Tag Archives: Treasury notes

U.S. Treasurys as traders look to PPI inflation data

Treasury yields fell on Tuesday as markets awaited the release of October’s producer price index figures and digested U.S. Federal Reserve speaker commentary.

At around 4:20 a.m. ET, the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury was down by around three basis points to 3.8367%. The 2-year Treasury yield was last at 4.3677% after declining by four basis points.

Yields and prices have an inverted relationship. One basis point is equivalent to 0.01%.

Traders looked ahead to the latest PPI figures which are due later in the day. The PPI reflects wholesale inflation by measuring how prices paid to producers for goods and services develop.

Markets are hoping that the data will provide more clarity on whether overall inflation is cooling, after consumer inflation figures released on Thursday hinted at this.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller suggested on Monday that last week’s data was only part of the bigger picture and other data points would have to be considered before drawing any conclusions.

He also indicated that the Fed would consider slowing rate hikes, but a pause to them is not imminent.

Federal Reserve Vice Chair Lael Brainard also hinted at a potential slowdown of rate hikes in remarks made on Monday.

Investors have been following Fed speaker comments closely as uncertainty about the central bank’s future policy and concerns about the pace of rate hikes leading the U.S economy into a recession have continued.

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Inflation and Fed sparking one way trip to market misery: Jim Bianco

Until inflation peaks and the Federal Reserve stops hiking rates, market forecaster Jim Bianco warns Wall Street is on a one way trip to misery.

“The Fed only has one tool to bring in inflation and that is they have to slow demand,” the Bianco Research president told CNBC “Fast Money” on Tuesday. “We may not like what’s happening, but over in the Eccles building in Washington, I don’t think they’re too upset with what they’ve seen in the stock market for the last few weeks.”

The S&P 500 dropped for the fifth day in a row and tripped deeper into a bear market on Tuesday. The index is now off 23% from its all-time high hit on Jan. 4. The Nasdaq is off 33% and the Dow 18% from their respective record highs.

“We’re in a bad news is good news scenario because you’ve got 390,000 jobs in May,” said Bianco. “They [the Fed] feel like they can make the stock market miserable without creating unemployment.”

Meanwhile, the benchmark 10-year Treasury Note yield hit its highest level since April 2011. It’s now around 3.48%, up 17% over just the past week.

‘Complete mess right now’

“The bond market, and I’ll use a very technical term, it’s a complete mess right now,” he said. “The losses that you’ve seen in the bond market year-to-date are the greatest ever. This is shaping up to be the worst year in bond market history. The mortgage-backed market is no better. Liquidity is terrible.”

Bianco has been bracing for an inflation comeback for two years. On CNBC’s “Trading Nation” in December 2020, he warned inflation would surge to highs not seen in a generation.

“You’ve got quantitative tightening coming. The biggest buyer of bonds is leaving. And, that’s the Federal Reserve,” said Bianco. “You’ve got them intending on being very hawkish in raising rates.”

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Bianco expects the Fed will hike rates by 75 basis points on Wednesday, which falls in line with Wall Street estimates. He’s also forecasting another 75 basis point hike at the next meeting in July.

“You could raise rates enough and you could butcher the economy and you can have demand fall off a cliff and you can have inflation go down. Now, that’s not the way you or I want it to be done,” said Bianco. “There’s a high degree of chance that they’re going to wind up going too far and making a bigger mess of this.”

He contends the Fed needs to see serious damage to the economy to back off its tightening policy. With inflation affecting every corner of the economy, he warns virtually every financial asset is vulnerable to sharp losses. According to Bianco, the odds are against a soft or even a softish landing.

His exception is commodities, which are positioned to beat inflation. However, Bianco warns there are serious risks there, too.

“You’re not there in demand destruction yet. And so, I think that until you do, commodities will continue to go higher,” he said. “But the caveat I would give people about commodities is they’ve got crypto levels of volatility.”

For those with a low tolerance for risks, Bianco believes government-insured money market accounts should start looking more attractive. Based on a 75 basis points hike, he sees them jumping 1.5% within two weeks. The current national average rate is 0.08% on a money market account, according to Bankrate.com’s latest weekly survey of institutions.

It would hardly keep up with inflation. But Bianco sees few alternatives for investors.

“Everything is a one way street in the wrong direction right now,” Bianco said.

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Correction may strike stocks after record September: Tom Lee

Longtime market bull Tom Lee is predicting a profitable period for investors in September.

According to Lee, the S&P 500 is positioned to surge more than 100 points this month. However, he warns the positive momentum has an expiration date.

“We could have a really strong rally in September,” the Fundstrat Global Advisors’ co-founder and head of research told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Friday. “We didn’t think there was a window for a 10% correction for most of 2021. The window where we think you could start to have potentially a 10% pullback is October.”

Lee attributes the vulnerability to growing fiscal and monetary policy risks — as well as uncertainty surrounding the pandemic and flu season.

“We get that much closer to tapering,” the CNBC contributor said. “That’s really when the debt ceiling rhetoric comes back, and if there are going to be concerns about the debt ceiling, the bond market could panic.”

When there’s upheaval in the bond market, it typically spills to stocks. But in the meantime, Lee indicates he would be a buyer.

He sees uncertainty regarding Covid-19 delta cases and its economic impact pushing the Federal Reserve to stay dovish for longer. According to Lee, it’s a recipe for new market highs.

“The U.S. is still in an underlying expansion. This is a risk on formula,” said Lee, who ran equity strategy for JPMorgan Chase from 2007 until 2014.

He cites a crude oil price comeback and bitcoin’s return above $50,000 as evidence.

Lee’s top market picks still involve trades most tied to the economic recovery. He particularly likes energy, and materials. He also sees opportunities in FAANG stocks, otherwise known as Facebook, Amazon, Apple, Netflix and Alphabet.

“My guess is that quite a number of investors thought we’d have a 10% correction in August,” Lee said. “So, money was taken off the table. Usually when people re-risk they start buying cyclical and epicenter ideas.”

Lee believes the S&P 500 could exceed 4,650 in September — 50 points above his year-end target. On Friday, the index closed at 4,535.43 and is about a quarter of a percent below its record high.

Disclosure: Tom Lee owns bitcoin.

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‘Day of reckoning’ is coming for high-flying tech stocks: Wells Fargo

Wells Fargo Securities’ Chris Harvey is doubling down on his Big Tech warning, saying a “day of reckoning” is ahead.

He’s urging investors to take profits in light of risks associated with rising interest rates.

“The premium that you’re paying is still exceptionally high,” the firm’s head of equity strategy told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Friday. “We believe that premium has got to compress. Two, we think that the next 25 basis point move in the 10-year [Treasury Note yield] is… up not down.”

After a surge earlier this year, the 10-year yield is trending lower. It ended the week at 1.43% on Friday, down almost 17% over the past three months. The drop has been benefitting growth stocks, particularly Big Tech.

But Harvey warns a significant reversal is virtually unavoidable, citing the fundamental economic backdrop. Rising rates will set the stage for a double-digit pullback in momentum growth stocks. He predicts it could happen later this summer or early fall.

“The tech companies and the growth companies that are selling at very high multiples,” he noted. “Even though they have high growth rates, the high multiples are what’s going to do them in.”

Harvey called the March rebound in Big Tech a “head fake” on “Trading Nation” in late April. He’s sticking with the call and is signaling more concern now with stocks in rally mode.

On Friday, the tech-heavy Nasdaq closed at all-time highs. It closed at 14,639.33, up 121% since the Covid-19 low on March 23, 2020. The broader S&P 500 and Dow also closed at fresh record highs.

If tech’s high-flyers correct, Harvey expects the fallout to affect the broader market due to the group’s dominance.

However, he’s maintaining his bullishness on market names tied the economic recovery.

“They’ve managed their earnings expectations quite well, and they’ve been much more conservative than we thought they would be,” said Harvey. “We think this cycle lasts longer than many people expect and many people believe.”

His top cyclical picks include large money center banks, chemical and aerospace companies.

“Many of the cyclical companies still have mid-single-digit to double-digit upside from here on a relative and absolute basis,” Harvey added.

Harvey has an S&P 500 year-end price target of 3,850, which implies a 12% dip from Friday’s close.

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Investors will get relief from falling Treasury yields: Jim Bianco

Investors may get a break from the market’s wild swings.

Wall Street forecaster Jim Bianco expects stocks to get a boost this spring because the benchmark 10-year Treasury Note yield will temporarily retreat.

“The near-term forecast is it’s oversold, and it’s probably due for a rally – meaning that we would have falling rates,” the Bianco Research president told CNBC’s “Trading Nation” on Friday.

He predicts the drop will benefit the indexes, including the tech-heavy Nasdaq which has gotten rocked by rising rates in the past month. The Nasdaq is particularly vulnerable to rates because technology is considered a long duration asset like Treasurys.

“The stock market will definitely act like it’s a relief,” Bianco said.

The 10-year yield closed the week at 1.70%, and it’s up almost 89% so far this year.

“Maybe we can see it fall way back to 1.50 [percent],” Bianco added. “But I wouldn’t consider that anything more than a respite in a move for longer-term for higher-yields.”

Bianco, who lists inflation as his big worry for 2021, predicts it will heat up in the year’s second half due to a strong economic recovery coupled with a record amount of federal coronavirus aid.

“$1400 checks, are hitting bank accounts today. Literally today, right now,” he said. “By Monday, President [Joe] Biden said one hundred million checks will be in the mail.”

By later this year, Bianco worries it will be virtually impossible to avoid lasting inflation for the first time in a generation.

“The trend towards yields is going to push-pull all year long,” Bianco said. “We could hit 2.50 [percent] over the next 12 months. So, about 75 basis points higher.”

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