[It seems that this got lost. Sorry if you get it twice]

>What's the 'TED spread?'

A little while ago, when I posted about treasuries vs. AA corps. spreads 
making new highs around 175 basis points, I said:

"... As a comparison, let's say that in the 98 
crisis, that spread climbed quickly from around 75 to around 125 BP. This is 
supposed to indicate a lack of confidence in the big US coporations or a 
"flight to quality". Interestingly, the TED spread is low. This is supposed to 
indicate confidence in the banks. Maybe it's the effect of the current strenght of 
the dollar (and of treasuries)."

This is a little short, so I'll add that TED stands for treasuries vs. eurodollar 
(euro here meaning not the currency but that the dollars are on the international 
scene, anyway here the term refers to the interest rate for interbank deposits 
of US Dollars held outside the United States). The eurodollar rate reflects not 
only the Fed's rates but also how risky people think it is to lend money to big 
international banks. People play this spread by buying US government bonds 
(traditionally of a 90 days maturity) futures and selling eurodollar futures short. 
If something really bad happens, then they make lots of money because the 
sky's the limit as to the width of the spream (f.ex. the oldest traders have seen it 
above 5%). 
For a chart: 
http://www.prudentbear.com/slides/spreads/sld010.htm

The spread with junk bonds might also interest some people. It currently 
stands around 5,75%. This spread has not been that high since the 1998 crisis, 
it seems. For the record, the spread with big corporations is around 1,7% and 
stable at this extraordinarily high level.


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