treasury auctions

Omicron Fears Fading, CPI Huge-r Still, Fed Hinting At Accelerated Taper, And Yet Euro$ Inversion (and other things) Is Still Here

By |2021-12-10T19:51:56-05:00December 10th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The bond market is imploding, right? It has to be going by everything you hear. Did you know that the last two 30-year bond auctions had gone “awry”, as one mainstream news outlet put it? Another "media" shop declared them “catastrophic.”The second of those long bond sales was conducted just yesterday afternoon, right in time to run into the buzzsaw [...]

A Clear Balance of Global Inflation Factors

By |2021-06-29T18:16:25-04:00June 29th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back at the end of May, Germany’s statistical accounting agency (deStatis) added another one to the inflationary inferno raging across the mainstream media. According to its flash calculations, German consumer prices last month had increased by the fastest rate in 13 years. Even using the European “harmonized” methodology (Harmonized Index of Consumer Prices, or HICP), inflation had reached 2.4% year-over-year [...]

Indirect *Bill* Bidders Aren’t Who You Think, Helping Explain the Anti-Reflation Behind Reverse Repo

By |2021-06-21T17:36:59-04:00June 21st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Following this morning’s Treasury bill auctions, each of the last three for the three shortest maturities (4-week, 8-week, 13-week) have each priced to yield less than the new reverse repo “floor” rate set by the Federal Reserve last Thursday. The first two of those, a 4-week and an 8-week, took place on the new RRP’s first day. The latest is [...]

Why Do Bonds At Auction Seem To Care More About That One Auction Than ‘Inflation’?

By |2021-05-28T16:18:19-04:00May 28th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

Back on February 25, Treasury auctioned 7-year notes and it did not go (as) well. Maybe you remember us saying something about it, and then again and again and… The prevailing view then – and now – was reflation hadn’t just accelerated, the true inflation long-promised by so much “money printing” (or at least by those who equate bank reserves [...]

Which Reflation Are You?

By |2021-05-26T19:32:45-04:00May 26th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

I am very much prone to bludgeoning several long-deceased equines, and given what’s really going on with the Fed's reverse repo (and nearly all commentary unhelpful surrounding it) this gives me yet another chance to really reuse my cudgel on at least two of them. This another opportunity to fixate more upon bank reserves, a forever topic until everyone learns [...]

It’s A Rate Train Coming Your Way

By |2021-04-26T18:13:28-04:00April 26th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On December 26, 2018, the US Treasury sold off $41 billion in 5-year notes. “Only” $85.8 billion in bids were submitted, weakening the widely watched bid-to-cover ratio to a chatty 2.09. The prior sale of 5s had yielded a bid-to-cover of 2.495, nearly $100 billion in bids for $40 billion on offer, so something was clearly up. Had it been [...]

The QEnundrum

By |2021-04-21T19:08:08-04:00April 21st, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The US Treasury Department announced today that it has completed an auction of 20-year bonds. Quite unlike the one 7s auction – you know, that one – this particular bond sale was positively uninteresting. Like all the rest of the bills, notes, and bonds since February 25, there an overwhelming number of bank dealers and other participants some of whom [...]

Why *Only* That Specific One?

By |2021-04-14T19:49:23-04:00April 14th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On February 23, the US Treasury sold off $60 billion and change of 2-year notes (CUSIP 91282CBN0). This particular shorter-term instrument has been in the crosshairs of the reflation trade, lurching in and out of it going back to last October, perhaps even late September. Caught up being the immediate tenor following the bills which have been bid (for “some” [...]

What Gold Says About UST Auctions

By |2021-03-10T19:29:16-05:00March 10th, 2021|Bonds, Commodities, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

The “too many” Treasury argument which ignited early in 2018 never made a whole lot of sense. It first showed up, believe it or not, in 2016. The idea in both cases was fiscal debt; Uncle Sam’s deficit monster displayed a voracious appetite never in danger of slowing down even though – Economists and central bankers claimed – it would’ve [...]

Treasury Supply & Demand, Interest Rates, It’s All About Other Things

By |2021-01-26T18:14:13-05:00January 26th, 2021|Bonds, Currencies, Economy, Federal Reserve/Monetary Policy, Markets|

On August 1, 2018, the Treasury Department announced that it was introducing the 8-week T-bill. With deficits up and going higher due mostly to December 2017’s Tax Cut and Jobs Act (TCJA), the government was becoming creative in how it would deal with its trickier funding needs. Not only the new bill maturity, note auctions were going to be bumped [...]

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