Chart Of The Day: Here's How To Trade The Treasury Rout

 | Oct 11, 2018 15:01

There is something inherently wrong with this market. In a healthy market, stocks and bonds maintain a negative correlation. When stocks rise bonds tend to fall, and vice versa.

The logic is simple. When investors seek growth, they are willing to take a risk on stocks; when they seek security, they buy bonds. However, recently, in what seems to contradict all common sense, there's been a selloff in both types of assets.

This must mean that investors are focused on the impact of higher borrowing costs as interest rates rise, which is negative, rather than the growing economy, which is positive. This paradigm shift, in which both stocks and bonds fall in unison, leaves investors exposed, upending diversification strategies which are supposed to be in place to hedge loss in either market.

As such, investors may unwind positions, selling both asset classes. Moreover, the outlook for yet higher rates makes current longer-term yields relatively unattractive. A good way to profit off this strange market is with the iPath US Treasury 10-Year Bear ETN (NASDAQ:DTYS).