From Across the Curve:
T Bills
December 4th, 2008 11:42 am
I just spoke to a bill trader who noted that a large chunk of the bill list is trading at zero percent. He mentioned a point that I had forgotten but is worth noting. Bills always trade well in December because at year end there is demand for them as investors of every ilk dress up their balance sheets. He has seen that demand to a far greater extent than normal.
He says that given all that has transpired this year there will be enormous demand for bill through the entire month of December. He has seen demand from an eclectic group of investors from around the globe. He expects the treasury to announce shortly a series of cash management bills which would total about $100 billion.
In his opinion if they do not issue bills will scream through zero.
So get used to these low rates they are here for a while.
Let's revisit the current situation.
The comparisons are not quite focused with today in terms of bills and bonds, since the funding preferences of Treasury are different now than they were back then, but you get the general idea of 'Treasuries' and their role in a flight to safety in a portfolio allocation.
But check this post out from Trader's Narrative:
"The mad rush into US government treasury bonds has pushed their yields to never before imagined levels. But according to the simple 1 year rate of change, we may be close or have already seen the end of this “bubble”, as this long term chart shows:
Although I think the bond market will return to its senses soon enough, US government bonds are not in a real “bubble”. But the extra-ordinary demand for US treasury bonds is at least partially responsible for the strength of the US dollar. Which I’m sure itself is surprising and confounding the gold bugs more than anyone else. After all, how can a near meltdown of the world’s financial system result in gold falling and the dollar going up? Isn’t that the exact opposite of what a sane person would expect to happen?
This recent chapter in financial history is chock full of unprecedented extremes and “Black Swans“. Among them, the yield inversion between equities and treasury bonds (Bloomberg):
Something that we haven’t seen in 50 years. And something that was just as jarring when it was witnessed in 1958. The sharp drop in rates is half the explanation, the other half is the dramatic rise in stock dividend yields."
You know my position. I believe that interest rates are going up, because this downward drive has been based, not on fundamentals, but an overblown aversion and fear of risk, and an accompanying flight to safety. That's also why I think that printing money will work.
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