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The soaring US Treasury yield has impacted the stock market; how should this be addressed? The following events deserve close attention!
This wave of decline is closely related to the rise in U.S. Treasury yields. Since Federal Reserve Chairman Powell clearly shifted focus to inflation at the December meeting last year, the increase in Treasury yields has put pressure on the U.S. stock market.
Options trading investors are "buying the dip" in the U.S. Treasury market, betting that yields have peaked.
As the volatility in the USA bond market intensifies, some Options Trading participants begin to boldly "buy the dip."
IShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF Options Spot-On: On January 13th, 824.45K Contracts Were Traded, With 6.2 Million Open Interest
On January 13th ET, $iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF(TLT.US)$ had active options trading, with a total trading volume of 824.45K options for the day, of which put options accounted for 32.15% of
Bond-market Selloff Fuels Options-trading Frenzy as Bets on a Rebound Surge
Tuesday's Producer Inflation Report Could Stoke Market Volatility As Fed Path Remains Unclear
When will the US stock market, US bonds, and the US dollar reach a turning point?
Why do the pricing of these three sets of assets—USA bonds, US stocks, and the USD—consistently deviate from the general market expectations? What is the main logic behind the pricing of USA assets, and how should we grasp the main contradictions in the pricing of USA assets?