The Treasury Magnet

Ten weeks ago we wrote that Treasury yields were looking down.  The day we wrote that the yields on 10-year Treasuries reach 2.31%, a 28-month low.  We suggested that the yield could drop below 2.20%, and if it did without bouncing back toward 2.30% within a very few days that the yield could drop to very strong technical support around 2.0%.  Well, they have dropped below 2.20%, not once but four times.  But they have never gotten down to 2.0%.  What gives?

 

arrows-up-down

 

First, let's look at the chart we had in our 12 October 2014 article (from the U.S. Department of the Treasury Resource Center and annotated by Econintersect).

 

10-year-yield-2013-2014-annotated

 

One of the comments about that chart related to the orange numbers noted:

The rate has almost completed the drop through what is analogous to a one week gap up 14 June to 21 June 2013 (orange on the chart); when gaps are filled the most recent trend is often continued. Watch for a close below 2.20% which is not reversed the next day as an alert that 2% is much more likely very soon.

Well, the chart below shows the latest update of the above data, showing only the data from 03 September 2014 through 31 December.

 

10-year-yield-2014-sep-03-to-2014-dec-31-annotated-update

The four dips below 2.20% are to be noted, the last one is the last data point, 31 December.

 

The lowest interest rate reached during this interval was 2.07% (16 December) and the highest was 2.39%  (06 November).  These two reference points should be considered the data points to be exceeded to establish a potential breakout from the year-end trading range.  The breakout should be considered confirmed if there is a daily close above 2.52% (top of the gap - orange notes first graph) or below 2.00% (support level anchored in early 2013).

What the current trading range appears to be could have as a metaphor a price anchor (or magnet) at 2.20% (or just above) with a "force field" that extends out to 2.39% or 2.07%.  To "weigh anchor" or "escape the force field" one or the other "limit" must be exceeded permanently.  We suggest that making long-term bets on Treasuries has little technical justification until "the force is with you".

Happy New Year market trekkers!

PS:  There are a lot of opinions about the direction for bonds with links in the October article.  One of them is repeated here, a video interview of Francesco Garzarelli of Goldman Sachs (GS), for example, who sees a global bear market for bonds, although he admits to losing money this year.

Video length: 00:02:01

Disclosure: None

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Clark Winslow 10 years ago Member's comment

Very insightful, thank you.