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Gundlach: Bond Wipeout Is Just Beginning

It was already a jittery day for fixed income investors, with a bond rout which started after today's French auction was poorly received, unleashing a selling scramble and sending Bund yields above 0.50% for the first time since January 2016, and breaking out above a key support level, then crossing the ocean and slamming both US stocks and bonds. And according to Jeff Gundlach, who recently doubled down on his vocal bond bearishness on Twitter...

Unveiling the Silver in the LBMA London vaults

Unveiling the Silver in the LBMA London vaults

Submitted by Ronan Manly, BullionStar.com
 
Sometime in the coming days, the London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) plans to begin reporting the amount of real physical gold and silver that is actually stored in the network of LBMA vaults in London. This follows an announcement made by the LBMA on 8 May.
 
There are 7 commercial vault operators (custodians) in the LBMA custodian vault network namely:
 

"Where There's Smoke, There's Taper" One Trader Warns "One Day This Will All Change"

"Where There's Smoke, There's Taper" One Trader Warns "One Day This Will All Change"

"Believe it or not, one day this will all change," warns former FX trader Richard Breslow in a shockingly frank statement of fact that most (if not all) of the current crew of market-participants are unwilling to accept all the time "the music is still playing."

Via Bloomberg,

Volatility will return, bond yields will find somewhere new to probe. Who knows, even equities might go down.

Global Bond Rout Sends S&P Futures, European Stocks Sliding

Global Bond Rout Sends S&P Futures, European Stocks Sliding

S&P futures are sliding this morning, down 0.4% and tracking the accelerating decline in European and Asian stocks, driven by a move higher in global interest rates, which started with Japanese 10Y yields rising to 0.1% for the first time since February, but mostly Bund yields which spiked after tripping stops, and jumped as high as 0.53% for the first time since early 2016. Oil climbs, dollar and gold slide. Economic data include initial jobless claims, trade balance, Markit PMI readings.

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