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To: IceShark who wrote (9190)10/22/1998 9:34:00 AM
From: MythMan  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 86076
 
Hedge fund sales hit bond

Long bonds dip sharply; Soros said to be behind turn to short-term Treasurys

October 22, 1998: 9:02 a.m. ET

NEW YORK (CNNfn) - Bond prices opened sharply lower Thursday on signs of hedge fund selling of long-term U.S. Treasurys in favor of shorter-term issues.
<Picture>At around 9 a.m. ET Thursday, the benchmark 30-year Treasury issue was down 25/32 in price at 105-23/32, as the yield rose to 5.12 percent.
<Picture>Bond traders cited speculation that a large hedge fund, said to be financier George Soros' Quantum Fund, was selling bonds to buy up the shorter-term two-year bills set for sale next week.
<Picture>"The net-net is a steepening of the yield curve," said one bond futures trader, referring to a drop in longer issues while shorter-term Treasurys hold relatively steady.
<Picture>The so-called "when-issued" T-bills are expected to go on sale next week, but early sales are permitted. Analysts said such a move to shorter Treasurys is not unexpected with recent trading volumes of bonds light.
<Picture>"Considering the fact we have been thin or illiquid in some areas in the market it wouldn't surprise me if there had been some hedge fund selling," said Kevin Flanagan, a bond trader at Morgan Stanley Dean Witter, adding that he didn't know whether Soros was selling bonds.
<Picture>The dip in bond prices came despite a report showing in unexpected rise in first-time jobless claims last week. Such a report would tend to indicate a slowing of the U.S. economy and thus be bullish for Treasury prices.



To: IceShark who wrote (9190)10/22/1998 9:46:00 AM
From: MythMan  Respond to of 86076
 
Ice,

I told him to get lost <g>

MM