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Bloomberg
is reporting U.S. Long-Term
Treasuries Advance as Consumer Prices Plummet.
Treasuries
maturing in 10 years or more, the most sensitive to inflation expectations,
rose after a government report showed consumer prices dropped in October by
the most on record.
The difference between yields on 10-year Treasury Inflation Protected Securities
and conventional notes, which reflects the outlook for consumer prices, was
44 basis points, the least since Bloomberg began tracking the data in 1998. Two-year
yields touched the lowest since 2003 as traders raised bets the Federal
Reserve will cut interest rates to spur the economy.
"The theme now seems to be one of deflation," said Tom di Galoma,
head of U.S. Treasury trading at Jefferies & Co., a brokerage for
institutional investors in New York. "That's the fear at this point.
That almost makes bonds look cheap."
Consumer prices plunged 1 percent last month, more than forecast and the most
since records began in 1947, after being unchanged the prior month, a Labor
Department report showed. The drop came as fuel costs plunged and retailers
used discounts for cars and clothing to attract consumers.
U.S. builders broke ground last month on the fewest new homes and obtained
permits for future construction at the lowest levels on record. Housing
starts fell 4.5 percent in October to an annual rate of 791,000, the lowest
since records began in 1959, a Commerce Department report showed.
The gap between 10-year swaps and the 10-year Treasury note yield reached as
low as 31 basis points, the narrowest since May 2003.
Traders exiting bets that the gap between the 10-year and 30-year
interest-rate swap rates would widen may also be driving the 30-year swap
rate lower, said Eric Liverance, head of derivatives strategy in Stamford, Connecticut at UBS Securities LLC, another primary dealer.
"These are powerful forces," Liverance said. "You'd better get
out of the way, or you're going to get run over."
The breakeven rate on two-year notes, which shows the difference in yield
between inflation-protected bonds and nominal bonds, fell to a negative 3.78
percentage points, indicating traders are betting that slumping economic
growth may lead to deflation over the next two years.
Deflation Is Here
There is no longer any debate (at least there should not be). Industrial Bond
Yields Strongly Support Deflation Thesis.
10 year to 30 year Gap Narrows
I could see by the action in treasuries that players were betting the gap
would widen and the yield curve would steepen. However, I never understood
why those bets were made.
Someone from one of the big brokerage houses emailed me last week saying the
yield curve would steepen. My response was "Why should it?"
The reason for my statement was that one month and 3 month Treasuries were
already trading at or near zero. The Fed Funds rate was effectively trading
at zero as well. There is no more room for the Fed to cut other than
symbolically. OK. The Fed is going to cut by at least 50 basis points in
December. Then what?
In the midst of the biggest consumer led recession since the great
depression, there is simply no reason to expect treasury yields to rise. Banks
are hoarding cash and any cash infusions from the Fed will likely go straight
into treasuries or perhaps used for mergers.
Yield Curve As Of 2008-11-19
Here is another look at the yield curve.
Chart courtesy of Bloomberg. Click On Chart For
Sharper Image.
A bet on the yield curve to steepen is a bet the economy improves. Why should
it? An even better question is "How low do 10 year and 30 yields
go?" Certainly 3% or lower on the 10 year and even 30 year are in the
realm of possibilities. That's how nasty this recession is likely to get.
Mish
GlobalEconomicAnalysis.blogspot.com
Mish's Global Economic
Trend Analysis
Thoughts on the great inflation/deflation/stagflation
debate as well as discussions on gold, silver, currencies, interest rates,
and policy decisions that affect the global markets.
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