Just because its only you two speaking, doesn't mean others aren't listening 
p.s. I would contribute if I could

p.s. I would contribute if I could

Well, that's what all the banks are doing and making a killing on it, so it's a good idea, if you can get a nice yield pickup on your long-dated assets.Quote from zf trader:
Well I have been talking to some people who are borrowing about 5 million $C to purchase assets with a 12 to 15 year life span.
What I have suggested is financing with short term rates and using part of the savings to buy options to protect against and up move in short term rates.
Would a delta of 3 million be enough to get a bank dealer interested? Could I get a comparable IV to eurodollar options?
Naveen, firstly, to avoid ambiguity with abbreviations, let's use NTR for on-the-runs and FTR for off-the runs.Quote from NAVEEVIa:
Have been following basis for both cash OTR & CTD bonds direction & magnitude of change is very close for ZT & ZF but for ZN the variation is more this is yesterdays chart ZN CTD & Cash OTR basis in dollars for 1 contract.
Next chart is US OTR yield spread( in %) with ZT ZF spread in ratio 1-1 in dollars overlaid on it.
By using ratio 1-1 we are actually giving more weight to ZF, this very closely follows 2-5s spread, i was thinking of doing something similar with2-10s, giving more weight than DVO1 based to ZN.
What do you guys say?
BTW anyone here daytrade yield spreads(2-5s, 2-10s) like this either thru cash or futures, if yes please shre your views.
Quote from Martinghoul:
Taking your 2s5s example. As you point out yourself, you should plot the 2s5s NTR yield spread vs the 2s5s expressed in contract price terms, but you must use the right weights (should be 0.82 for Sep contracts). Otherwise, what you'll be seeing in the price chart will be contaminated by outright mkt moves (while it's a small effect, it's a matter of principle). The OTR yield spread chart, on the other hand, is outright duration neutral, by definition.