bund & c.: la partenza a razzo. Seduti? Pronti? Viaaaaaa

Fleursdumal ha scritto:
poteva mancare il vecio alpin? :lol: :love:

stai bbbbono và ... che ero corto da questa mattina a 113.25 ed ero più che convinto del ribasso, poi quando li ho visti tenere in quel mod a 112,65625 mi sono messo glilli in testa ed ho chiuso ... avessi tenuto invece. :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:


... e vabbè ... ci saranno altre occasioni. :) Vediamo intanto se si ricoprono stì cornuti ... altrimenti mi tocca mettere un'ordine a mezzanotte. :rolleyes:
 
ditropan ha scritto:
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
poteva mancare il vecio alpin? :lol: :love:

stai bbbbono và ... che ero corto da questa mattina a 113.25 ed ero più che convinto del ribasso, poi quando li ho visti tenere in quel mod a 112,65625 mi sono messo glilli in testa ed ho chiuso ... avessi tenuto invece. :rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes:


... e vabbè ... ci saranno altre occasioni. :) Vediamo intanto se si ricoprono stì cornuti ... altrimenti mi tocca mettere un'ordine a mezzanotte. :rolleyes:

mica lo chiamiamo T-bronx per niente :smile: mi son smarronato ore col ditino pronto a incrementare su rottura 113 poi zac hanno piantato una candelaccia improvvisa
 
mica lo chiamiamo T-bronx per niente :smile: [/quote]

infatti :rolleyes:
US Treasuries bleed as bears claw 6-mo high yield
Tue Oct 25, 2005 03:50 PM ET
(Recasts, adds comments, updates prices)
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa

NEW YORK, Oct 25 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury debt prices fell sharply on Tuesday as early selling prompted bears to test six-month highs in benchmark yields.

A mixed auction of five-year inflation-protected debt first triggered the selling, which then took on a life of its own.

Benchmark 10-year notes (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) slumped 20/32 to yield 4.53 percent, up from 4.45 percent Monday and matching a six-month high hit last week.

Analysts said the sell-off represented the resumption of a negative trend in Treasuries that was a natural reaction to economic data showing strong growth and budding inflation.

"We've seen an economy that shows inflationary pressure and has been very resilient through hurricane season," said Joseph Di Censo, fixed-income strategist at Lehman Brothers.

He added that the market was also nervous ahead of Federal Reserve Chairman Alan Greenspan's retirement, which was brought into focus this week with the appointment of Ben Bernanke as his successor.

"Investors usually test new Fed chairmen, but ironically, they seem to be testing Bernanke even before he takes office," Di Censo said.

The market ignored a drop in consumer confidence for October and focused instead on next week's Fed meeting, which is likely to bring another installment in the central bank's monetary tightening campaign.

Bulls got no help from a $7 billion reopened TIPS auction. They were sold at a high yield of 1.740 percent and drew bids 1.65 times per dollar of debt on offer, well below the 1.80 seen in the original sale.

Indirect bidders, which include customers of primary dealers and foreign central banks, took home just $1.62 billion, or 23.1 percent of the deal, well below the 51.8 percent at the original auction and 54.4 percent at the April reopening.

Regular five-year debt (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) suffered more losses after the auction and was down 12/32 for a yield of 4.40 percent from 4.32 percent on Monday.

Treasuries failed to make any headway despite news that consumer confidence took another hit in October even after its dramatic post-Katrina drop in September.

The Conference Board's sentiment index eased to 85.0 from 87.5 in September, upsetting forecasts of a rise to 88.1.

The employment outlook also was a worry. The survey's measure of difficulty in finding work edged up to 25.3 in October, its highest reading since December 2004, from 25.0 in September.

Investors have learned to discount what consumers say and focus instead on what they did, and what they did, at least in September, was buy homes in earnest.

Sales of existing homes were unchanged last month at a 7.28 million unit annual pace, with strong post-Katrina sales in the South helping offset weaker activity elsewhere, the National Association of Realtors said.

That helped explain why two-year notes (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) were off 4/32 for a yield of 4.33 percent, a new 4-1/2-year high, while 30-year debt(US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) retreated 1-1/32 to yield 4.73 percent from 4.67 percent.

As for retail spending, two weekly surveys released on Tuesday provided a mixed view.

Chain store retail sales fell 0.2 percent in the week ended Oct. 22, compared with a 0.4 percent increase the previous week, the International Council of Shopping Centers and UBS said in a joint report.

Redbook Research, an independent company, said U.S. chain store sales rose 1.0 percent in the third week of October from the same period in September.


© Reuters 2005. All Rights Reserved.
 
goood morning bbbbanda

ottimo ottimo bbbbanditi ( e qui ci vorrebbe la immagine del nonnetto)
siete in gran forma :)
 

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