BUND - Selling pressure should ease. Techs and the macro gameThe recent drop did not happen because Bill Gross said it should happen. Bund futures is one of the biggest markets, if not the most liquid, so Bill Gross might have been short for a while, but him alone can not move the price. What he as one of the oldest and smartest bond investors can achive though is to open others' eyes with his comments.
I think that is what has started here. The holders of German bonds (and its futures) started to realise something: the big idea of long term deflation and the trades related to deflation is a BS. No one can believe that there will be deflation for such a long period of time. Or if there would be, then ECB's QE (which sent down European yields to these extreme lows artificially) worth exactly nothing! Now ask some questions:
- does it fundamentally make sence and worth to hold a 10y German bond at 0-0,45 bps yield? Of course it does not.
- Would this yield be so low without such a fckd up QE programe, which had been frontrun by whole mkt for 8-10 months? Of course not.
- Will the ECB finish its bond buying any time soon? Of course not.
I think these are the main questions that investors ave been asking and what have been moving this mkt.
One thing is sure: a bearish yield curve steepening has started and long end yields jumped some, so mkt has started to price out the big the deflation trade. But this is still not a big drama in terms of nominal yields and lvls. The big drama is/will be the uncontrolled LEVERAGE, what the ECB has forced on the mkt. At extremely low nominal levels you have take extremely high leveraged risk to make the same possible amount profit on your investment, or trade.
So Mr. Gross will be right... sometimes... but not now. As ECB is probably realising the same problem, and starts to manage volatility here. They were so "upset" not finding enough eligible bonds to buy when the whole German curve was trading negative upto 9 years. Do you think they will not start buying now? :-)
So the fundamentals and game theory is well reflected in the charts. We'll likely see a top building period now.
Bund Futures has reached important support at 156. Short term it can correct up to 157,50-158, but longer term the good risk reward game will remain the sell on tops strategy.
I enterred some long positions at 156+, with tgt 157,50.
BUND trade ideas
BUND - German 10Y yield is below Japan's 10Y now. Bubble?You may think equities are in bubble. but in fact the real and massive bubble is in the global bond markets.
The Bund has reached all time low yield at 31 bps (0,31 %), which is now lower than Japan 10y bond yield at 35-36 bps. If I want to be sarcastic, I could say "what a great value!". But in fact this is a great example of how distorted mkts can become due to Central Banks' actions. I mean none of us can really believe buying a 10 year maturity bond at 0,31 bps can get you any reasonable real yields for the long run, as it is very unlikely that we see such low inflation for the next 10 years. But when money is being printed in such large amounts, that money is trying to find its way, hunting for the smallest positive return. That is shown on the chart, the trend is absolutely bullish.
However even if I am a technical trader, I can not ignore fundamental idiotism. So despite there is not yet a firm sell signal right now, I think the risk of top hunting (so selling into these rallies from time to time) is getting smaler and smaller as the lunatic global bond bubble blowing goes on.
Of course no one knows if Bund yields go maybe to negative (e.g. Swiss 10y is negative already), but the downside of shorts is more and more limited.
Still too early to call for a burst of this bond bubble, but even the strongest, centrally manipulated trends have limits, so from now I will always try to play for pullbacks.
Weekly:
- Ichimoku is strong bullish, the long term trend will not be in danger for several more months, but Price got too far above Kijun Sen and from longer term equilibrium, looks like a parabolic bullish move since end of 2014
- Heiken Ashi candle is bullish, but haDelta reached extreme high and may turn down from here.
- Supports are ard 156 and 153,60
Daily:
- Bullish Ichimoku setup with supports at 157,90 and lower at 156,20
- Today's HA candle may be a signal for a pull back if it closes with small body within prev. candles body. Also haDelta suggest some consolidation or pull back is more possible than further gains from here. The oscillator is still bullish.
BUND - Big picture still bullish, with chance for correctionDaily: Absolutely long term bullish picture, but Slow Stoch and MACD warns for a possible correction down to Kijun Sen, which is in line with horizontal support marked by Chikou Span peaks.
4 Hrs: No real sell signal yet, watch Kijun Sen here at 147,95. This level is in line with Daily Tenkan Sen.
1 Hr: Top consolidatio with Price enterring Kumo, flat Tenkan and Kijun lines, Chikou hit into price candles. DMI lost direction. Key level is the Kumo bottom, 147,95-148, which is in line with higher time frame (4 Hrs) Kijun Sen.
Stocks rally today again, European equities gaining bullish momentum on lower time frames. This should support selling in Bunds. UST may see some selling pressure today, but depends on US data flow.
If you are looking for a counter trend trade, wait for a sell signal at 148,00. Be wise, do not enter with more than 1 trade unit, place a tight stop ard local top 148,40.
BUND - Sell signals lining up, so sell on topsBund tried to break higher, but it was enough only for a Kijun retest. Price turned down again from 144 level, and by now is back into the Kumo. 142-144 range is expected to stay for some time, but the bias is bearish.
Slow Stoch sell signal, MACD turnind down again, DMI is zig-zag with low ADX, Future Kumo bearish cross.
Sell in 143-143,50 range in more clips with stops above 144,10.
Trade is a lot dependent on tomorrow's ECB, but my personal view is still that ECB won't even cut the rate. QE? Except equities uber bullish pricing none of any other asset class believes in it now. That is something they brainstorming about, but for me that is a kind of ECB's last resort if things would turn really bad. Anyway, can anybody tell me how would they execute the QE, since Europe doesn't have a common eurobond market? What would they buy? Bund only? Or periphery bonds only? Or a mix? But then what kind of weighs to calc with? And what if one country once ever defaults on its local debt? Guys, Europe is not US, and ECB is a conservative and "devided" central bank, with a lot of internal tensions. It is not the FED.
Bund - confirmed bullish breakoutFinally Bund confirmed bullish breakout, to continue it's recent uptrend. Daily MACD crossed up again.4 Hrs ADX picking up.
The question is what kind of expectations are behind this move? Does it mean a possible risk off coming for equities? Or maybe investors just think ECB will be more dovish next week? Or maybe stg else? Anyway, as technical traders we should never really care about any reasons behind. Just do what the chart suggests us to do. Leave the rest for academics and fundamental guys.