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The only asset moving up over the last week has been longer term Treasury
yields. This is odd especially in the face of equity market weakness and
especially since demand for Treasury bonds has outstripped supply over the
past year. So why are yields moving up now? Maybe yields are rising in anticipation
of buyer fatigue as this week's record bond issuance comes to market.
This is difficult to know until it happens, but I can say for sure that yields
are not rising because of inflation concerns nor are they rising because of
strength in the economy. Yields generally rise after an economic expansion
is well under way and they generally rise when the unemployment rate falls.
The last time I checked, the unemployment rate was still rising; the economy
had stopped its free fall, but visibility was less clear; and deflation seem
to be a bigger threat than inflation.
Over the past several months, lower Treasury yields did not confirm the strength
in the stock market, and this has been a glaring divergence that I have noted
on more than one occasion. Now with weakness in the equity markets imminent
(but not guaranteed), yields start to move higher. Hmm. I hope this isn't the
new normal?
Technically, long term Treasury yields have the characteristics of an asset
that could undergo a secular change in trend. This has been a theme that I
have been on for over 10 months now, but in all honesty, yields have yet to
show real sustainable strength. The best that I can say about my analysis is
that I have said to avoid Treasury bonds for anything but a trade.
See figure 1, a weekly chart of the yield on the 10 year Treasury bond. The
10 year Treasury did trade to a yield of 4% back in June, but they fell back
to 3.1% level before bouncing. Yields are above the prior weekly pivot high
point at 3.437% and the down sloping black trend line, and it would be bullish
for higher yields if there was a monthly close over the prior low pivot
(on a monthly chart) at 3.432%. Yields appear likely to trade to the resistance
zone between 3.856 to 4%.
Figure 1. $TNX.X/ weekly

Why yields should move higher has been a subject of much conjecture all year
long. Nonetheless, increasing bond supply has been met by buyer demand, and
the fundamental back drop (despite the stock market rally) really has not been
conducive for higher yields. The technicals are at odds with the fundamentals.
Other observations are noteworthy. Figure 2 is a daily chart of the ProShares
UltraShort Lehman 7-10 Year Treasury (symbol: PST), which seeks results that
are twice the inverse of the daily performance of the Barclays Capital 7-10
Year U.S. Treasury index. The triple bottom is is quite noteworthy.
Figure 2. PST/ daily

Figure 3 is a daily chart of the ProShares UltraShort Lehman 20+ Year Treasury
(symbol: TBT), which corresponds to twice the inverse of the daily performance
of the Barclays Capital 20+ Year U.S. Treasury index. The double bottom is
quite noteworthy, as indicated by the volume spike.
Figure 3. TBT/ daily

Another observation comes from the Treasury Inflation Protected Securities
or TIPS market. As recently as last
week, I was under the belief that yields were heading lower. Why? TIPS
were headed higher. There is a very clear inverse relationship between TIPS
and 10 year Treasury yields. This can be seen in figure 4. As TIPS go up; long
term yields go down.
Figure 4. TIPS v. $TNX.X/ weekly

However, TIPS have not followed through (and I could be wrong!), but they
haven't broken down completely yet. A monthly close below the pivot at 102.75
would be reason enough to abandon the notion of higher TIPS. See figure 5.
A monthly close below this level would add credence to the notion of higher
Treasury yields.
Figure 5. TIPS/ monthly

So let's summarize. There are lots of conflicting crosscurrents when it comes
to yields on longer term Treasury bonds. Whether the current mini-lift in yields
develops into a longer term sustainable trend is not certain as the fundamentals
are at odds with the technicals. Nonetheless, betting on higher yields - because
of the technical, secular tailwinds - may be the easier trade to make at this
juncture.
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