So how high will yields go? I’m hearing 6% or even 7%

So how high will yields go? I’m hearing 6% or even 7%

Today the yield on the 10-year Treasury closed at 4.71%. That was down 2 basis points on the day but in the year the yield is up 96y basis points. Almost a full percentage point. How high can yields go? Bond traders and investors want to know. Investors in other financial assets, stocks, for instance want to know. The Federal Reserve, which is supposed to set interest rates but is increasingly a sideline spectator on rates, wants to know.

The oil slump continues with WTI crude dropping below its 50-day moving average

The oil slump continues with WTI crude dropping below its 50-day moving average

So suddenly oil traders are worried about slowing global growth? Remember that just last week, these same folks bid oil up to near $100 a barrel after Saudi Arabia and Russia announced that they would extend curbs on production. My take on all this: Nobody knows and the traders driving these moves don’t have much conviction in their buys or sells. Which means that any move in either direction is likely to be followed by a strong move in the opposite direction.

Good news for inflation, interest rates, the Fed in today’s ADP jobs number if we can believe it

Good news for inflation, interest rates, the Fed in today’s ADP jobs number if we can believe it

Private payrolls rose by just 89,000 jobs in September, according to figures published today by the ADP Research Institute. That’s the fewest jobs added in a month since the start of 2021. Private payrolls climbed 180,000 in August. The results trailed all estimates in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The report is more evidence of a further slowing in the labor market. “We are seeing a steepening decline in jobs this month,” Nela Richardson, ADP’s chief economist, said in a statement. “Additionally, we are seeing a steady decline in wages in the past 12 months.” Both trends would be good news for the Federal Reserve in its fight to lower inflation. And would be positives for a financial market which has seen bond yields rise and stock prices stagnate recently in fears that inflation might be staging a come back. Good news–if, that is, the ADP numbers can be believed.

The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped another 13 basis points today, October 3

The yield on the 10-year Treasury jumped another 13 basis points today, October 3

Where did the slow-moving, deep and placid Treasury market go? The yield on the 10-year benchmark Treasury–you know the one used to set the interest rate on things like mortgages–moved up another 13 basis points today, October 3, to 4.80%. That’s a jump to 24 basis points in just two days. The Treasury market just doesn’t move like this. The yield on the 10-year Treasury is now up 63 basis points in the last month.

I’ll be selling Nvidia out of my Volatility Portfolio tomorrow

I’ll be selling Nvidia out of my Volatility Portfolio tomorrow

I’m going to take advantage of today’s pop in Nvidia (NVDA) to sell the shares out of my very short-term Volatility Portfolio tomorrow, Tuesday, October 2. The shares closed up at the close today at $447.82, a gain of 2.95% on the day. I initiated the position in the Volatily Portfolio on Mach 25, 2023. It was up 66% as of the close today So why sell Nvidia here?

Could be a rocky day for Tesla shares tomorrow, Monday.

Could be a rocky day for Tesla shares tomorrow, Monday.

It could be a rough day ahead for Tesla (TSLA).The company has broken four quarterly car delivery records in a row, but then the results for the current quarter–which could be announced as early as Monday, Ocroer 2, are likely to show that deliveries have slipped. Not seriously. But when a stock is trading at 70 times tailing 12 month earnings per share in a nervous market, a stumble is all it takes to send a share price down. And this nervous market doesn’t need bad news from one of its leaders.

Count on another shutdown “emergency” and another temporary spending “fix”

Saturday Night Quarterback (on a Sunday) says, For the week ahead, expect…

Kicking the shutdown 45 days down the road doesn’t change a single vote in Congress. The question remains exactly what it was before Saturday’s vote–Will McCarthy–or whoever is Speaker–use Democratic votes to pass legislation to fund the operations of the Federal government? Anything that increases the chances the Congress will return to its pre-vote chaos–or worse–will be a negative for financial markets. Anything that points to a full fiscal year budget based on a willingness to use Democratic votes in the House to pass a full fiscal year budget will be a positive for financial markets.