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Bund-Battering Continues - It's Different This Time

Tyler Durden's picture




 

10Y German bond yields hit 42.5bps today (almost a 10x move off their 4.9bps lows on April 17th - before Bill Gross and Jeff Gundlach unleashed their bearish theses). While Draghi keeps buying, the move over the last week is 'almost' unprecedented in bond market history. We says 'almost' because we have seen this before - a sovereign issuer with an extremely low yielding bond suddenly see their bond market collapse... Japan 2003 (when Greenspan cut rates less than expected).

 

 

Think this time is different? Think again...

Still in early May 2003, Greenspan and other Fed governors were making public speeches on the possible outbreak of deflation, promising extraordinary measures of liquidity pumping to fight it, including direct purchases of long-term government bonds by the Fed. In its official release following the May 6 Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, the Fed said that over the next quarters, "the probability of an unwelcome substantial fall in inflation, though minor, exceeds that of a pickup in inflation from its already low level." The foreseeable reaction was yet another frenzy on the bond market, pushing down Treasury yields in mid-June to the lowest levels in half a century.

 

But suddenly, probably under pressure by the White House to present an upbeat economic outlook, Greenspan changed his line. The first indication for this was the decision by the Fed on June 25 to lower its key interest rates by just 0.25%, not the .50% investors had expected. Bond markets worldwide started to go down. As bond prices fell, bond issuers were forced to promise higher interest rates. Already by July 2, yields for 10-year U.S. Treasuries shot up to 3.64%, compared to the 45-year low of 3.07% reached on June 16.

 

The repercussions were felt worldwide. Japanese government bonds (JGB) on June 30 suffered their biggest slump in two years. On July 3, a bond auction by the Japanese Finance Ministry drew just half as many bids as the previous sale in June, leading on the same day to the biggest JGB plunge since September 1999. Japanese 10-year bond yields reached a record low of 0.435% on June 12, but by July 3 had shot up to 1.125%. On July 4, the JGB crash continued, driving 10-year yields at one point to 1.40%. Japan has the largest government bond market in the world, with $4.7 trillion in outstanding debt, compared to $3.3 trillion U.S. government bonds. Both the German and the British government bond auctions on July 2 drew the lowest demand in several years.

 

The bond market decline accelerated when Greenspan testified to Congress on July 15, presenting an inexplicably rosy outlook for the U.S. economy. He enthused about the stimulating effects of the Bush Administration's tax cuts on top of the Fed's rate cuts. In sharp contrast to previous statements, he now downplayed the threat of deflation: "The FOMC devoted considerable attention to this subject at its June meeting, examining potentially feasible policy alternatives. However, given the now highly stimulative stance of monetary and fiscal policy and well-anchored inflation expectations, the Committee concluded that economic fundamentals are such that situations requiring special policy actions are most unlikely to arise." Within hours, Greenspan's comments triggered the biggest massacre on the bond market since the Long-Term Capital Management collapse in Autumn 1998.

*  *  *

Sound familiar?

 

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Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:35 | 6057987 mygameon
mygameon's picture

Since before Lehman

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:38 | 6057990 Headbanger
Headbanger's picture

Deja vu all over again

Moar like 1937 than 2003 however.

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:47 | 6058019 Cognitive Dissonance
Cognitive Dissonance's picture

So are we saying the great and glorious central bankers are not immortal and infallible?

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 09:36 | 6058136 Pool Shark
Pool Shark's picture

 

 

And if you look really, really, closely, you can actually see that incredible 2003 "massacre" on this chart:

http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-8NziQ1iJvlA/VUAaL13EtxI/AAAAAAAABiY/VfRDYwwvxAc/s1600/%2Bc20150429_Japan_debt_yield.png

Where are 10-Year JGB rates today?

 

 

0.34%

 

 

"And now you know the rest of the story..."

[We are ALL Japan now...]

 

 

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:47 | 6058021 Haus-Targaryen
Haus-Targaryen's picture

Where is this cash going to?  

Ok ok ok I get it.  People are dumping Bunds, but Spanish debt aren't seeing a similar sell off.  

WHERE THE FUCK IS THIS CASH GOING?

Sure as shit isn't into AG or AU.   

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:52 | 6058030 Headbanger
Headbanger's picture

It's going into covering margin on stocks?

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 09:11 | 6058086 Who Laughed
Who Laughed's picture

This is good for ECB QE, the pool of purchasable assets just increased which means BlackRock won't yet be unloading their EFT portfolios. 

 

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:48 | 6058022 SheepDog-One
SheepDog-One's picture

Worst since flapper girls were busting a move to The Jitterbug.

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 08:50 | 6058025 papaswamp
papaswamp's picture

Someone just fucked with te UST 10yr..

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 09:18 | 6058110 disabledvet
disabledvet's picture

So junk is junk and Greece is toast. How is this news again? Been true since "taper."

Equities have loved it...but not nearly as much as currency traders.

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 09:40 | 6058192 markar
markar's picture

I thought Draghi with his trilllion Euro slush fund couldn't get enough of these Bunds. Can someone explain why are they crashing?

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 10:14 | 6058300 Quinvarius
Quinvarius's picture

They are not crashing.  Nor will they.  The professional money managertards on this trade are hoop hawing about a 4 point move from 160 to 156 over several days after going to slaughterhouse for 20.  These prices are entirely set by the ECB.  This is not a market.  You will never see a tail event in the Bund market.  The price will go to where the ECB thinks it should go, for whatever reason they deem.  If you are not in the club, and the guys announcing their bund trade are not, you would be an idiot to trade this market.

Mon, 05/04/2015 - 12:11 | 6058682 Bunga Bunga
Mon, 05/04/2015 - 12:47 | 6058809 malek
malek's picture

You mean the kind of crisis such as when the US government was accused of torturing people?

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