Bond rally nearing an end?

Discussion in 'Financial Futures' started by gharghur2, Jan 18, 2006.

  1. WOW! $750 GOLD ... 1.34 EURO

    Gold recent new highs are not being confirmed by the gold mining stocks, which have tracked it all the way up. $700 sounds like a nice round number to sell.

    The Dollar has yet to test and fail at important support levels just below the market. Until that happens I remain BULLISH long term while the Dollar seeks this intermediate term low.

    Just my thoughts ;)
     
    #1001     May 9, 2006
  2. mcurto

    mcurto

    2 day total on this NOB strangle package is 27,000 x 16,000, pretty much same levels. This NOB is gonna make a big move soon, all of this seems to be pointing toward a steepening of the spread.
     
    #1002     May 9, 2006
  3. Buy1Sell2

    Buy1Sell2

    I agree with your first statement about putting on positions on when times are slow. I don't agree with the second statement that it is much smarter to not put in positions on these slow days. It is my belief that the smart money positions themselves ahead of the crowd using whatever technicals they are comfortable with. It's the small spec who then is chasing the market right after news etc.
     
    #1003     May 9, 2006
  4. Surdo

    Surdo

    el Surdo boarded the train this afternoon! (an add on)

    I would love to see a Pit Close of 106 '18 , or higher, for one more "Greenie"!
     
    #1004     May 9, 2006
  5. Think it's just three of us now
     
    #1005     May 9, 2006
  6. Surdo

    Surdo

    We got the "Greenie" on an UNCH '17 close!
     
    #1006     May 9, 2006
  7. Now all we need is Bernanke :)
     
    #1007     May 9, 2006
  8. moo

    moo

    So is "the Fed ends at 5%" already priced in?
     
    #1008     May 9, 2006
  9. If the statement contains something to the effect that they will pause to wait for more data I believe we'll have a monster rally, at least for a day.
     
    #1009     May 9, 2006

  10. It's curve/premium/greek neutral here and not terribly aggressive. The greeks are currently flat across the spread.

    The delta curvature is such that it becomes a flatener on the upside and steepener on the downside [bond prices]. Interesting trade, but not a significant position will be incured in either scenario, unless we move >1SD, then a reversion is necessary. It's flat to short gamma/vega at delta neutrality and "gets shorter" as we trade to the strikes -- short dvega + dgamma [curvatures] due to the net short options in TY.
     
    #1010     May 9, 2006