Bond rally nearing an end?

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

  1. spersky

    spersky

    I re-established my short in the 10 year note today at 108050. I think today was just a relief rally because the CPI came it as expected, and was not worse. We will see what happenes.

    Regards,
    Steve
     
    #121     Feb 22, 2006
  2. The 30yr is getting overbought short term, and it's internal momentum is still in decline.
    Staying short
     
    #122     Feb 22, 2006
  3. Surdo

    Surdo

    5-Yr Note Auction...Tad sloppy, Light Indirect Takedown

    Stone & McCarthy (Princeton) -- The 5-year note auction statistics were run-of-the-mill to sloppy.
    The auction stopped at 4.622%, a tad above pre-auction stop talk that centered on 4.6175% heading into the deadline. 56.17% of bids at the high yield

    were accepted. The Indirect takedown was a light 21.3%.

    The bid cover came in at 2.18, relative to an average of 2.54 over the prior 12 auctions. Non-comps were light as usual $147 mln.
     
    #123     Feb 23, 2006
  4. Thanks

    Lets see how they react to this ...
     
    #124     Feb 23, 2006
  5. When does liquidity shift to june on the 30-yr? Thanks.
     
    #125     Feb 27, 2006
  6. mcurto

    mcurto

    Tomorrow
     
    #126     Feb 27, 2006
  7. march and june trading at the same price already?
     
    #127     Feb 27, 2006
  8. landboy

    landboy

    Are you in the buying volatility camp, Mcurto?
     
    #128     Feb 27, 2006
  9. fuf

    fuf

    Anyone know where is a good website source that has the contract roll-over specific days for the ZB?
     
    #129     Feb 27, 2006
  10. mcurto

    mcurto

    No way, I wouldn't be buying volatility yet unless I could pay for the straddle decay by scalping gamma, and on a day like today it would have been tough since it was a one way street. Everyone is saying "volatility is so cheap, it can't be this cheap, might as well buy it, etc.". I am still in the camp that until there is warning of a structural change in long end rates or reason for the Asians to diversify I would continue to remain short it. On the other hand, if one is short volatility I would continue to trim down on the position size (the Merrill MOVE index is at 8-year lows and hasn't been there since before LTCM) because every day that we bleed lower in volatility it will make the blowup that much worse. If you have deep pockets maybe buy some September (or even December) volatility in the 30yr, but it is incredibly illiquid so good luck getting out once locals know your position.
     
    #130     Feb 27, 2006