Wednesday, April 07, 2010

10s today, 30s tomorrow, and we're at major support

This is the week that helps predict the future for long-term interest rates.

The auction by the US Treasury of 10-year notes today, and 30-year bonds tomorrow provides the first data point in the new Fed-less bond market regime.

At the close of business yesterday, April 6, their respective yields were 3.98 and 4.84.

We will certainly revisit this data often in the months and years to come. Make a note.

The bond futures contract closed yesterday at 114.11. Make another note.

As the US Treasury sells more and more debt to refinance existing debt, and create new obligations to fund the expansion of government programs, rates are certain to rise.

Combined with the Treasury's added supply, the US Federal Reserve will be selling both mortgage-backed securities and treasuries to reduce the amount of inflationary fuel in the banking system before the banks can use it to make loans to credit-worthy borrowers.

As banks make loans, and the economic expansion takes hold, inflation grows. Further pressure on bond holders will come from the deteriorating value of the currency. Inflation kills bonds.

The combined pressure from these three sources will be too great for bond yields to hold, and they will certainly continue the rise that began more than a year ago, when 30-year bond yields bottomed at 2.58 in late December of 2008.

Our trader is shorting bonds at every resistance level, and will soon be aggressively selling when support breaks - like today and tomorrow.

Paterson's analysis suggests that the bond contract has a long way to fall, and will probably break par, with yields above 6%.

Get short and get rich.

* * * * * J B K * * * * *

San Francisco

James B. Klein
Paterson Financial Services

WEBSITE: paterson.com
WEBLOG: paterson-financial-services.blogspot.com
NEWS WEBLOG: paterson-financial-services-news.blogspot.com

Fed says extended period may last a long time | Reuters

Bank lending is too weak to allow the Fed to push up the funds rate.

Until bank lending increases, the Fed seems happy to leave things as they are, and to focus on the long end of the curve.

Instead of bank lending, we see banks securitizing their loans and keeping their balance sheets flush with cash.

* * * * * J B K * * * * *

San Francisco

The Federal Reserve could keep interest rates ultra-low for even longer than investors expect if the economic outlook worsens or inflation drops, minutes from the central bank's last meeting suggested.

The minutes of the Fed's March 16 gathering, released on Tuesday showed lingering concern about the economy's prospects, with policymakers indicating they were in no hurry to raise interest rates.

"The duration of the extended period prior to policy firming might last for quite some time and could even increase if the economic outlook worsened appreciably or if trend inflation appeared to be declining further," the minutes said.

"Such forward guidance would not limit the committee's ability to commence monetary policy tightening promptly," they said.

http://www.reuters.com/article/idUSTRE6354CM20100406

Tuesday, April 06, 2010

‘Unloved’ Junk Debt May Be Best Bond Investment: Credit Markets - Bloomberg.com

Reaching for yield and taking risk.

It's that time in the business cycle.

GS already has theirs, and they now want to sell it to you.

It's a good trade.

* * * * * J B K * * * * *

San Francisco

April 6 (Bloomberg) -- Speculative-grade bonds with the highest rankings may offer the best returns after trailing the riskiest debt in a record credit-market rally.

Goldman Sachs Group Inc. is recommending high-yield, high- risk bonds with rankings in the BB tier, the first below investment grade on the Standard & Poor's scale. Pioneer Investment Management Inc. favors BB and B bonds, the next lowest bracket, while saying the riskiest debt is overvalued. Debt ranked in the BB category gained 39.1 percent in the past 12 months, underperforming the CCC tier by 66 percentage points, according to Bank of America Merrill Lynch index data.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=20601087&sid=a7P22sf_Lf4Q&pos=3

Monday, April 05, 2010

How Texas Escaped the Housing Crisis - ABC News

I'll be damned.

It's written in the state constitution: no cash-out refis.

I'd prefer to change Fannie and Freddie's underwriting guidelines.

* * * * * J B K * * * * *

San Francisco

But there is a broader secret to Texas's success, and Washington reformers ought to be paying very close attention. If there's one single thing that Congress can do now to help protect borrowers from the worst lending excesses that fueled the mortgage and financial crises, it's to follow the Lone Star State's lead and put the brakes on "cash-out" refinancing and home-equity lending.

http://abcnews.go.com/Business/TheBigMoney/texas-escaped-housing-crisis/story?id=10243782