BUND, T-BRONX, T-NOTE ... e compagnia bella (V.M. 78 Anni)

freccia messa verso nord e test dei massimi di jurnata in corso , poco sotto r2 , se sfondano ci rivediamo con molto probabilità sulle r3
alle 20 i risultati dell'asta di 2y t-note
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
freccia messa verso nord e test dei massimi di jurnata in corso , poco sotto r2 , se sfondano ci rivediamo con molto probabilità sulle r3
alle 20 i risultati dell'asta di 2y t-note

Avranno chi si compra le aste e gliele fan pagare un pò...poi domani si scende per paura dell'inflazione e si posizionano per venerdi :rolleyes:
 
il danaro è sempre stato gonfissimo ,sicuramente i grossi stanno cercando di far coprire un pò degli short aperti copiosi dagli hedge funds, pescecane sta cercando di mordere barracuda

1112200959squalo2[1].gif


era da prendersi qualche long di 10y per accompagnare un pò il rafforzamento dello spread 30y-10y ma mi si son bloccate le dita e ho sparato solo qualche bid in danaro a vuoto
1112201046cheschifo.gif
 
gastronomo ha scritto:
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
freccia messa verso nord e test dei massimi di jurnata in corso , poco sotto r2 , se sfondano ci rivediamo con molto probabilità sulle r3
alle 20 i risultati dell'asta di 2y t-note

Avranno chi si compra le aste e gliele fan pagare un pò...poi domani si scende per paura dell'inflazione e si posizionano per venerdi :rolleyes:

beh per adesso è chiaro chi è short e chi è long e in che quantità, la cosa più probabile visti i rapporti di forza e di conoscenze asimmetriche è che qualcuno dalla parte dei funds voglia coprire qualche short prendendo profitto per non rischiare troppo
 
Temevo accadesse...troppi corti.....ma continuo a pensare che la questione sia solo rimandata...magari anche solo a domani - vedrem :rolleyes: ma che orchite pure oggi.....e che porcones che sto tirando :eek: ...
 
U.S. job gains seen strong again in March

By Andrea Hopkins

WASHINGTON, March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. employers likely added about 220,000 jobs in March, notching another strong month of hiring after a hefty 262,000 gain in February, but analysts warned weather-related volatility could affect the numbers.

After months of disappointing job growth, analysts were pleasantly surprised by February's hiring surge and predict only slightly slower growth in March. Most believe the economy is on track to add more than 2 million jobs this year.

"I don't think there is any reason to believe there's been any setback in the labor market," said Ken Mayland, president of ClearView Economics.

The median estimate from a Reuters survey of 30 analysts is for 220,000 new jobs in March, with forecasts ranging from a gain of 180,000 to 275,000. The unemployment rate is expected to drop to 5.3 percent from 5.4 percent in February.

The Labor Department's closely watched payrolls report, due at 8:30 a.m. EST (1230 GMT) on Friday, is also expected to show a 0.2 percent increase in average hourly earnings and a slight lengthening of the workweek to 33.8 hours.

Experts point to recent data that show layoffs have slowed, factories are humming, and consumer sentiment and spending is buoyant despite a pickup in energy prices and inflation.

Even though Mayland is predicting a gain of 225,000 jobs in March -- in line with other forecasters -- he said would not be surprised by a sudden hiring surge.

"Some month is going to come along here where we're going to see a 350,000 or 400,000 job gain," Mayland said.


STORM CLOUDS

There are some notes of caution about March, however -- and most of it comes down to weather.

David Resler, chief economist at Nomura Securities, said February's 262,000 gain was partly a bounceback from January's disappointing 132,000 growth, and he predicted March hiring somewhere between the two at about 190,000.

"It's our judgment that last month was primarily a makeup for the weather-related weakness in January, and if you look at the two months together ... we think we're in an economy that's generating that kind of job growth," Resler said.

Steve Stanley, chief economist at RBS Greenwich Capital Markets, is also on the lookout for some volatility in March.

"Our feeling is that the weather was bad during the survey week, which should have knocked down hiring in some industries, most notably construction," Stanley said in a research note.

The payrolls report is based on a survey of 160,000 businesses and government agencies conducted in the pay period containing the 12th of the month. In the second week of March, a storm brought colder-than-usual temperatures and as much as a foot of snow to the U.S. Northeast.

Data measuring layoffs have also been mixed. While new claims for unemployment benefits were just 321,000 in the week ended March 12, a report by employment consulting firm Challenger, Gray & Christmas showed planned job cuts rose 17 percent in February.

Paul Ashworth, senior international economist at Capital Economics, said the Challenger report is worrying because the data is not adjusted for seasonal factors and does not take into account that businesses generally announce more job cuts at the start of a quarter.

"We would have hoped for a big decline in February," Ashworth said. "The Challenger survey is now pointing to a much more modest gain of less than 100,000 in payrolls, compared to the 225,000 or so that it was signaling last month."
 
US Treasuries cling to gains despite muted auction

NEW YORK, March 30 (Reuters) - Treasury debt prices clung to modest gains on Wednesday as month-end buying helped overshadow a muted auction of new U.S. government debt.

The sale of $24 billion in new two-year Treasury notes went at a high yield of 3.860 percent. It drew bids for 2.03 times the amount on offer, above February's 1.93 but still below last year's average of 2.2.

Indirect bidders, a class that includes foreign central banks, picked up $7.03 billion, or 29 percent of the issue, below even the meager 31 percent at the last sale. Primary dealers themselves got $15.79 billion of the issue.

Yields on the current two-year note <US2YT=RR> were stuck at 3.84 percent. The benchmark 10-year note <US10YT=RR> was a slight 2/32 firmer, leaving yields at 4.57 percent from 4.58 percent.
 
Treasuries resist sloppy auction to squeak higher
Wed Mar 30, 2005 04:36 PM ET
(Updates prices)
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa

NEW YORK, March 30 (Reuters) - U.S. Treasury bond prices clung to moderate gains on Wednesday as month-end buying helped offset a soft auction of short-term debt.

For the most part, the market was stuck in a holding pattern ahead of key releases on inflation and jobs due at the end of the week.

"We're coming into the big fundamental news -- that's going to be the market's focus," said Alan DeRose, a trader at CIBC World Markets.

With all the anticipation, traders barely registered a spotty sale of $24 billion in new two-year Treasury notes, choosing to focus on buying longer maturities to match month-end extensions in duration.

That strategy helped lift the benchmark 10-year note (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) 5/32 in price, lowering yields to 4.55 percent from 4.58 percent. The 30-year bond (US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) also racked up decent gains, rising 18/32 to yield 4.80 percent compared with 4.84 percent on Tuesday.

Five-year notes (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) gained 3/32, taking yields to 4.25 percent from 4.28 percent.

Looking ahead to Thursday, analysts were expecting steady 0.2 percent growth in the personal consumption expenditure price index, the Fed's favored measure of inflation.

"If we come in at consensus it's going to be in the back of people's minds that the Fed could go 50 basis points at one of the next two meetings, and that would certainly be the case for any number North of that," said DeRose.

Any strength beyond that threshold could place further weight on an already depressed market, he added.

Already on Wednesday the market learned that inflation pressures had been building as early as the fourth quarter, as evident in revisions to that period's gross domestic product growth.

Concerns of a more aggressive Fed given the inflation picture, coupled with the disappointing results for the latest short-term debt auction, kept the current two-year note (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) flat in price for a yield of 3.84 percent.

In Wednesday's sale, the new notes drew bids for 2.03 times the amount on offer, above February's 1.93 but still below last year's average of 2.2.

Indirect bidders, a class that includes foreign central banks, picked up $7.03 billion, or 29 percent of the issue, below even the meager 31 percent at the last sale. Primary dealers themselves got $15.79 billion.

CREEPING INFLATION

In the government's final take on fourth quarter economic growth, the Commerce Department reported GDP grew at a 3.8 percent annualized pace, unchanged from the second estimate but below forecasts of 4.0 percent.

On the upside, business investment was revised up and inventories down, a mix that was promising for growth this quarter.

But in a worrying sign that inflation pressures were already gathering momentum late last year, the price indices in the report were generally revised higher.

The core PCE price index rose an annual 1.7 percent, up from the initial 1.6 percent. The revision takes it a step closer to the top of the central bank's presumed 1.0 percent to 2.0 percent comfort band.

"The slight upward revision to the core PCE deflator will offset any bullish impact from the marginally weaker than expected GDP number and leave bonds treading water before key releases later this week," said Alan Ruskin, research director at 4CAST.

The Fed surprised many last week by highlighting concerns about inflation so any upward drift in the core PCE would likely fan speculation of faster interest rate hikes ahead.
 
Buongiorno a tutti :) ,
livelli sul bund per oggi
r3 118.80
r2 118.44
r1 118.30
pivot 118.08
s1 117.94
s2 117.72
s3 117.36
che sonno...
 

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