German Bunds:120,000 DISTANT OTM call spreads have been bought

Quote from ASusilovic:

Irish/german 10-year bond yield spread widens to fresh highs at 418 BPS (+5 BPS), after Moody's downgrading Anglo Irish Bank's subordinated debt...

why anyone even want to buy anglo irish bank's debt, they been delisted for what 2 years?
 
Quote from dtan1e:

why anyone even want to buy anglo irish bank's debt, they been delisted for what 2 years?

why not buy? when you know jct and the ecb are behind all the debt 100%, there's no risk!
 
Since when is the ECB behind the bank debt? The Irish finance minister hinted on Friday that there might be haircuts on some Anglo-Irish sub debt. However, seems like it's not happening, according to the latest comments.
 
Stronger money-supply and lending data indicate the 16-nation euro zone has seen a "turning point towards credit growth," European Central Bank Executive Board member Juergen Stark told reporters in Istanbul, news reports said Tuesday. The ECB on Monday said loans to the private sector increased by 1.2% in August compared to the same month last year. M3 money supply grew at an annual rate of 1.1%, up from 0.2% in July. Stark also said the European Central Bank is in the process of phasing out non-standard liquidity measures put in place during the financial crisis. "We are in the process of phasing out the non-standard measures. This week and in the fourth-quarter 2010 a number of non-standard measures will mature and they will not be renewed," he said, according to Dow Jones Newswires.
 
Euro-swaps-curve-e1286182571173.jpg


A persistent inversion of this sort — we are told — usually reflects changing rate expectations, towards a more hawkish stance from the ECB.

http://ftalphaville.ft.com/blog/201...ity-and-the-implications-for-cash-collateral/

I am waiting for persistence... :D
 
Oct. 14 (Bloomberg) -- Pacific Investment Management Co., which runs the world’s biggest bond fund, said it sold Treasuries on expectations a second round of debt purchases by the Federal Reserve will have limited impact.

“The market is very clearly anticipating that the Fed is going to act,” Douglas Hodge, chief operating officer, said in an interview at the World Knowledge Forum in Seoul today. “The challenge right now is the breadth of policy measures that can be taken by the U.S. is rather limited.”

The Fed purchased $300 billion of Treasuries in 2009 under a policy known as quantitative easing, or QE, and traders are preparing for another round of buying they’ve dubbed QE2. Hodge’s comments come as some investors voice concern that record-low Treasury yields will curtail demand for U.S. bonds as the Fed acts to spur economic growth.
 
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