I'm short now.
Quote from richard_m:
The key phrase in your comment is "everyone". So you think the Fed is going to keep cutting when real inflation is sky high. Are your groceries any cheaper? Maybe the coffee you are buying is a full pound. Or the bleach is a real gallon. My wife is paying 30-40% for both food and energy. Oh yeah, let's not count that.
Obviously I don't trade based on fundamentals.
Quote from scriabinop23:
I at first didn't think they'd cut with oil in the 90s, and lo and behold, look at what they did. The fed has other central banks on their side, and the freedom to cut rates. Housing problems are not going to go away any time soon, so cash is going to continue pouring into risk free assets.
They are sacrificing the dollar to preserve asset prices and the employment status quo. I don't agree with it either, but thats whats happening.
Additionally, the dollar selloff accompanied by bonds going up is not a good sign for a bond short. That doesn't spell a fear of holding US denominated assets.
Look at the dollar/bond correlation and you'll see its been inverse ever since the dollar's tanking accelerated. I recommend you acknowledge the 'inflation' concept while sounding good, is not contributing at all to driving bonds south. In fact, more money supply and a need for increased cash reserves on banks means more demand for risk free assets *domestically*.
And this says nothing of the yield curve, which looks way too healthy considering we haven't even formally hit recession yet.
Quote from invertedCurve:
that's true Richard, it is all relative but if you are short lets say 20 from 113.26 then right now you are 80 grand in the hole just not understanding why you take a stand down there when you could have gotten out and put it back on with the TY yield under 4% at a much better price? And who knows what will happen with non fun/un-enjoyment on Friday.