Bund e TBond: l'era del cinghiale bianco

adesso i bonds stanno andando in panic buying , non riuscivo a capire come resistesse lo spoore e anfatti adesso sta bucando il min intraday però proprio quando il T-Bond è ultratirato :specchio:
 
grafo monthly, più tardi cerco di capire come abbinargli il tasso d'interesse

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Fleursdumal ha scritto:
stamattina ho trovato una carta di credito a terra, nessuno l'aveva vista :eek: era solo davanti all'ingresso della stazione ferroviaria :lol:
presa e portata alla stazione di polizia, sono un citizen modello :-o

brao!

fai vedere che gli italiani non sono tutti poco di buono

.... e poi se provavi ad usarla mi sà che ti beccavano :V
 
TREASURIES-Bonds up as bank gloom offsets holiday cheer
Mon Nov 26, 2007
By Burton Frierson

NEW YORK, Nov 26 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasuries rose on Monday, pushing benchmark yields to their lowest level in more than two years, as fresh credit market strains revived demand for safe-haven government bonds.

Continuing a drip feed of bad news from banks, analysts at Goldman Sachs said HSBC (HSBA.L: Quote, Profile , Research) (0005.HK: Quote, Profile , Research), Europe's biggest bank, was likely to need a further $12 billion in provisions for its U.S. subprime mortgage and home equity loans.

The Federal Reserve, meanwhile, said it would supply additional liquidity to the banking system ahead of the New Year in response to heightened pressures in money markets.

The Fed news and HSBC report increased worries that continued fallout from the housing slump will undermine the economy, enhancing the allure of low-risk government debt on fears that losses in other financial markets signal more trouble for a slowing economy.

Dealers said light volumes were exaggerating price moves, though worries about the economy's ability to withstand recent shocks trumped all other factors.

"The market seems to be now more focused on recession and worrying about economic slowdown," said Bill Tedford, director of fixed income strategy at Stephens Capital Management in Little Rock, Arkansas.
Prices on benchmark 10-year notes <US10YT> rose 7/32 on the day to yield 3.98 percent. Price gains took 10-year yields down as far as 3.97 percent, their lowest point since mid-2005. Bond prices and yields move inversely.

Stocks failed to live up to earlier enthusiasm over figures showing robust shopping traffic during the post-Thanksgiving weekend.

"Most of the Treasury rally took place as the stock market began to sell off," said Carley Garner, senior analyst at Alaron Trading in Las Vegas.

However, shorter dated notes were struggling in the face of upcoming bond supply, with Treasury expected to sell two- and five-year notes later in the week.

Two-year notes <US2YT> fell 1/32 on the day to yield 3.09 percent. Five-year notes <US5YT> were flat to yield 3.41 percent.

Still, dealers expect sizeable month-end buying as money managers try to keep pace with market benchmarks after Treasuries auctions this month.

"We know that Friday brings on a large month-end extension need at a time when investors by several measures are neutral. Ergo an extension leaves them a bit short," David Ader, head of government bond strategy at RBS Greenwich Capital, said in a research note.

This month's auctions included a reopening of 30-year bonds. Long bonds rallied on Monday ahead of the month-end extension and also as investors repositioned after recent gains that had benefited short dated notes in particular.

Prices on 30-year bonds <US30YT> rose 18/32, pushing yields down to 4.39 percent, their lowest in two years. (Editing by Leslie Adler)
 

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