioned Way
- Time to Recognize Cognizant - Barron's
- Avoid the 'Group Think' on Melco-Crown
- Safeway: A Safe Way to Invest
- Full list of Long Ideas »
- Nuance Communications: An End to Acquisitive Growth
- Short Interest Rising in Tesoro; Shorts Covering Airline Positions
- Harbinger Capital: Cut Short
- Not Much Meat on Pilgrim's Pride's Bones
- Salesforce.com: Demystifying the Force
- Should We Listen to Boone Pickens on Oil?
- Three Reasons Solar Sell-off May Be in Early Innings
- Is the Market Rolling Over?
- Solar and Oil, Part Deux
- Financial vs. International ETFs: Which Bear is Grizzlier?
- Full list of Short Ideas »
- Fed Should Cut Rates - Cramer's Mad Money (9/5/08)
- Bullish on Wachovia - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/5/08)
- Worst Downgrades - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/5/08)
- Pimco's Bill Gross: Jim Cramer Is 'Courageous' and 'Entertaining'
- Cramer Sees the Light - Cramer's Mad Money (9/4/08)
- Keep Buying Big Brown - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/4/08)
- Don't Buy These Bonds - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/4/08)
- Loss of Integrity - Cramer's Mad Money Recap (9/3/08)
- Not Off the RIMM - Cramer's Lightning Round (9/3/08)
- Unbelievable Moves - Cramer's Stop Trading! (9/3/08)
- Full list of Cramers Picks »
Trading Center
Hedge Fund Jobs
Job Seekers: Search jobs by category, get job alerts by email or live feed, apply online See full list of jobs »
Employers: See all recruitment options, get applications online or by email Post a job »


