us treasuries

The Consensus

By |2021-04-16T19:51:39-04:00April 16th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

With government cash being shoveled into personal and corporate bank accounts, US consumers have reported that they are being more optimistic about the state of the economy. Before that, they went on a spending binge as stated unequivocally by historic retail sales figures. Why, then, so much higher spending than improved happiness and certainty while going about it?The University of [...]

Perhaps Just One Word Absent From The Historic Consumer Splurge

By |2021-04-15T20:00:07-04:00April 15th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Enormous. Terrific. Unbelievable. Biggest ever. The superlatives for US consumer spending during the month of March 2021 are appropriate, and for once they aren’t caused by some artifact of arithmetic or some other trick. While there are absolutely some base effects within the numbers, these levels of retail sales are far and away more than those. It's so ridiculous that [...]

Why *Only* That Specific One?

By |2021-04-14T19:49:23-04:00April 14th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On February 23, the US Treasury sold off $60 billion and change of 2-year notes (CUSIP 91282CBN0). This particular shorter-term instrument has been in the crosshairs of the reflation trade, lurching in and out of it going back to last October, perhaps even late September. Caught up being the immediate tenor following the bills which have been bid (for “some” [...]

Fragility (脆弱性)

By |2021-04-13T19:16:45-04:00April 13th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

For a short while, with reflation being traded in almost every corner of the global bond market, the Bank of Japan started to get “those” questions again. Almost of the humble brag variety. A few years ago, Japan’s central bank had widened what it considered to be an acceptable trading range for its 2016 QQE addendum of Yield Curve Control [...]

Soar or Sour: Short Run, *Then* What?

By |2021-04-06T18:32:13-04:00April 6th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The sound of economic sizzle finally within earshot, though perhaps nearly a year too late. PMI’s for the month of March 2021 were of the sort which should have come about in May and June 2020. The “V”-shaped recovery was much talked about at that earlier time, though in PMI terms (as well as regular “hard” data) the numbers fell [...]

Maybe The Biggest Challenge Is Not To Get Carried Away

By |2021-04-06T12:38:25-04:00April 6th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Like a child fixated on a shiny new toy, I was enthralled by trading in WTI futures on Monday. There are times when end-of-day closing prices just don’t capture the full extent of what actually goes on during the several hours of any regular session, and yesterday was certainly one of those times. We’ve been on top of front-end contango [...]

Throw A German ‘Log’ On The Possible Fedwire Fire

By |2021-03-26T19:47:49-04:00March 26th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

One other fascinating, corroborating angle to the short run picture comes at us from Europe, specifically Germany. As illustrated yesterday, there’s a whole bunch of market prices/indications from around the world which have keyed in on February 24-25 as a possible turning point. The most obvious candidate which may have triggered it would be February 25th’s major US Treasury selloff. [...]

Dealers Finally *Choose* To Sell UST’s, Predictably Market Chooses to Buy All of Them

By |2021-03-23T20:11:57-04:00March 23rd, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

There is a bit of a benefit from all this SLR “cliff” business, though tangential in nature. It is another test of the “too many” Treasury hypothesis, the idea that a lot of the problems in funding markets like repo had been caused by the government’s fiscal profligacy (especially following December 2017’s TCJA “tax reform”). With foreigners selling UST’s, and [...]

TGA & RRP, Bills Fed Up

By |2021-03-17T19:36:37-04:00March 17th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

When the 4-week Treasury bill equivalent yield traversed the so-called RRP “floor” back in 2017, hardly anyone noticed. With rates nominally rising due to the Federal Reserve’s historically dovish hawkish normalization push, it was all a jumbled mess. What if the 4-week bill rate (or 3-month) was somewhat less than this RRP thing-y, they were all moving anyway.Even as the [...]

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