![]()
- Citigroup Lost $20 Million on Facebook IPO Trades
- JPMorgan to Shake Up Risk Team After Big Loss: Report
- EU Finalizes Bank Reforms; Shifts Burden to Bondholders
- Spain to Inject Emergency 19 Billion Euros into Bankia
- EU Set to Launch Action Against China Over Telecom Aid
- JPMorgan to Shake Up Risk Team After Big Loss: Report
- Marc Faber: Chance of Global Recession Is Now 100%
- Cool Jobs: From Gold Stacker to Bed Tester
- 'Flash Sale' Sites: Gimmick, or Online Shopping Future?
- A New Look at the ‘New Poor’
- Six Pack: Beer Buzz of the Week
- Greek Exit Could Trigger 50% Fall in Euro Stocks: Analyst
- Under Pressure, FHA Skews to Wealthier Home Buyers
- Big Stock Upside for Hudson City Deal: Analyst
- 5 High-Yield Stocks Ready to Boost Dividends
- Yoshikami: Four Things You Need to Know About Gold Now
- Steinbock: The Euro Zone Endgame Begins
- Option Bulls Take Another Shot on Idenix
MOST SHARED
- Spain to Inject 19 Billion Euros into Bankia
- Fresh Fears as EU Finalises Reform Plans
- Zero China Growth Is ‘Probable’: Gordon Chang
- Beijing Faces Brussels Action on Telecoms Aid
- Marc Faber: 100% Chance of Global Recession
- Citigroup Lost $20 Million on Facebook IPO Trades
- China Growth Risks Signal Need for Fiscal Action
- Greek Exit Could Trigger 50% Fall in Euro Stocks: Analyst
- Senate Summons Dimon to 'Get to the Bottom' of JPM Mess
- Why Are Greek and Italian Politicians So Bad?
MOST POPULAR
HOT ON FACEBOOK
Bonds Flat as Stocks Look for Direction
Treasury debt prices were little changed Thursday absent a strong directional clue from US stock futures, but supported by a persistent safe haven bid on concerns about the banking system and weaker than expected jobless claims data.
Benchmark US government securities yields, which move inversely to their prices, traded near two-month lows as investors' palpable concerns about high stress in lending markets stayed at the fore.
Yields of the very safest government securities, ultra short-dated Treasury bills, were near their lowest levels in more than five decades hit on Wednesday as investors stampeding out of falling commodities and stocks parked assets there.
Longer maturity Treasurys also stand to gain if the fall in energy prices persists and alleviates inflation concerns, analysts said.
"Those who would not invest in stocks had several havens: Treasurys, commodities and shorting the dollar. It would appear we are are in a correction now for dollar weakness and gold and oil are making pretty big retreats here. That will only increase the bid it seems to me for Treasurys," said David Dietze, chief investment strategist at Point View Financial Services, Summit, N.J.
Commodities continued plunging on Thursday, as US crude oil futures dropped below $100 per barrel and gold fell in sight of the $900 per ounce mark.
"One of the big fears for fixed-income investors is inflation," and the fall in commodities creates "just a little less concern about inflation," Dietze said.
Weekly initial jobless claims rose to 378,000, above economists' forecasts for 360,000.
Noting the steady rise in continuing claims, Beth Malloy, bond market analyst with research company Briefing.com in Chicago added that: "The 10-year Treasury note has pared losses not mainly because of claims, but because we have a shortened week and because of the safe haven bid."
The benchmark 10-year Treasury note's price, which moves inversely to its yield, edged down 1/32 for a yield of 3.33 percent, versus 3.33 percent late Wednesday.
Short-term interest rate futures showed about a 76 percent chance chance the Federal Reserve would cut interest rates 50 basis points by its late April policy-setting meeting, up from about a 64 percent chance before the data.
The 2-year Treasury note's price was down 2/32 for a yield of 1.51 percent, versus 1.47 percent late Wednesday.
Bond investors were also waiting to see how hefty banks' direct borrowing from the Federal Reserve via the discount window has been in the week ending Wednesday: one key gauge of the banking system's needs for extra cash to shore up balance sheets depleted by the credit market crisis.
The weekly data is scheduled for release at 4:30 p.m.
"We are coming up on a three day weekend. People remember what happened last weekend," with the near collapse and rescue of Bear Stearns, the fifth biggest U.S. investment bank, said Dietze.
"One of the large players in investment banking hit the windshield last weekend, and was only salvaged through intervention by the Federal Reserve," he said. "Will there be another sad story revealed? That is keeping risk aversion very high and a very strong bid for Treasurys."
- The Nasdaq has suffered the most from the EU crisis showing there's risk in the usual tech stocks.
- Targeting more Millennials is just one of the items brewing for consumers in the world of spirits.
- It seems many people may need a reminder of how NOT to act on a plane. Here are a few tips.
- Here are some very unusual roadside stops along American highways that might peek your interest.
- How three generations of Americans are dealing with the finances of retirement.









