Psicologia e mercati pacco doppiopacco&contropaccotto..sig.e sig:il Bund-vm18 (1 Viewer)

ditropan

Forumer storico
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
te li vai a cercare col lanternino i guai neh :D :lol: :p
sei in posizione praticamente ovunque :eek: dimmi cosa ti manca che vediamo di fare a scambio come le figurine :D

:D :D :D :D :grinangel:


.... che vadano affanchiulo ... non mi piacciono per niente !!!
Li vedo con poco sprint gli yankees ... 2 contrattini li porto a casa e gli altri tento la sorte.

Facciamo un poco di barbon trading. :D :smile:

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ditropan

Forumer storico
fanbrodo !!!! ... aspettavano che io mi alleggerissi per salire ! :evil: :evil: :rolleyes:


... imposto i seguenti prezzi assurdi e vediamo se hanno il coraggio di eseguirmi !!! :lol: :lol: :lol:

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maaaandiiii. :) :smile:
 

gastronomo

Forumer storico
Treasuries mixed ahead of fresh supply, key data
Mon Jan 24, 2005 03:07 PM ET
(Adds Guynn, analyst comments, prices)
By Pedro Nicolaci da Costa

NEW YORK, Jan 24 (Reuters) - U.S. government debt prices were narrowly mixed in thin trade on Monday as the market geared up for a fresh batch of data and the latest serving of supply from the Treasury.

Comments from Atlanta Federal Reserve President Jack Guynn did little to alter market expectations for a sustained dose of moderate interest rate hikes, at least in the first half of the year.

"In an environment of slower growth, steady job creation, weaker productivity gains, and modestly rising inflation that we envision for 2005, the FOMC will continue to lift its target federal funds rate," said Steven Wood, chief economist at Insight Economics.

"Based on our forecast we believe the baseline case is for the FOMC to increase short-term interest rates by 25 basis points at each of the next four meetings," said Wood.

For his part, Guynn said merely that the Fed's efforts to tighten monetary policy should prevent a major build-up in inflation, a view that broadly mirrored the market's consensus on price pressures.

Consumers also appeared sanguine on the issue, with the University of Michigan's latest survey showing households anticipate a 2.75 percent annual rise in prices during the next five to 10 years.

With no economic data due until later this week, the market was left to drift in its usual pattern so far this month, with longer-dated debt climbing and shorter maturities retreating. The split led to a renewed flattening of the yield curve.

Benchmark ten-year notes (US10YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) were up 5/32 for a yield of 4.13 percent, while two year-notes (US2YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) were down 2/32 and yielding 3.19 percent, compared with 3.16 percent on Friday.

The spread between those two maturities narrowed again to 94 basis points, down from 100 on Friday and closer to a 3-1/2-year low hit about a week ago.

Dealers were gearing up for another debt sale this week after the Treasury Department announced it would sell $24 billion of two-year notes on Wednesday. The new two-year notes to be sold on Wednesday yielded 3.2075 percent in when-issued trade.

Treasury will also auction $8 billion of 20-year inflation protected notes, known as TIPS, on Tuesday followed by the two-year sale on Wednesday. Traders expect good demand for the issue, since longer-dated maturities have been in favor in recent weeks.

Even on Monday, the thirty-year bond (US30YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) was performing far better than the rest of the curve, up a solid 19/32 for a yield of 4.61 percent, down from 4.65 percent on Friday.

In contrast, five-year notes (US5YT=RR: Quote, Profile, Research) were down 1/32, their yields rising to 3.65 percent from 3.64 percent late Friday.

Data this week include homes sales, consumer confidence and durable goods orders, as well as the first reading of fourth-quarter gross domestic product on Friday. The economy is thought to have grown 3.5 percent annualized last quarter, though forecasts range from 2.8 percent to 4.1 percent.
 

f4f

翠鸟科
gooood morning bbanda

stamane son preso ma
notizia : petrolio a 49 (ora 48 )
bush chiede 80mld per iraq e afghanistan :-?
 

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