Well, May tends to be flat & choppy at the long end so in the near-term everyone is going to be right. But then come ~June 1 yields tend to drop ...
Quote from drsteph:
I was in your camp up until about two months ago, when the commodity markets started going nuts. Inherently inflationary. I think the deflationary influences have been whipped for now - the demographic influences are a long-term drag, not a short term influence. Higher bond yields in the 5-10 year term would go a great way to provide satisfactory yields for the bond buyers under the deflationary scenario, would they not?
Its hard being a deflationist when gold hits $650. Once it drops back to $300, and there is no more talk of protectionistm against China, and strong and severe anti immigration laws are taken, I may re-join your camp, but its too hard to be there for me right now.
If I start buying long bonds at yields upards of 6%, without major deflationary signs, I will not buy zeroes at that level. At 7-8% I may start buying zeroes, but only to hold to maturity, as I could see myself taking a paper loss on that for a few years initially.