Monday, January 5, 2009

"The flight from risk averse assets into riskier and less liquid paper manifested it self in the Treasury market."

From Across The Curve:

"Closing Comments January 5 2009
January 5th, 2009 5:41 pm | by John Jansen |

Prices of Treasury coupon securities registered very bifurcated results as the first fully staffed trading session of the new year produced a rout in the long end. Investors returned from the holidays with the animal spirits racing and poured money from risk free assets into riskier fixed income assets( THIS IS WHAT I'D EXPECT. ).The yield on the 2 year note declined 2 basis points to 0.80 percent. The yield on the 3 year declined a basis point to 1.07 percent. The yield on the 5 year note glided ever so slightly higher by 4 basis points at 1.69 percent. The yield on the 10 year note jumped 11 basis points and the yield on the Long Bond catapulted 24 basis points and sliced right through the 3.00 percent level to finish at 3.03 percent.

The 2 year/10 year spread widened 13 basis points to 168 basis points.

The 2 year/5 year /30 year spread closed the day at 45 basis points after opening at 27 basis points.

The flight from risk averse assets into riskier and less liquid paper manifested it self in the Treasury market( GOOD NEWS. A POSSIBLE DIMINUTION OF FEAR AND AVERSION TO RISK. ). I have chronicled here over the last couple of months the story of several off the run bonds which had become extremely cheap on the curve or had recounted instances of off the run issues which had had produced strange relationships.

As an example the 8 1/8 August 2019 bond has traded as much as 70 basis points cheap to the 10 year note. The 10 year note is a November 2018 maturity and there is no reason why one should pick up 70 basis points for a three month extension. That spread narrowed 6 basis points today and has narrowed over the last several days to 57 basis points.

Then there is the story of the August 2023 bond and the November 2024 bond. The yield curve is positively sloped in which case rolling back on the curve should cause one to give up Not so in the relationship between these bonds. That spread had been such that you could sell the 2024 and roll backwards to 2023 and pick 36 basis points. That spread is 28 basis points today.

If the Fed is serious about keeping the funds rate at zero (and they are) then these and numerous other anomalies along the Treasury curve will correct as yield hogs scour the curve for incremental value.

Money managers continue to buy MBS and paper is closing about ½ point tighter to Treasuries."

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