Quote from cdcaveman:
it seems to me the entire verbage is related to the interest rate curve derived from futures prices.. as in the front has a lower interest rate and gradually gets to be a larger interest rate as you head towards the back, creating a curve that looks like contango..
so when you say steeper you mean the interest rates are going down in the front and up in the back.. a flattening trade would send the interest rates flatter, higher in front, lower in the back.. i've heard that have inverted before... my father told me..
naturally investors require higher rates on longer maturity bonds, putting the interest rate typically higher the farther you go out.. this is all correct right..
Honestly i've watched the price action of the curve for the last month, and i can see how i could trade it, yet i didn't have a complete understanding of what the heck it all meant.. plus, i won't trade any new products unless i've got a in depth understanding and have done in depth historical studies on the relationships and there bounds..