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Sommario:1. Rising Debt Concerns Trigger Market AnxietyVolatility in the U.S. Treasury market has intensified, particularly in long-dated bonds, as investors grow increasingly wary of Americas ballooning fisca
1. Rising Debt Concerns Trigger Market Anxiety
Volatility in the U.S. Treasury market has intensified, particularly in long-dated bonds, as investors grow increasingly wary of Americas ballooning fiscal deficit, unresolved debt ceiling negotiations, and broader creditworthiness. The cost of insuring U.S. debt via credit default swaps (CDS) has continued to climb, reflecting heightened demand for credit risk hedging. In response to liquidity pressure, some institutions have begun offloading long-term Treasuries.
2. Leverage Unwinds Amplify the Selloff
Many hedge funds have long deployed leveraged basis trades—exploiting spreads between Treasury cash bonds and futures. But recent bond market turmoil has widened losses on these strategies, triggering margin calls and forced liquidations. According to Apollo, net short positions held by hedge funds in Treasury futures have exceeded $800 billion, indicating significant sell pressure. In April, a Japan-based bank's fund reportedly collapsed due to Treasury-related losses, sparking a wave of similar unwinds and escalating the panic.
3. Gold Surges as a Safe-Haven Hedge
Rising U.S. credit risk has prompted a shift toward physical assets not tied to sovereign credibility.
Capital is rotating out of financial assets in search of value preservation.
Even amid rising interest rates, investors continue to favor gold, suggesting the current crisis stems from lost confidence—not liquidity.
Gold is now consolidating between $3,200 and $3,270 per ounce. If fiscal risks escalate further, the metal may break into higher territory.
4. Looming Treasury Issuance Could Drain Liquidity
Looking ahead, if a debt ceiling agreement is reached in May, the U.S. Treasury is expected to issue significant debt to replenish its Treasury General Account (TGA)—effectively draining liquidity from the system. Compounding the risk, the Feds reverse repo facility (ONRRP) has declined from $2.67 trillion to just $620 billion, reducing the buffer to absorb liquidity shocks.
The current Treasury market turmoil is not merely about rates—it reflects a deeper convergence of debt, liquidity stress, and evaporating investor confidence. As risk aversion rises, capital is migrating into “hard assets” like gold. Unless fiscal and liquidity uncertainties subside, golds bullish trend is likely to persist.
Technical Outlook on Gold
Gold remains in a clear uptrend. Having broken the previous all-time high of $3,245, prices have reached $3,265. A breakout above this level could open the door to $3,290.
Resistance: $3,290
Support: $3,200, $3,245
Disclaimer: The views, analysis, research, prices, or other information provided in this article are for general market commentary only and do not constitute investment advice. Readers assume full responsibility for their investment decisions.
Disclaimer:
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