1) It may. A large order in one market can spawn large orders elsewhere from traders who are "leaning on" the original large order who are doing basis or spread trades.Quote from NAVEEVIa:
1. Does that have anything to do with trades, orders in cash market, i.e. if cash 2yr is has large best bid then ZT will also have alrge bid?
2.What are active cash hours trading in US
Quote from Martinghoul:
2. The cash mkt is open practically 24hrs a day (Asians do their dirty deeds in the wee hours of the morning). So is the eCBOT electronic futures (specifically 23:30PM - 22:00PM GMT; pit is open 13:20PM - 20:00PM GMT, as ndack alluded).
I think in terms of real activity it's probably between 8AM and 3PM (maybe 4PM) New York time, but I would hesitate to put an exact number on it. As I said liquidity is there all the time, but maybe the best opening hours are when the NY Fed dealing desk is open.Quote from NAVEEVIa:
Thanks ,
sorry i was not being clear, specifically what hours should one consider as active hours for cash bonds trading during US hours, i understand that being a OTC market like FX no opening or closing hours are set.
I would classify it as a curve trade, rather than RV. To me cash RV is more about trading micro bond switches within the same sector. It could however be 2s10s if your rationale for the trade is some sort of model signal, rather than a macro call. Generally, distinctions between macro and RV are blurry.What is relative value trade, does trading 2-10 treasury yield spread qualify is relative value trade?
Indeedy, that's my understanding of the process...Martinghoul in your earlier post you mentioned that indirect bidder( i understand those bidders who are not US institutions, is this correct) bid directly to Treasury, so primary delaers have no knowledge of indirect demand is that so?
Naveen