Saturday, August 4, 2007

Bonds '07

We watch for bond ETFs and yield indexes to reach opposite extremes around the same time. Yield indexes tend to max out further from their respective means than do bond ETFs. When bond-and-yield extremes are reached, the market is about to change direction.

This year, we've had two full reversals from the bonds and yields. On January 29 we noted that bond ETFs were more than two standard deviations below their respective means, while yield indexes were more than three standard deviations above their respective means. We said "So it appears the bonds are reaching extremes. Further moves into the extreme Zones by yields and bonds could translate into serious losses for the market this week." At the time, the 30-Year Bond (TLT) ETF was at 86.91, while the 10-Year Interest Rate (TNX) index was at 48.79.

The turnaround happened quickly, so that reversion to the mean was already under way by weekend comment time. But the DYR Report on March 12 clearly detailed a serious reversal in the bond ETFs (now heading down again) and yield indexes (now heading up again) that happened during trading the previous Friday. At the time, 30-Year Bond (TLT) was at 89.4, while the 10-Year Interest Rate (TNX) was at 45.89.

The first move sent TLT (bonds) up 3%, while TNX (yields) dropped by 5%. Those are big moves for the bond-and-yield issues. Hard to trade, but they move markets.

The second reversal triggered the current market downdraft. On May 29, we said "The interest-rate indexes may have peaked last week too. All three durations are near 100% overbought over both 10 and 90 days. We've seen them higher before, but not with this much unity. Time to sell." At the time, 30-Year Bond (TLT) was at 86.43 while 10-Year Interest Rate(TNX) was at 48.61.

Extremes -- at the bottom for yield indexes and at the top for bond ETFs -- have not been reached yet for this cycle. This week, 30-Year Bond (TLT) is at 87.25, while 10-Year Interest Rate (TNX) is at 47.

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