The last time the European Central Bank officially embarked on a big bond buying campaign, we were a few months into 2015 and US rates had already bottomed out for the year. Bond traders are well acquainted with "buying the rumor" and "selling the news," but in the case of European bond buying, they weren't quite prepared for how much of an effect the supply constraints would have on European bond prices. As such, European yields were able to rally even more when bond buying actually began, despite the seeming to have bottomed out months earlier with the initial confirmation of the program.

2016-6-8 ECD Bond Buying

We have to wonder if we're seeing something similar now. Yields bottomed out earlier this year when Europe's new bond buying programs were confirmed. And now they're back in position to push even lower as the program is set to begin. Granted, it wouldn't be as surprising and as meaningful as it was last year, but if it's even remotely similar, it could provide a second wind for a US Treasury market that's seemingly winded with 10yr yields bouncing around 1.70.

There is no significant data on tap today, but there is an important 10yr Treasury auction.  With yesterday's 3yr auction a bit weaker than most other Treasury auctions, today's 10yr auction will give us clues as to whether demand is cooling for Treasuries overall, or if it's just cooling for the shorter end of the yield curve (more than it already has... which is quite a lot).  In other words, maybe investors just want to buy the longer-lasting stuff, as has been the case since the Fed began talking more seriously about hiking rates in mid-2015.


MBS Pricing Snapshot
Pricing shown below is delayed, please note the timestamp at the bottom. Real time pricing is available via MBS Live.
MBS
FNMA 3.0
102-28 : +0-00
Treasuries
10 YR
1.7110 : -0.0020
Pricing as of 6/8/16 8:39AMEST

Tomorrow's Economic Calendar
Time Event Period Forecast Prior
Wednesday, Jun 08
7:00 Mortgage Market Index w/e 476.1
13:00 10-yr Note Auction (bl)*