Quantcast
  Free Trial!
  Today’s Best Stocks To Trade!   
Click Here

Most Popular Indicators for Futures Traders


E-minis/Futures

Trading Ideas

Daily E-minis Ideas


Trading Lessons

Strategies
Interviews
Glossary
All Trading Lessons


Daily Stock Setups

Connors Daily Battle Plan
Haggerty Professional
Kaltbaum Intra-day Set-ups
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
TM Indicators


Trading News

Markets Updates
Technical Alerts
Breaking News


PowerRatings

Short Term
Long Term
Charts


Indicators

E-minis/Futures
Strategy Finder
Stocks
Market Bias


Quotes

Markets
Stocks
Charts
Level II
Historical Data
Forex


Trading Contests

Up or Down




Bonds March Higher on Market Malfunctions
By John Patrick Lee | TradingMarkets.com | January 17, 2008
Stocks RSS

U.S. 10-year Treasury bond prices rallied to new 4-year record highs, after Merrill reported Q4 losses close to $10 billion. The full extent of the damage of the credit crisis came roaring back into full view for traders today, who then bought U.S. Treasuries as a safety from economic weakness. Bonds typically rally on economic weakness and fall on strength, so it's clear that traders have taken a defensive position in relation to bonds.

The dollar fell against the yen and the euro today, after Merrill Lynch posted quarterly losses nearing $10 billion. A string of financial writedowns and corporate losses have led to traders selling the dollar in favor of more profitable currencies. The dollar has been in deep trouble in the past months on a weakening economy. The dollar is just off all-time lows on the euro, and trading at 2-year lows versus the yen. The yen rallied against the euro today, as traders reversed the carry trade and bought back yen.

Crude oil continued to fall today, moving lower by about 0.7%. Crude has fallen around 10% since the first day of the year, when price hit new records of $100. Crude has been falling on speculation that a U.S. economic slowdown would lead to a decline in energy demand. Crude has fallen recently on similar fears, only to bounce back quickly. Natural gas futures were down moderately.

Gold futures fell today with oil. Gold normally trades inversely to the dollar and with oil. Today, traders ignored dollar weakness and instead focused on falling oil prices, and sold gold. Copper futures were down fractionally.

Grains were mixed. Corn was flat while soybeans were down moderately.

The major indexes were down big today, after Merrill reported massive losses linked to the subprime mortgage markets. The S&P fell 2.9%, the Dow fell 2.4%, and the Nasdaq dropped 1.9%. Click here to read the rest of today's Stock Market Recap.

Economic News
U.S. housing starts fell more than forecast last month.

Stocks RSS
Related Articles

PREMIER SPONSORED LINKS
TRADE CENTER

The TradingMarkets Directory
Stocks
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis
PowerRatings
Training Classes
Tools
Stock Scanner
Daily Market Bias

Options
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Commentary and Analysis

Forex
How to Trade
Forex Momentum Index
Pivots

E-mini/Futures
Quotes
Charts
How to Trade
Daily Market Bias

How to Trade
Stocks
Options
Forex
E-mini/Futures
Glossary

Tools
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Stock Screener
Quotes & Charts
Stock Indicators
Market bias Indicators

PowerRatings
Short Term PowerRatings
Long Term PowerRatings
Industry PowerRatings
PowerRatings Charts
Training Classes
PowerRatings Strategies
Search PowerRatings

Trading Contests
Up or Down Stock Contest
#1 - Win $1000 every month

Up or Down Forex Contest -
Win $1000 every month


Premium Subscription Services
Short Term PowerRatings Free Trial
Long Term PowerRatings Free Trial
TradingMarkets Subscription Free Trial
Daily Battle Plan Free Trial
Gary Kaltbaum - Intraday Breaking Alerts Free Trial
Kevin Haggerty Professional Trading Service Free Trial
Forex Force with Mark Whistler Free Trial

RELATED SITES
Nothing but forex



All analyst commentary provided on TradingMarkets.com is provided for educational purposes only. The analysts and employees or affiliates of TradingMarkets.com may hold positions in the stocks or industries discussed here. This information is NOT a recommendation or solicitation to buy or sell any securities. Your use of this and all information contained on TradingMarkets.com is governed by the Terms and Conditions of Use. Please click the link to view those terms. Follow this link to read our Editorial Policy.

© 2008 The Connors Group, Inc.