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To: Defrocked who wrote (46600)6/11/1999 4:15:00 PM
From: IceShark  Respond to of 86076
 
That is not what I wanted to hear, though suspected. Thanks. Have a good weekend.



To: Defrocked who wrote (46600)6/11/1999 6:37:00 PM
From: Haim R. Branisteanu  Respond to of 86076
 
Defrocket there are several factors at work who push the bond down. As the 10 year started to run it indicated that many home buyers are now desperate to lock in a mortgage rate. This is usually done by selling the 10 year treasury.

The treasury market will rally strongly as those hedges must be covered, due to the strong negative sentiment and those afraid not missing the treasury rally.

BWDIK
Haim



To: Defrocked who wrote (46600)6/14/1999 8:51:00 AM
From: Cynic 2005  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 86076
 
Are you still short yen and feel strongly about it? Isn't this news almost a green-light to short $ against the Yen.
--------------
June 14, 1999


Bank of Japan Intervenes
To Halt the Yen's Rise
Dow Jones Newswires

TOKYO -- The Bank of Japan intervened in global currency markets Monday, buying dollars to slow the yen's rise.

In afternoon trading in Tokyo, the dollar was quoted at 120.60 yen, up nearly three yen, or 2.25%, from 117.95 yen late Friday in New York.

Earlier in the day, the dollar fell to as low as 117.91 yen. But it suddenly jumped above 119 yen on rumors that the Bank of Japan, the nation's central bank, had intervened to prop up the U.S. currency.

Eisuke Sakakibara, Japan's vice finance minister for international affairs, confirmed that the Bank of Japan had intervened. "We took appropriate steps," he said.

Mr. Sakakibara, whose knack for influencing exchange rates earned him the moniker "Mr. Yen," said that in order to ensure a recovery of Japan's economy, a premature strengthening of the yen is undesirable.

"We are watching the forex market situation closely. If needed, we will take decisive measures," he said.

Market participants speculated that the Bank of Japan may have spent as much as $10 billion on the intervention.

Haruhiko Kuroda, the head of the Ministry of Finance's international bureau, echoed Mr. Sakakibara's comments.

Recently, there has been concern that the stronger yen will hurt Japan's ailing economy by cutting into exports.

The Bank of Japan began intervening in the morning, boosting the U.S. unit to 119 yen from an intraday low of 117.91 yen. Traders said the bank continued to intervene, selling the yen at 118.20 yen, 118.80 yen, 119.20 yen, 119.50 yen and 120 yen.

The persistence of the central bank is the main factor boosting the U.S. currency, traders said. Indeed, the BOJ's aggressive dollar buying came despite heavy selling by U.S. funds to repatriate yen carry trade positions.

"There's really no one else that would be buying now," said Hirokazu Note, chief foreign exchange dealer at Sumitomo Bank



To: Defrocked who wrote (46600)6/15/1999 10:14:00 AM
From: Defrocked  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86076
 
Sold my bond calls this AM for okay gain. FWIW.