The Treasury-Market Party Is Over

 | May 30, 2014 12:58AM ET

Last Hurrah

Everybody knew the GDP number was going to be revised down on this reading, and that it probably gets revised up for the next reading, and Bond Traders used the Revision in first quarter GDP to take the U.S. 10-Year Yield down to 2.4% on a nice push, but this required a whole lot of ammunition, and as soon as Europe started to close at 10 am central time (Europe close is 10:30 am for practical purposes) the Traders needed to start closing some of these positions.

Bottom in the Bond Market

The 10-Year then went 7 basis points higher to actually end the day up, which in trader`s terms is an outside reversal, or a very bullish sign for 10-year yields going forward, this effectively is the bottom for the 10-year bond yield for 2014, 2015, 2016 and beyond.

Mark this date in your calendars as the last time the 10-year Yield was this low, we mentioned in an earlier article about this market being a coiled spring, well just sit back and watch the carnage as everyone tries to run for the exits at the same time in the bond market. Grab some popcorn because this is going to be funny over the coming months and years as yields continue to rise, some poor sap actually bought a 10-Year Bond today at 2.41% Yield, and thought this was a good investment.