The 10-Year Treasury Yield Could Drop Under 2.4%

 | Jul 24, 2014 06:46AM ET

With each passing day it seems the bearishness towards bonds refuses to ease. Surveys by economists still show a heightened distrust for the Treasury market, even though prices have marched higher for the bulk of 2014. When we look at the weekly chart of the U.S. 10-Year Treasury (TNX) we can see that support may be under 2.4%, and if prices do in fact break 2.4%, that may open the next wave of shorts to get squeezed.

Below is a weekly chart of TNX going back to 2008. I’ve included the 200-week Moving Average as it has been an important level of support and resistance for the 10-year yield. In 2010 and 2011 we saw the 200-week MA act as resistance when bond prices were falling prior to the corrections in equities which took place each of those years. In 2013 we saw this long-term Moving Average act as support when yield was falling in October. And once again this MA acted as support in late May of this year when TNX last approached the 2.4% level.

Once again we see yield approaching this critical level of support that currently sits at 2.38%. A break under 2.4% would shock a lot of traders. If we look at momentum, using the Relative Strength Index (RSI) we aren’t even close to seeing oversold conditions. During past bottoms in yield the 14 week RSI dropped to under 30. Of course it’s not a requirement for momentum to become ‘oversold’ on this weekly chart for yield to rise, but that’s been the case during previous intermediate-term bottoms.