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Macro Monitor

Mar 01 1991

Bond Market Summary

  • Mar 1, 1991

The bond market continued to advance in early February. It peaked however on February 8th, the day after the Treasury completed its financing. In the week following, T-bonds held in a narrow range, but began losing ground in the last half of the month. In the final days of February and on the first trading day of March, the decline picked up momentum.

Feb 01 1991

Bond Market Summary

  • Feb 1, 1991

War, recession, falling oil prices and other good inflation news combined to support the U.S. fixed income markets in January.

Jan 07 1991

Well, At Least It Is Now Official

  • Jan 7, 1991

The committee at the National Bureau of Economic Research says it is a recession.

Dec 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Dec 1, 1990

In November, recession evidence continued to build. War fears started to fade. November 17 came and went, and the Bush hawk began his molt. The dollar stabilized, at least momentarily. Inflation fears faded, as oil prices traded down. In this environment, the bond market marched steadily upward all month.

Nov 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Nov 1, 1990

Crude prices fell 11% in October and almost all other commodities moved lower, easing recent inflation fears. The economic numbers mostly continued to say recession, with the exception of the new GNP number. However, very few believe the accuracy of the number.

Oct 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Oct 1, 1990

The recent improvement in the bond market is probably not the result of the politicians’ weak kneed program to deal with the deficit. Rather, it more likely stems from the lack of bad news from the Middle East and growing evidence that the economy is in a recession.

Sep 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Sep 1, 1990

As things heated up in the desert, the bond market swooned. Late in August, Middle East tensions eased somewhat, with the dollar and the bond market staging a rally, trimming the losses for the month. Nevertheless, bond market damage in August was still severe.

Aug 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Aug 1, 1990

All things considered, the bond market held up well in July. And even though the dollar index slid about 4%, there was little progress on the deficit front and inflation fears rose with oil prices. These bond market negatives were offset by increasing evidence of a recession in the works.

Jul 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Jul 1, 1990

George Bush turned the bond market around during the last week in June, mentioning that “tax revenue increases” are needed. Long bonds rejoiced by moving up about two points in the last four trading days of June.

Jun 04 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Jun 4, 1990

The bond market surged upward in the first part of May, and then consolidated those gains for the remainder of the month. Bonds have again blasted upward here on the first day of June.

May 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • May 1, 1990

In mid-April, the bond market broke sharply, stabilizing late in the month. The decline brought T-bonds down into the upper ranges of our buying zone (9%-10%). But in the first days of May they have rallied to 8.90%.

Apr 01 1990

Bond Market Summary

  • Apr 1, 1990

The bond market has weathered some recent storms better than anticipated. The dollar has also performed better than expected. But inflation fears could increase in coming months.

Mar 07 1990

Well, It Was Better Than January

  • Mar 7, 1990

The bond market was fighting to stabilize in February, folowing the "surprise" January decline.

Feb 07 1990
Feb 07 1990

January 1990: The "Wrong Way" Bond Market

  • Feb 7, 1990

It was all downhill for bonds in January.

Dec 01 1989

Bond Market Summary

  • Dec 1, 1989

I continue to believe that at least a mild recession is in the cards for 1990 and that the deficit will soon start to expand. However, I no longer think this will be a strong negative in terms of bond market psychology, at least not over the next six months or so.

Nov 01 1989

Bond Market Summary

  • Nov 1, 1989

Inflation continues to cool and the economy is providing more evidence of slowing, but we still have our reservations about the bond market and remain cautious.

Oct 01 1989

A Potential Tactical Move Into Junk Bonds

  • Oct 1, 1989

It still appears to be premature, but we are giving serious consideration to adding a package of selected high yield corporate bonds to the fixed income component of the two asset allocation models.

Oct 01 1989

Bond Market Summary

  • Oct 1, 1989

A lackluster T-bond rally in the first half of September seemed to be primarily a flee to quality as junk bonds were trashed. Then in the last week or so T-bonds have moved lower, even as the junk market stabilized.

Sep 01 1989

Bond Market Summary

  • Sep 1, 1989

In August, the dollar was strong and inflation fears continued to wane. So why were most long-term bonds down 2-4 points? We can blame the economy, or at least Wall Street’s perception of the economy.

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