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	<title>Bonds &#8211; Investing Contrarian</title>
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		<title>Week of Bond Failures</title>
		<link>https://www.investingcontrarian.com/bonds/week-of-bond-failures/</link>
				<pubDate>Fri, 26 Mar 2010 22:17:38 +0000</pubDate>
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				<description><![CDATA[<p>The week of March 21-26, 2010 will be remembered for the worst week for Bond auctions. Yields on 10 year shot up to levels seen in June 2009. 10-year notes touched the highest levels since June amid heightened concerns about the government&#8217;s ability to finance its deficits and as investors turn to seeking out higher [&#8230;]</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.investingcontrarian.com/bonds/week-of-bond-failures/">Week of Bond Failures</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.investingcontrarian.com">Investing Contrarian</a>.</p>
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								<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The week of March 21-26, 2010 will be remembered for the worst week for Bond auctions. Yields on 10 year shot up to levels seen in June 2009. 10-year notes touched the highest levels since June amid heightened concerns about the government&#8217;s ability to finance its deficits and as investors turn to seeking out higher yields in other asset classes.<br />AnalyzingÃ‚Â this week auction results could be crucial to understand what lies ahead.<br />We will only look at the 7 year UST 5 Year UST and 2 Year UST auctions held this week.<br />7 Year UST auctions<br />Treasury continues to see tepid demand for its bonds. Bids came in at 2.6 Bid/cover while yield stayed at elevated levels of 3.374%.<br />The Treasury Department sold $32 billion in 7-year notes (UST7YR 3.31, +0.02, +0.61%) on Thursday at a yield of 3.374%, higher than traders anticipated. Bidders offered to buy $2.61 for every $1 of debt being sold, compared to an average of $2.83 at the last four sales, all for the same amount. Indirect bidders, a group that includes foreign central banks, bought 41.9%, versus an average of 49.7% of the last four. Direct bidders, a class that includes domestic money managers, purchased another 8.1%, compared to 11.3% on average. In the broader market, long-term bond yields, which move inversely to prices, turned higher before the auction results were released. Yields on 10-year notes (UST10Y 3.87, +0.02, +0.49%) rose 3 basis points to 3.89%, after jumping by the most since last summer on Wednesday.<br />
The size of issue was 32bn same as last month.<br />Bid/cover to came in 2.61, far lower than the 3.0 observed in February. Indirect bidders picked up 41% marginally above February 40% while the direct bidders stayed away and only accounted for 8% as against 17% last month. Dealers took the big chunk of 50%.</p>
<p>We are moving faster down the hill to the meltdown. Fasten your seat belts.<br />To read last month 7 year UST demand, click here<br />5 Year UST auctions<br />Offered Amount: $42<br />
Bid/Cover: 2.55<br />
Marketwatch reports:<br />The graph below illustrates the FED mechanism t o hide the lack of demand for its crap by showing strong demand through Direct bidders. For sure, it does seem the Asian Giants are growing tired of the week after week ofÃ‚Â unbelievablyÃ‚Â large amount of supply.<br />The offered amount is rising by every auction.</p>
<p>Does the apparent lack of demand from China in any way explain the latest aggressive posturing by the US concerning Currency Manipulation? I think so.<br />2 Year UST Auction<br />The offered amount was a massive $44 billion. This is in keeping with the recent spate of 30 Year bonds demand flailing which is making the FED to force increase short duration bonds. But even that is now under attack as indirect bids softened and yields ticked 1 bps over the expected.<br />Demand was moderate for the TreasuryÃ¢â‚¬â„¢s monthly 2-year note auction, a very large $44 billion offering that posted a soft bid-to-cover ratio of 3.00 vs. a 3.19 average over the last six auctions, all of them $44 billion in size. In a sign of weakness, the high yield of 1.000 percent was nearly 1 basis point over expectations. Dealers ended up holding this issue as non-dealers took down only 45.6 percent of the auction, well under the 55.8 percent average going back to June. Direct bidding by non-dealers, at 13.8 percent, was heavy but not extreme. The Treasury auctions $42 billion of 5-year notes on Wednesday followed by $32 billion of 7-year notes on Thursday.<br />We do not see any immediate threat to 2 year bonds sale.<br />The first signs of the meltdown inÃ‚Â bondÃ‚Â market will be seen in the 30 year which we have termed as failure for 2010 as all three auctions have been under stress.<br />Shaily<br />Editor: Investing Contrarian</p>
<p>Tagged with: bond, failure, meltdown</p>
<p>The post <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.investingcontrarian.com/bonds/week-of-bond-failures/">Week of Bond Failures</a> appeared first on <a rel="nofollow" href="https://www.investingcontrarian.com">Investing Contrarian</a>.</p>
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