Derivati USA: CME-CBOT-NYMEX-ICE BUND, TBOND and the middle of the guado (VM 69)

impagabili quelli che suonano il sax, stanno disegnando sullo spoore una candela da totale presa per il q :D se chiudono bassi ennessimo gap domani in europa , i grafi sono un gruviera ormai :squalo::jack::grinangel:
 
Come prima sensazione... ma poi ci studiero sopra domani si dovrebbe di nuovo recuperare magari dopo un a notte difficile.. notte difficile anche per molti TS cmq....

e poi si scopre che anche gli hedge sono sotto....
 
China reviews eurozone bond holdings

By David Oakley in London and Jamil Anderlini in Beijing
Published: May 26 2010 18:43 | Last updated: May 26 2010 18:43

China, which boasts the world’s largest foreign exchange reserves, is reviewing its holdings of eurozone debt in the wake of the crisis that has swept through the region’s bond markets.
Representatives of China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange, or Safe, which manages the reserves under the country’s central bank, has been meeting with foreign bankers in Beijing in recent days to discuss the issue.

Safe, which holds an estimated $630bn of eurozone bonds in its reserves, has expressed concern about its exposure to the five so-called peripheral eurozone markets of Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.

Any move by Safe would mark a significant change in direction, as Beijing has been trying to diversify away from the US dollar in recent years by buying a greater proportion of assets denominated in other currencies.
One investor said: “This is a big strategic shift. Last year, the Chinese were trying to reduce their exposure to dollar assets by buying eurozone assets. This would be a complete reversal.”
A spokesman for Safe refused to comment. An estimated 70 per cent of China’s reserves are held in US dollar securities, but the composition and management of the funds controlled by Safe are regarded as state secrets.
However, analysts point out that Safe rarely cuts its existing holdings significantly as it has so much new money to invest every month.
Instead, it reduces the proportion of new investment it devotes to a particular asset, thereby reducing the weighting of that asset in its overall portfolio.
According to the latest figures announced by Safe, the country’s foreign exchange reserves totalled $2,447bn at the end of March, up $174bn in just six months.
Separately, a Chinese diplomat said he was “worried about” the effect of Europe’s debt crisis and the weakness of the euro on the global recovery and China’s country’s exports.
“The euro’s fluctuation will have an impact on China’s thinking, but it’s only one element” in any decision to allow the Chinese currency to rise, He Yafei, a vice foreign minister, said, according to Bloomberg.
China’s official reserves have been growing at a rapid pace for years, driven by inflows of foreign capital, a large trade surplus and restrictive cross-border capital controls.






Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.
 
China reviews eurozone bond holdings

By David Oakley in London and Jamil Anderlini in Beijing
Published: May 26 2010 18:43 | Last updated: May 26 2010 18:43

China, which boasts the world’s largest foreign exchange reserves, is reviewing its holdings of eurozone debt in the wake of the crisis that has swept through the region’s bond markets.
Representatives of China’s State Administration of Foreign Exchange, or Safe, which manages the reserves under the country’s central bank, has been meeting with foreign bankers in Beijing in recent days to discuss the issue.

Safe, which holds an estimated $630bn of eurozone bonds in its reserves, has expressed concern about its exposure to the five so-called peripheral eurozone markets of Greece, Ireland, Italy, Portugal and Spain.

Any move by Safe would mark a significant change in direction, as Beijing has been trying to diversify away from the US dollar in recent years by buying a greater proportion of assets denominated in other currencies.
One investor said: “This is a big strategic shift. Last year, the Chinese were trying to reduce their exposure to dollar assets by buying eurozone assets. This would be a complete reversal.”
A spokesman for Safe refused to comment. An estimated 70 per cent of China’s reserves are held in US dollar securities, but the composition and management of the funds controlled by Safe are regarded as state secrets.
However, analysts point out that Safe rarely cuts its existing holdings significantly as it has so much new money to invest every month.
Instead, it reduces the proportion of new investment it devotes to a particular asset, thereby reducing the weighting of that asset in its overall portfolio.
According to the latest figures announced by Safe, the country’s foreign exchange reserves totalled $2,447bn at the end of March, up $174bn in just six months.
Separately, a Chinese diplomat said he was “worried about” the effect of Europe’s debt crisis and the weakness of the euro on the global recovery and China’s country’s exports.
“The euro’s fluctuation will have an impact on China’s thinking, but it’s only one element” in any decision to allow the Chinese currency to rise, He Yafei, a vice foreign minister, said, according to Bloomberg.
China’s official reserves have been growing at a rapid pace for years, driven by inflows of foreign capital, a large trade surplus and restrictive cross-border capital controls.






Copyright The Financial Times Limited 2010. You may share using our article tools. Please don't cut articles from FT.com and redistribute by email or post to the web.


notare la forza dell'oro in queste ultime sedute certamente correlate a queste tensioni e vedo i futuri che promettono notte difficile come avevo pronosticato...
 
gooood morning bbbanda

bellissimo articolo sui chinenis

hanno così tatnti soldi che non venderanno bond italogreci .... per sottopesarli, ne compreranno di meno :rolleyes:

interessante però anche che temono l'euro basso
-Ho maturato la convinzione che i cinesi mentono sempre (Bini Smaghi diceva qualcosa a proposito, quando ho tempo lo cerco)
-Non ci frega niente se non comprano i nostri bond, non siamo gli USA con la globablizzazione e il sistema "tu compri il mio debito, io compro la tua merce".


occhio che questo l'ha scritto Bottarelli che è l'amico di Ambrosio
scrive tante di quelle sciocchezze che è tempo sprecato leggerlo... come quella del fallimento di uno stato europeo ad Aprile... 2009 :D

Purtroppo di questi tempi tutti scrivono immani sciocchezze, è un problema trovare qualcosa che vale la pena, sigh...
 
"European stocks rose after China’s foreign exchange regulator said reports that it was reviewing its euro holdings are “groundless.” Asian shares and U.S. index futures surged."
 
-Ho maturato la convinzione che i cinesi mentono sempre (Bini Smaghi diceva qualcosa a proposito, quando ho tempo lo cerco)
-Non ci frega niente se non comprano i nostri bond, non siamo gli USA con la globablizzazione e il sistema "tu compri il mio debito, io compro la tua merce".



occhio che questo l'ha scritto Bottarelli che è l'amico di Ambrosio
scrive tante di quelle sciocchezze che è tempo sprecato leggerlo... come quella del fallimento di uno stato europeo ad Aprile... 2009 :D

Purtroppo di questi tempi tutti scrivono immani sciocchezze, è un problema trovare qualcosa che vale la pena, sigh...

ma se non ci frega niente delle loro merci come è che abbiamo aumentato l'import dalla Cina negli ultimi 8 anni? :D
 

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