Derivati USA: CME-CBOT-NYMEX-ICE T-Bronx5Y-10Y-Bund .. il ritorno del figliol prodigo (vm18)

leo-kondor ha scritto:
neanche il tempo di postare, già fatto, indolore e veloce :D

bonnieeeeeee .....quando Fleu va short vai long...e pure quando ci vado io short vai long...e diventerai milionario...se poi ci va Ditro allora miliardario...siamo il post che più fa tendenza sui mercati....cioè tende ad andare al contrario
 
va adarvial'organ dan :D non fare la checca isterica e continua a pugnare :clava:
well son rimasto col long di yen dajeeee voglio 10 tick puliti e me ne vado :pizza:
 
dan24 ha scritto:
bonnieeeeeee .....quando Fleu va short vai long...e pure quando ci vado io short vai long...e diventerai milionario...se poi ci va Ditro allora miliardario...siamo il post che più fa tendenza sui mercati....cioè tende ad andare al contrario

ero posizionato da prima... no problem, fatto qualcosina oggi con dow quindi dormo tranquillo

piuttosto, pensate che tutto sto movimento sia dovuto alle elezioni? io si, e mi sa da domani al risveglio la musica cambia, stiamo a vedere, che ne pensate?

io dormirei short sul dow per non saper cosa prendere :D anche se è molto probabile che così facendo la prenderei .. molto bene in quel posto .. :D :D :D
 
domani c'è la bilancia commerciale più la fiducia del miccigan quindi oggi potrebbe essere l'ultimo gg di festa , il minind sta facendo nuovi massimi
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
domani c'è la bilancia commerciale più la fiducia del miccigan quindi oggi potrebbe essere l'ultimo gg di festa , il minind sta facendo nuovi massimi

seguito a ruota dal dow! non ci posso credere!!!!!!!! :help:
 
Fleursdumal ha scritto:
va adarvial'organ dan :D non fare la fratello isterica e continua a pugnare :clava:
well son rimasto col long di yen dajeeee voglio 10 tick puliti e me ne vado :pizza:

Alle gipa rule non la si fa :D
comunque io avrei shortato lo yen ed anche gli indici.. in questo modo da una delle due parti era più facile gainare (in quanto la correlazione è Yen forte mercati deboli e viceeversa) si stoppava la perdente e via :cool:
Comunque essendo la relazione non simmetrica in termini di effetti non sempre è facile calibrare e oggi saresti stato costretto ad andare over con almeno una delle due col rischio che domani cambia tutto. :rolleyes:

Io preferisco aspettare un movimento significativo del cross e poi mi posiziono sull'azionario (e sempre contro o a favore del mercato su cui il cross si muove in maniera più significativa) :cool:
 
Il repo market e le manipolazione della liquidità.
mentre la FED alzava i tassi ha continuato ad iniettare liquidità sul mercato dei treasury...

U.S. TREASURY IS QUIETLY DOING THE FED'S WORK

By JOHN CRUDELE

November 7, 2006 -- FOR the past few years the U.S. Treasury has been quietly involved in what the financial markets call "repo" agreements and this near-secret operation could explain why the nation's money supply seems to be confoundingly large.

It might also explain why Washington decided earlier this year to stop publishing M3 money supply figures, the broadest and most popular measure of money in circulation.

Repurchase agreements - or repos - have long been used by the Federal Reserve to get money quickly into the hands of financial institutions, which in turn can put the money into circulation in the form of loans.

Last Thursday, for example, the Fed executed $2.5 billion in overnight repos and $8 billion in 14-day repurchase agreements. These were reported on the financial wires.

The Treasury completed a $5.5 billion repo operation on the same day under what it calls the Term Investment Option. There was no mention of the Treasury operation on the wires. In the Fed's repo deals, the banks temporarily turn over securities to the central bank in exchange for cash.

The Treasury TIO program works in a similar way, except the financial institutions pledge securities as collateral in exchange for the cash.

Is this like the repo operation at the Fed? "Kinda'," says a spokeswoman for Treasury. "But not really." She said the TIO program only replaced the old way of putting government cash in banks without making the banks place bids, which gets the government a better deal.

Most people judge whether the Federal Reserve is trying to influence economic growth by its actions with interest rates.

If the Fed is raising rates, for instance, it really isn't tightening credit if it is also putting large amounts of money into the hands of bankers through repos.

The opposite is also true: the Fed can't really speed up the economy by cutting the interest rates it controls (and hoping all other rates come down) if it is keeping a tight fist on the amount of money banks have available to lend. This is the way the repo market has worked - up to now.

These days, whenever the Treasury finds itself with extra cash lying around, it can turn the money over to the Fed to be invested.

Apparently the Treasury doesn't report its repo auction results in the Fed's report since last Thursday's maturities in the two operations didn't match. It's difficult to call this operation "secret" if financial institutions have been using it for three years to increase their liquidity. But folks I asked on the trader side of the investment community if they had never heard of this arrangement.

Experts worry whenever there is too much money - liquidity - in the financial system because it can lead to things like price spirals in the housing market and bubbles in stocks.

But even more worrisome for the financial markets than too much liquidity would be an inability to track the amount of money being pumped into the financial system.

Unless I find out differently, it looks as if the Treasury has created a way to duplicate the Fed's power. And that is a disturbing possibility unless it is somehow monitored.

[email protected]
 
3-year note sale attracts modest demand
1:12 PM ET, Nov 08, 2006 - By Leslie Wines - 3 minutes ago
NEW YORK (MarketWatch) -

An afternoon auction of $19 billion in new 3-year notes attracted modest, although not spectacular, demand, including a fairly solid bid-to-cover - or bids accepted to bids received - ratio of 2.27. The indirect bid, a carefully watched category that includes foreign central banks, was somewhat low at 22.3%. The auction also produced a high yield of 4.666% and a median yield of 4.649%.
 
Gli indicatori di sentiment a sondaggio sono bullish e questo non è positivo per il mercato in ottica contrarian.
La lettura del CPC e dei flow of fund sono solo parzialmente supportivi ma queste ultime sedute potrebbero aver migliorato la situazione.

In realtà se si guarda il grafico in fondo si può notare che il proxi del sentiment negli ultimi top ha sempre fatto un primo top e poi un secondo top inferiore in corrispondenza con il massimo degli indici...


This Market Is Full Of Bull!

In my recent post, I averaged the bullish stock market sentiment from three well-regarded and longstanding surveys and found unprecedented bullishness during the past two years. My latest article for Trading Markets found that the peaks and valleys of sentiment across the three surveys have tracked intermediate-term market swings quite nicely. A chart of those data can be found on the 11/7 Trading Psychology Weblog.

Going back to mid-1987 (N = 1006 weekly periods), I created a composite measure of investor sentiment by averaging the bullish percentages from the American Association of Individual Investors survey, the Investors Intelligence poll, and the survey from Market Vane. Over that period, these measures of sentiment are positively correlated with each other, but do not have huge areas of overlap. The AAII and Investors Intelligence polls are most closely related, with a correlation of .52. Those two polls correlate with the Market Vane measure by only about .26. Altogether, the polls share less than 30% of the total variance in reported sentiment. That suggests to me that the surveys may be tapping different kinds of traders: some shorter-term, some longer-term, some index traders, some traders on individual equities.

By averaging the three surveys and focusing on when they are all bullish or bearish, we can obtain a good sense for when a variety of traders are leaning the same way in the market.

What we find in doing so is that, since 1987, the 2004-2006 is unprecedented in its persistent bullishness. Specifically, the average bullish percentage from 2004-2006 has been 53%. The average bullishness from 1987-2003 has been 43%. To put that into perspective, 71% of all weekly periods since 2004 have seen bullish readings over 50%. Prior to 2004, only 20% of readings exceeded 50%.

But now the big question: Does investor sentiment have an impact upon future price changes?

When composite bullishess has exceeded 55% (N = 108), the next 10 weeks in the Dow Jones Industrial Average have averaged gains of only .57% (60 up, 48 down). That is considerably weaker than the average ten-week gain of 1.70% (640 up, 366 down) for the entire sample. Indeed, when bullishness has exceeded 60% (N = 22), the next ten weeks in the Dow average a loss of -2.51% (7 up, 15 down)--a remarkable finding, given the long-term bullish bias in the Dow over that period.

How about when bullishness has been below 40% (N = 308)? The next ten weeks in the Dow average a robust gain of 3.0% (217 up, 91 down)--much stronger than average.

It does, indeed, appear that investor sentiment possesses some contrary value. Consider the outcomes when we look 20 weeks out: When sentiment is bullish (over 55%), the average gain over the next year is a subnormal 1.44%; when there are relatively few bulls (under 40%), the average gain is a robust 5.34%.

The present market, hovering near that 60% level, has some uncomfortable company in market history, including January, 2000; April, 1998; and August,1987. Not every period of very high bullishness has led to a market crash, but only 6 of the 22 highly bullish periods were higher 20 weeks later. And that's no bull.

1163022449sentiment06112006+.gif
 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Alto