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Treasuries retreat as mortgage sector turns jittery
Wed Oct 26, 2005 02:06 PM ET
(Adds auction details, analyst comments, updates prices)
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa
NEW YORK, Oct 26 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury debt prices retreated for a third straight session on Wednesday as mortgage-related selling helped push benchmark yields to their highest level in seven months.
The selling took on a momentum of its own after rapidly raising yields breached 4.53 percent, a key chart level that forced investors worried about slower prepayment speeds of mortgage loans to dump Treasuries.
Benchmark 10-year notes (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) were 5/32 lower for a yield of 4.57 percent, up from 4.54 percent on Tuesday but below the 4.61 percent touched at the height of selling.
"It is looking increasingly likely that the 10-year's trading range is re-setting from the placid 4.00-4.50 percent range that has prevailed for 2-1/2 years to something higher," said Tony Crescenzi, chief bond market strategist at Miller, Tabak & Co.
Bonds got little help from an auction of $20 billion in two-year notes that dealers described as average. The sale garnered a high yield of 4.365 percent and 2.21 times the number of bids per dollar of debt on offer.
That was just above the 2.17 percent average of the nine previous two-year auctions in 2005.
Indirect bidders, which include customers of primary dealers and foreign central banks, took home $6.93 billion or 34.7 percent of the deal, also just above the 34.1 percent average at the nine previous two-year auctions.
The current two-year note (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was off 1/32 and yielding 4.37 percent, up from 4.34 percent.
Treasuries resumed a two-month selling trend this week as it dawned on investors that not only is the Federal Reserve likely to raise interest rates when it meets next week, it is also bound to keep doing so in the foreseeable future.
The nomination of Ben Bernanke to succeed Greenspan next month removed some uncertainty from the market, but impatient traders started to question his inflation-fighting credentials before he was even confirmed for the job.
"Some of this selling is related to uncertainty over the inflation view of the proposed new Fed chairman," said Andrew Brenner, head of fixed-income at Investec U.S.
Traders reported heavy trading volume, a good deal related to a mortgage-market looking to hedge against slower prepayments that would prevent brokers from reinvesting at higher yields -- a phenomenon known as extension risk.
But poor performance in European debt was also spilling over into U.S. markets, felled both by positive economic news in Germany and tough talk on inflation from the European Central Bank.
Adding to bond-negative sentiment, the Financial Times reported that AHBR, one of Germany's top mortgage lenders, was "close to failure." U.S. dealers feared such an event would likely trigger heavy selling of U.S. government securities from AHBR's porfolio.
Five-year notes (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) eased 4/32 for a yield of 4.45 percent, while the 30-year bond (US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) lost 13/32 to yield 4.77 percent, up from 4.74 percent.
Treasuries retreat as mortgage sector turns jittery
Wed Oct 26, 2005 02:06 PM ET
(Adds auction details, analyst comments, updates prices)
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa
NEW YORK, Oct 26 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury debt prices retreated for a third straight session on Wednesday as mortgage-related selling helped push benchmark yields to their highest level in seven months.
The selling took on a momentum of its own after rapidly raising yields breached 4.53 percent, a key chart level that forced investors worried about slower prepayment speeds of mortgage loans to dump Treasuries.
Benchmark 10-year notes (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) were 5/32 lower for a yield of 4.57 percent, up from 4.54 percent on Tuesday but below the 4.61 percent touched at the height of selling.
"It is looking increasingly likely that the 10-year's trading range is re-setting from the placid 4.00-4.50 percent range that has prevailed for 2-1/2 years to something higher," said Tony Crescenzi, chief bond market strategist at Miller, Tabak & Co.
Bonds got little help from an auction of $20 billion in two-year notes that dealers described as average. The sale garnered a high yield of 4.365 percent and 2.21 times the number of bids per dollar of debt on offer.
That was just above the 2.17 percent average of the nine previous two-year auctions in 2005.
Indirect bidders, which include customers of primary dealers and foreign central banks, took home $6.93 billion or 34.7 percent of the deal, also just above the 34.1 percent average at the nine previous two-year auctions.
The current two-year note (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was off 1/32 and yielding 4.37 percent, up from 4.34 percent.
Treasuries resumed a two-month selling trend this week as it dawned on investors that not only is the Federal Reserve likely to raise interest rates when it meets next week, it is also bound to keep doing so in the foreseeable future.
The nomination of Ben Bernanke to succeed Greenspan next month removed some uncertainty from the market, but impatient traders started to question his inflation-fighting credentials before he was even confirmed for the job.
"Some of this selling is related to uncertainty over the inflation view of the proposed new Fed chairman," said Andrew Brenner, head of fixed-income at Investec U.S.
Traders reported heavy trading volume, a good deal related to a mortgage-market looking to hedge against slower prepayments that would prevent brokers from reinvesting at higher yields -- a phenomenon known as extension risk.
But poor performance in European debt was also spilling over into U.S. markets, felled both by positive economic news in Germany and tough talk on inflation from the European Central Bank.
Adding to bond-negative sentiment, the Financial Times reported that AHBR, one of Germany's top mortgage lenders, was "close to failure." U.S. dealers feared such an event would likely trigger heavy selling of U.S. government securities from AHBR's porfolio.
Five-year notes (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) eased 4/32 for a yield of 4.45 percent, while the 30-year bond (US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) lost 13/32 to yield 4.77 percent, up from 4.74 percent.