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Thrifty Investors Behold: Cheapest ETF In Every CategoryMichael Johnston • Mon, Jun 18, 2012
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Treasuries Update: Yields Drop As Treasuries RallyDoug Short • Thu, Dec 29, 2011
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Traders Tap ETFs To Profit From Higher Treasury YieldsJohn Spence • Tue, Nov 15, 2011
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Treasury ETFs And The Supercommittee DeadlineTom Lydon • Tue, Nov 15, 2011
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Treasuries Update: The October Sell-OffDoug Short • Mon, Oct 31, 2011
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DSXJ vs. ETF Alternatives
DSXJ Description
The JPMorgan Double Short US 10 Year Treasury Futures ETNs ("ETNs") are designed to provide investors a convenient way to implement and monetize a rising rates view at the medium part of the US Treasury curve. Subject to the resetting leverage, this allows for the possibility to profit from an expectation of rising interest rates. The ETNs are inversely linked to the performance of the NYSE US 10 Year Treasury Futures Index (the "Index"). The Index seeks to replicate the returns of maintaining a long position in the medium portion of the US Treasury curve. The ETNs provide double inverse leveraged exposure to the Index, from one reset date to the next and less Investor Fees**, so that you positively benefit from a fall in the price of the Index due to a rise in prevailing yields. The ETNs are senior, unsecured obligations of JPMorgan Chase & Co. and are subject to optional and early redemption at the discretion of JPMorgan Chase & Co. after one year.
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Country: United States
Key Info
- In Your Portfolio: Broad U.S. Bond ETFs, A Guide to Strategy ETFs
- Asset Class Performance: Bonds, Strategies
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- | Earnings
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- | M&A
- | On the move
- Thursday, June 20, 8:09 AM The market's take on the Fed yesterday is inline with Jon Hilsenrath's who says the central bank's more optimistic economic projections opens the door to the end of QE within a year. Bill Gross (BOND) says the market's got it all wrong, focusing on rising growth and employment projections, but ignoring falling inflation estimates. "Those selling Treasurys (TLT, TBT) in anticipation the Fed will ease out of the market might be disappointed." 2 Comments [U.S. Economy]
- Thursday, June 20, 6:49 AM The post-FOMC slide looks set to continue at the open with S&P 500 (SPY) futures -0.9% and Nasdaq 100 (QQQ) -1%. Markets around the globe all closed sharply in the red overnight and Europe is off more than 2%. There's no flight to fixed income either, with the 10-year Treasury yield continuing to fly higher, now at 2.43%. TLT -1.9%, TBT +4.6% premarket. 9 Comments
- Wednesday, June 19, 2:13 PM Bond prices (TLT -0.7%) slip following the more upbeat assessment of the economy from the FOMC. Higher growth and lower unemployment projections spell maybe a quicker schedule for tapering and eventual tightening, but materially lower inflation expectations say the opposite. Stocks give up a bit of ground as well, the S&P 500 (SPY -0.3%). The dollar (UUP +0.3%) pops higher across the board. 3 Comments [U.S. Economy, On the Move]
- Wednesday, June 19, 12:09 PM Calling long-dated U.S. Treasurys (TLT, TBT) the most hated asset class in the world (ed: They've been so for years), Jeff Gundlach - appearing on CNBC - calls them the one place where you can make money over the coming weeks. "There are no signs of inflation anywhere." 5 Comments [Quick Ideas]
- Monday, June 17, 12:56 PM More from Zulauf at Barron's: Taking issue with the gathering consensus of a stronger economy and the Fed pulling back, Zulauf suggests bond yields (TLT, TBT) may have stopped rising and could be set to fall. In conjunction with that view, noncyclical names (XLU, XLV) could be set for a comeback at the expense of cyclical sectors (XLV, XLB, XLE). Comment! [Quick Ideas]
- Friday, June 14, 2:37 PM The anti-QE rhetoric is building just in time for next week's FOMC meeting, as Guggenheim's Scott Minerd channels his inner Bill Gross, calling the Treasury market (TLT, TBT) a "ponzi scheme." "The only reason investors would buy Treasurys today is that they expect the Federal Reserve will buy them at higher prices in the future," Minerd tells clients. The longer the Fed's bond buying continues, "the more volatility-inducing pressure will build." 13 Comments [U.S. Economy]
- Thursday, June 13, 1:10 PM Treasury prices (TLT +0.6%) slide off the session highs as the 30-year auction prices the long bond at 3.355% vs. the when-issued yield of 3.324%. Stocks don't seem to mind, the S&P (SPY +0.7%) climbing to about the day's high. 3 Comments
- Wednesday, June 12, 10:15 AM As a shaky bond market (TLT -0.8%) helps snuff out an early rally for stocks, Bill Gross reminds the Fed isn't hiking rates for years, and it makes intermediate-term Treasurys a buy at yields greater than 2%. The 10-year yield is up 3 bps to 2.22%. Treasury ETFs (long and short) in the 7-10 year range: IEF, PST, ITE, TENZ, TYNS, UST, VGIT, TBX, GVI. 4 Comments [U.S. Economy]
- Tuesday, June 11, 10:19 AM Price matters and even though Bill Gross declared the secular bond bull market over 6 weeks ago, the 10-year Treasury (TLT) north of 2.2% is starting to hold some appeal. It's a "decent environment to earn your carry," he says. The Total Return Fund (BOND ... is not as vulnerable as investors believe it to be as witnessed in May." Comment! [Financials]
- Tuesday, June 11, 7:15 AM Bond yields stay on the rise, the 10-year Treasury up 5 bps to more than a one-year high of 2.27%. The long bond is up 2 bps to 3.4%. TLT -0.4%, TBT +0.6% premarket. 1 Comment [U.S. Economy]
- Thursday, June 6, 7:28 AM Add SocGen's professional bear Al Edwards to those doubting (previous) an imminent tapering: "I might be wrong, but I just don't see this economy as healthy," he tells CNBC. "If I am right than any sharp rise in bond yields (TLT) should quickly derail this apology of a recovery." The monthly jobs report (25 hours away) is definitely popcorn-worthy again. Comment! [U.S. Economy]
- Wednesday, June 5, 8:22 AM Stock index futures shave a little from losses as Treasury prices rise following the weak ADP print. In addition to the soft 135K in job gains, April's increase is adjusted down by 6K to 113K. ADP's Carlos Rodriguez notes an increase of 5K construction jobs in May was offset by 6K jobs lost in manufacturing. SPY -0.2%, TLT +0.7% premarket. (full report) Comment! [U.S. Economy]
- Tuesday, June 4, 4:49 PM More Gundlach (previous): "If we put another 60 bps onto yields in the month of June like we almost did in May, I think there is no way you would see markets continue to digest it in a calm fashion," he says, making the case for Treasurys (TLT, TBT). Somewhere in the area of 2.35% on the 10-year (2.13% now) would force the Fed's hand and you might even see expanded QE. Comment!
- Tuesday, June 4, 12:31 PM "Current conditions represent a buying opportunity for bonds (TLT, LQD) says Jeff Gundlach, appearing on CNBC. Higher interest rates will prove too damaging to certain sectors and he expects the 10-year Treasury - currently at 2.13% - to head back below 2% into the summer and fall. Nikkei (EWJ, DXJ)? In the mid-12s, it's a buying opportunity. Apple (AAPL)? He was a buyer in the low $400s and $500 is a chip shot, but it may never see $700. Chipotle (CMG)? He never got filled on his short at $380, but would give it a shot again. 9 Comments
- Monday, June 3, 8:47 AM Did Apple's (AAPL) mammoth $17B bond sale mark the top for bonds? Ten-year Treasury yields bottomed for the year at about 1.62% right at the time of the offering and have gone vertical since (currently at 2.16%). A back-of-the-envelope calculation finds the company pocketing $724M in savings over the life of the paper by borrowing at the end of April vs. the end of May. TLT -7.6%, LQD -3.7% during May. 3 Comments
- Friday, May 31, 7:02 AM "It's hard to believe that the greatest bond bull market in history will end without some bloodshed," writes BAML chief investment strategist Michael Hartnett. "Risks of a bond crash are high." He notes major breakouts to the upside in equity markets often coincide with "major inflection points in bond yields." Treasurys this morning are taking a breather from recent losses, the 10-year yield off 4 bps to 2.07%. TLT +0.5% premarket. 6 Comments