Volume Light as Treasuries, Commodities Reopen Trading
Chris Nagi
09/13/01 - 03:00 PM EDT
New York's Financial District was still under rubble Thursday morning but
the nation's capital markets crept back to life.
Treasury bonds became the first securities to change hands on a U.S.
market since terrorists destroyed the World Trade Center and many
investment firms on Tuesday. Commodities also resumed trading on a limited
basis at the Chicago Board of Trade and Chicago Mercantile Exchange.
Two-year notes rallied, their yield falling to about 3%, while the
benchmark 10-year bond swung in a full-point range amid concerns about
insurance losses and the impact of the explosion on the U.S. budget and
economy. Investors sought a safe haven in the short end, particularly with
no
definitive word on when stock trading would resume.
Volume in the bond markets was extremely low, although there
was solid action in interest rate futures such as eurodollar and Fed funds
contracts. With the Treasury Department promising easy access to liquidity
and the impact of the dister on the economy still unclear, trading in
October
Fed funds futures implied expectations of a quarter- to half-point cut in
interest rates. The Federal Open Market Committee next meets Oct. 2.
Overseas, stocks were modestly higher in volatile and heavy trading in
Europe, while Asian markets that were open for their second day rose. The
European Central Bank met Thursday and decided, as expected, to leave rates
unchanged. The ECB benchmark is currently 4.25%. The dollar was unchanged
against the pound and higher against the yen.
Equity market officials were meeting in New York again to formulate a
definitive timeline for the resumption of stock trading. On Wednesday,
Richard Grasso, the chairman of the
New York Stock Exchange, said the
exchanges would open Friday at the earliest, but probably not until
Monday.
"We are still in the recovery phase," Grasso said. "There are still
people trapped in that wreckage and we have to be very careful to make sure
that nothing we do in any way interrupts the efforts ot the brave men and
women who are at that site."
Efforts to remove debris from Lower Manhattan continued Thursday
morning
and access to the area was limited to emergency vehicles. The NYSE, which
is
located about two blocks east and two blocks south of where the Trade
Center
stood, was cordoned off, and officials remained concern about a myriad of
issues, including safety, access and the communications infrastructure.
Some market players worried the damage would lead to unfair advantages
both in access to prices and physical infrastructure. Art Hogan, a
strategist
with Jeffries, said any major inequalities would result in a halt in
trading.
"Having all of us using the New York Stock Exchange as a pricing
mechanism is one thing that handicaps all of us. We're all sort of dealing
with the same thing as far as the pricing mechanism and the central
marketplace," Hogan said. "If the market's open, those prices are going to
be
good."
The U.S. government released its
first major economic indicator since the terrorist attack, saying new
unemployment claims rose 21,000 to 431,000 in the week of Sept. 8.