bund, t-bond t-note ecc SOLO LONG FOR EVER

gastronomo ha scritto:
la Cina rivaluta :smile: :smile: :smile: :smile:

Non mi è chiaro come possa reagire il bund :rolleyes:[/quote]

neanche a me
ma temo reagirà come sempre nei momenti di incertezza :uhm:

ora 1400 121.96 :uhm: :uhm: :uhm: :uhm:
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
troppo stress in quest'ultimo periodo orcolo , lo pompa è al limite :eek: :D :sse:

mmm nonostante il candelozzo, lo spread 30y-10y è rimasto intatto , no buono

Grandissimi stì cinesi !!! :D ... gli ho rotto il chiulo al t-bronx in questi minuti ... + 3850 € netti !!! :-D :-D :-D :-D

1121947969azz5.jpg


... cazzarola non stavo capendo na cippa ... ero lì che clikkavo come un matto !!! :eek: :eek: :eek:
 
Bravo Andrea, pure io non ci capisco una cippa: da 121.85 a 122.45 sul crucco... lasciati 1800 euro in un amen..... e continuo a non avere idee ... e guarda come continua a ballare :eek:
 
orco zio come non bastasse altro, oggi ci rimetto 4,5 anni di vitatraderistica

c'mon c'mon

Gb: nuovo allarme a Londra, evacuate stazioni metro
ROMA (MF-DJ)--Nuovo allarme nella citta' di Londra. Si sarebbe verificata una serie di incidenti nella rete metropolitana della capitale britannica. Tre stazioni sono state prontamente evacuate. ren
 
US S&P stock futures fall on London tube evacuation
Thu Jul 21, 2005 08:28 AM ET
(Updates with futures falling)
NEW YORK, July 21 (Reuters) - U.S. Standard & Poor's stock futures on Thursday pointed to a lower market open after a London underground railway station was evacuated.
 
dati alle 16 alle 18, fomc minutes alle 20 , il nonnetto alle 16, trimestrali pesanti alle 22:15 , notizie nebulose da Londra, il mercato valutario in tempesta, si salvi chi può
 
Treasuries in downdraft on China revaluation news
Thu Jul 21, 2005 08:39 AM ET
NEW YORK, July 21 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury debt prices, particularly longer-dated securities, fell hard on Thursday morning on news that China had revalued its currency, sparking concern Chinese demand for U.S. debt might start to fade.

Subsequent news on Thursday of fresh emergencies at three London subway stations, did not yet spark a flight-to-quality into the U.S. Treasuries market.

While a China revaluation at 2.1 percent was modest, the market's concern clearly reflected the critical role foreign central banks have played in keeping long-term rates so low even as the Federal Reserve has raised short-term rates rise.

"It was a token revaluation at 2.1 percent. But It's going to potentially create less demand on the long end," said one trader at a Wall Street Treasury dealer.

The benchmark 10-year note (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was 14/32 and yielding 4.21 percent compared with 4.16 percent on Wednesday.

The two-year note (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was 1/32 lower and yielding 3.89 percent.

The consequence of the collective effect of Thursday's action was a widening spread between the yield on the two- and 10-year notes to 31 basis points from 28 basis points on Wednesday.

That spread has been narrowing dramatically since the Fed began raising short-term rates just over a year ago -- in part because of buying by foreign central banks.

Still, some economists were injecting a cautionary note, saying that the revaluation would do little to alter China's appetite for U.S. debt.

"They're going to continue to accumulate dollars that will be invested in U.S. Treasuries. So I don't think this is anything that spells the end of Chinese buying of U.S. Treasuries at all," said Chris Rupkey, senior financial economist at Bank of Tokyo-Mitsubishi in New York. "I would say (Friday's downward move) is a one-day event."
 

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