Bund,T-bond,T-note, CME,CBOT ....(vietato ai minori di 75aa)

accontentato di 18 sette tick...meglio l'uovo oggi... :ops:


questi sono un po' pazzerelli :D


oddio magari un'altra entratina a 117.40 :eek: si potrebbe fare :ops:
 
uscito a 117.18 :evil:

tra il bund e i certificati in un solo giorno mi son mangiato il gain di un mese :evil:

ok ancora 4 giorni per uscire in gain seppure piccolo :-D

si riparte da ZERO :eek:

a domani :)

ps. sul bund lascio un ordine a 117.60 non si sa mai
ciao :) :) :)
 
Buongiorno a tutti gli shorters impenitenti :) , eccomi tornato temporaneamente in questa Milano piovosa e uggiosa - ci tocca aspettare il 2 novembre :rolleyes: ... certo che più a lungo il petrolio sta lassù più gli impatti sull'economia reale si faranno sentire...per il riscaldamento di quest'inverno mi sà che mi tocca bruciare la libreria :eek: :-D :lol: - Bravo a Dan che ha cambiato avatar (l'altro mi agita...), spero Fleur stia bene (nel senso esteso della sua famiglia :) ), un saluto al caro Ditro e bbanda (quelli dello zoo hanno ripreso Ciube :-? :lol: :lol: :lol: ), una lettura per l'Avvocato su indicazione di un sito che ho beccato in giro :)

Top 10 Bestsellers at the Financial World Bookshop in the City of London
Below is a list of the current top 10 best sellers in the bookshop in the City of London that Patrick Young of erivativesreview.com has an equity interest. According to Patrick, “the Financial World Bookshop is the “largest specialist financial book store in Europe and the last remaining store of its type in the City of London.” Additionally, “A large number of Chicago and New York traders regularly visit the bookstore when in Europe as it offers a truly amazing selection of books which habitually carries 8000 financial titles in stock,” Patrick wrote in this newsletter last summer. I hope to make this a recurring feature. Here is the list:



Top 10 Bestsellers
1. Fooled By Randomness: The Hidden Role of Chance in Life and the Markets

Taleb (Texere Publishing) 2004 £12.99



2. Introduction to Global Financial Markets

Valdez (Palgrave Macmillan) 2003 £25.99



3. Options, Futures and Other Derivatives

Hull (Prentice Hall) 2002 £44.99



4. Dictionary of Finance and Investment Terms

Downes & Goodman (Barron’s Educational Series) 2003 £10.99



5. The "Financial Times" Guide to Using the Financial Pages

Vaitilingam (FT Prentice Hall) 2000 £14.99



6. Art of Persuasion

Erickson (Hodder Mobius) 2004 £10.99



7. Financial Instrument Pricing Using C++

Duffy (John Wiley) 2004 £60.00



8. Mastering Financial Calculations: A Step-by-step Guide to the Mathematics of Financial Markets

Steiner (FT Prentice Hall) 1998 £35.99



9. Ugly Americans: The True Story of the Ivy League Cowboy Who Raided Asia in Search of the American Dream

Mezrich (William Heinemann) 2004 £10.99



10. Volatility and Correlation 2nd ed.

Rebonato (John Wiley) 2004 £65.00
Here is the contact information for the bookshop:
Financial World Bookshop
90 Bishopsgate
London EC2N 4DQ
Tel: 020 7929 7794
Fax: 020 7626 8138
Email: [email protected]
The Financial World Bookshop is located in the heart of the City of London. It benefits from good communications with Liverpool Street, Moorgate, Bank and Aldgate stations, which are all within close proximity to the property.
The bookshop is situated on the corner of Bishopsgate, Camomile Street and Wormwood street, just 2 minutes walk from Liverpool Street station.
 
bentornato gastro

molto gradito l'omaggio

Ciube sta bene, i suoi piccoli han le cose dei piccoli
e lui babysittereggia

tentiamo opzioni a destra e a manca
ancora ci manca la 'quadra'

e il mercato..... afffan.kiul.o il mercato 8)
 
Andrea 53 ha scritto:
e DITRO qui non si è visto e nemmeno nel palazzo accanto :-?


ciao Andrea ... ci sono ci sono .... sofferente ed in silenzio ma ci sono. :pimp: ;)


questa mattina ho detto crepi l'avarizia e me ne sono scortari 2 di bund a 117,2.
 
dan questo è perfetto come avatar :D

1098728738silvioincina2.jpg
 
US Treasuries supported as oil climbs

(Updates prices, comment, changes byline)

By Ellen Freilich

NEW YORK, Oct 25 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury yields hit their lowest level in almost seven months on Monday as record high oil prices clouded the outlook for global economic growth.

A slump in the dollar was also taken as potentially positive for bonds, since traders suspected Asian central banks could intervene to stop the currency falling too far. In the past, many of the dollars bought in intervention have ended up parked in Treasuries.

The benchmark 10-year Treasury yield <US10YT=RR> dropped as far as 3.93 percent in early trade from 3.98 percent late on Friday, in the process surpassing September's trough of 3.96 percent. Yields later edged back up to 3.96 percent on profit-taking, but the trend was clear.

"Treasuries remain (convinced) that growth may be dampened going forward on account of higher oil prices," said Parul Jain, deputy chief economist at Nomura Securities.

The sharp movements in oil prices and the blue-chip Dow Jones industrial average's slide below 10,000 fed a safe-haven bid for Treasuries, Jain said.

"Some money is going from equities into the safety of Treasuries in view of the pending election," she added.

One trader at a U.S. primary dealer said: "The bid started strong out of Asia, gathered pace as global equity markets slipped and got another pop when 3.96 (percent) cracked.

"You have to think bonds are expensive at these levels, but nobody wants to short them in such uncertain times and the path of least resistance is down (in yields)," the trader said, adding that 3.91 percent was the next chart target.

The only U.S. economic data of the day showed the housing market was surprisingly strong in September, with sales of existing homes rising 3.1 percent to an annual 6.75 million pace. Bond investors, however, have long become inured to robust housing data and the numbers had little lasting impact.

Two-year notes <US2YT=RR> added 1/32 in price, lowering yields to 2.50 percent from 2.52 percent. The Treasury will hold an auction of new two-year notes on Wednesday that is likely to amount to $24 billion.

Five-year notes <US5YT=RR> added 3/32, taking yields to 3.23 percent from 3.25 percent late on Friday. The 30-year bond <US30YT=RR> rose 3/32, leaving its yield at 4.75 percent.

Oil futures climbed above $55 a barrel <0#CL:> as a threat by Norwegian oil and gas employers to halt production exacerbated supply fears.

The inexorable rise in energy costs could squeeze corporate profit margins. That view took a toll on U.S, equity futures <NDZ4><SPZ4>. Euro zone and Japanese shares were also hit by fears the falling dollar would make exports from those regions less competitive.

In contrast, some bond investors are hoping the dollar's decline will spark another wave of intervention, as it did early in the year. Then the Japanese, in particular, intervened massively to stop the dollar's slide against the yen and much of the currency purchased was parked in Treasuries.

"Yen strength, and other Asia FX strength versus the dollar, brings about noise/expectation that intervention will be around to slow rallies in local currencies," said Peter McTeague, head of government bond strategy at RBS Greenwich Capital Markets.

That was just one of the reasons he looked for yields to tick lower in the week ahead.

"We like the low-rate thesis and feel that that the 'pain' trade is another adjustment lower," he said. "Strong oil, weak stocks, and a weak dollar may force that trade, and softer recent data and election uncertainty also work in favor of bonds versus stocks."
 

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