ETF Chart of the Day: U.S. Treasuries | ETF Trends

One of the more interesting charts over the past week is that of iShares Barclays 20+ Year Treasury Bond (NYSEArca: TLT), as investors will note the product running to a new all-time high just eight trading sessions ago, only to reverse almost 4.5% to current levels.

Trading volume has been phenomenally high in the ETF as well as related ETFs in the Treasury Fixed Income space for the past several weeks, as there feels to be a true “push and pull” in store between institutional managers that are making allocation decisions between “equity” and “government bonds.”

TLT remains handily above both its 50 and 200 day moving averages, and near term price action seems very important in the product (which is tied to the performance of the Barclays Capital 20+ Year Treasury Bond Index) around the $124-$125 level as this is where a technical “break out” gap up occurred at the end of May before TLT surged to new highs.

Additionally, we have noted very high short interest that exists in the longer term Treasury Bond market via bearish positions in the futures, options, and other instruments tied to the Bonds, and that said, there may very well be some short covering that provides support and some bids at these levels.

We note that the choppy price moves in the Treasury Bond market as of late are not random, but are rather tied to the daily gyrations of world equity and fixed income markets, and the fickleness of the market in general in finding a near term direction, and establishing if we are in a “risk on” or “risk off” environment heading into the summer.