Bonds Investment TV

Wall Street Bond Dealers Whipsawed on Bearish Treasuries Bet

By Lisa Abramowicz and Daniel Kruger Apr 22, 2014 12:01 AM GMT+0800
From http://www.bloomberg.com/news/

Betting against U.S. government debt this year is turning out to be a fool’s errand. Just ask Wall Street’s biggest bond dealers.

While the losses that their economists predicted have yet to materialize, JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM), Citigroup Inc. (C) and the 20 other firms that trade with the Federal Reserve began wagering on a Treasuries selloff last month for the first time since 2011. The strategy was upended as Fed Chair Janet Yellen signaled she wasn’t in a rush to lift interest rates, two weeks after suggesting the opposite at the bank’s March 19 meeting.

The surprising resilience of Treasuries has investors re-calibrating forecasts for higher borrowing costs as lackluster job growth and emerging-market turmoil push yields toward 2014 lows. That’s also made the business of trading bonds, once more predictable for dealers when the Fed was buying trillions of dollars of debt to spur the economy, less profitable as new rules limit the risks they can take with their own money.

“You have an uncertain Fed, an uncertain direction of the economy and you’ve got rates moving,” Mark MacQueen, a partner at Sage Advisory Services Ltd., which oversees $10 billion, said by telephone from Austin, Texas. In the past, “calling the direction of the market and what you should be doing in it was a lot easier than it is today, particularly for the dealers.”

On March 31, Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen highlighted inconsistencies in job data... Read More

Treasuries (USGG10YR) have confounded economists who predicted 10-year yields would approach 3.4 percent by year-end as a strengthening economy prompts the Fed to pare its unprecedented bond buying.

Caught Short

After surging to a 29-month high of 3.05 percent at the start of the year, yields on the 10-year note have since declined and were at 2.7 percent at 11:55 a.m. in New York.

One reason yields have fallen is the U.S. labor market, which has yet to show consistent improvement.

The world’s largest economy added fewer jobs on average in the first three months of the year than in the same period in the prior two years, data compiled by Bloomberg show. At the same time, a slowdown in China and tensions between Russia and Ukraine boosted demand for the safest assets.

Wall Street firms known as primary dealers are getting caught short betting against Treasuries.

They collectively amassed $5.2 billion of wagers in March that would profit if Treasuries fell, the first time they had net short positions on government debt since September 2011, data compiled by the Fed show.

‘Some Time’

The practice is allowed under the Volcker Rule that limits the types of trades that banks can make with their own money. The wagers may include market-making, which is the business of using the firm’s capital to buy and sell securities with customers while profiting on the spread and movement in prices.

While the bets initially paid off after Yellen said on March 19 that the Fed may lift its benchmark rate six months after it stops buying bonds, Treasuries have since rallied as her subsequent comments strengthened the view that policy makers will keep borrowing costs low to support growth.

On March 31, Yellen highlighted inconsistencies in job data and said “considerable slack” in labor markets showed the Fed’s accommodative policies will be needed for “some time.”

Then, in her first major speech on her policy framework as Fed chair on April 16, Yellen said it will take at least two years for the U.S. economy to meet the Fed’s goals, which determine how quickly the central bank raises rates.

After declining as much as 0.6 percent following Yellen’s March 19 comments, Treasuries have recouped all their losses, index data compiled by Bank of America Merrill Lynch show.
Yield Forecasts

“We had that big selloff and the dealers got short then, and then we turned around and the Fed says, ‘Whoa, whoa, whoa: it’s lower for longer again,’” MacQueen said in an April 15 telephone interview. “The dealers are really worried here. You get really punished if you take a lot of risk.”

Economists and strategists around Wall Street are still anticipating that Treasuries will underperform as yields increase, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

While they’ve ratcheted down their forecasts this year, they predict 10-year yields will increase to 3.36 percent by the end of December. That’s more than 0.6 percentage point higher than where yields are today.

“My forecast is 4 percent,” said Joseph LaVorgna, chief U.S. economist at Deutsche Bank AG, a primary dealer. “It may seem like it’s really aggressive but it’s really not.”

LaVorgna, who has the highest estimate among the 66 responses in a Bloomberg survey, said stronger economic data will likely cause investors to sell Treasuries as they anticipate a rate increase from the Fed.

History Lesson

The U.S. economy will expand 2.7 percent this year from 1.9 percent in 2013, estimates compiled by Bloomberg show. Growth will accelerate 3 percent next year, which would be the fastest in a decade, based on those forecasts.

Dealers used to rely on Treasuries to act as a hedge against their holdings of other types of debt, such as corporate bonds and mortgages. That changed after the credit crisis caused the failure of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. in 2008.

They slashed corporate-debt inventories by 76 percent from the 2007 peak through last March as they sought to comply with higher capital requirements from the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision and stockpiled Treasuries instead.

“Being a dealer has changed over the years, and not least because you also have new balance-sheet constraints that you didn’t have before,” Ira Jersey, an interest-rate strategist at primary dealer Credit Suisse Group AG (CSGN), said in a telephone interview on April 14.

Almost Guaranteed

While the Fed’s decision to inundate the U.S. economy with more than $3 trillion of cheap money since 2008 by buying Treasuries and mortgaged-backed bonds bolstered profits as all fixed-income assets rallied, yields are now so low that banks are struggling to make money trading government bonds.

Yields on 10-year notes have remained below 3 percent since January, data compiled by Bloomberg show. In two decades before the credit crisis, average yields topped 6 percent.

Average daily trading has also dropped to $551.3 billion in March from an average $570.2 billion in 2007, even as the outstanding amount of Treasuries has more than doubled since the financial crisis, according data from the Securities Industry and Financial Markets Association.

“During the crisis, the Fed went to great pains to save primary dealers,” Christopher Whalen, banker and author of “Inflated: How Money and Debt Built the American Dream,” said in a telephone interview. “Now, because of quantitative easing and other dynamics in the market, it’s not just treacherous, it’s almost a guaranteed loss.”

Trading Revenue

The biggest dealers are seeing their earnings suffer. In the first quarter, five of the six biggest Wall Street firms reported declines in fixed-income trading revenue.

New York-based JPMorgan, the biggest U.S. bond underwriter, had a 21 percent decrease from its fixed-income trading business, more than estimates from Moshe Orenbuch, an analyst at Credit Suisse, and Matt Burnell of Wells Fargo & Co.

Citigroup, whose bond-trading results marred the New York-based bank’s two prior quarterly earnings, reported a 18 percent decrease in revenue from that business. Credit Suisse, the second-largest Swiss bank, had a 25 percent drop as income from rates and emerging-markets businesses fell. Declines in debt-trading last year prompted the Zurich-based firm to cut more than 100 fixed-income jobs in London and New York.

Chief Financial Officer David Mathers said in a Feb. 6 conference call that Credit Suisse has “reduced the capital in this business materially and we’re obviously increasing our electronic trading operations in this area.”

Bank Squeeze

Jamie Dimon, chief executive officer at JPMorgan, also emphasized the decreased role of humans in the rates-trading business on an April 11 call as the bank seeks to cut costs.

About 49 percent of U.S. government-debt trading was executed electronically last year, from 31 percent in 2012, a Greenwich Associates survey of institutional money managers showed. That may ultimately lead banks to combine their rates businesses or scale back their roles as primary dealers as firms get squeezed, said Krishna Memani, the New York-based chief investment officer of OppenheimerFunds Inc., which oversees $79.1 billion in fixed-income assets.

“If capital requirements were not as onerous as they are now, maybe they could have found a way of making it work, but they aren’t as such,” he said in a telephone interview.

To contact the reporters on this story: Lisa Abramowicz in New York at labramowicz@bloomberg.net; Daniel Kruger in New York at dkruger1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at dliedtka@bloomberg.net Michael Tsang


Lisa Abramowicz and Daniel Kruger Apr 22, 2014 12:01 AM GMT+0800
From http://www.bloomberg.com/news/

Stocks and bonds under Fed pressure

By Hibah Yousuf @CNNMoneyInvest May 13, 2013: 4:51 PM ET
Article from http://money.cnn.com/

NEW YORK (CNNMoney)

The jokes about QE Infinity may come to an end soon.

The Federal Reserve and its bond buying program were a hot topic Monday, following a Wall Street Journal report over the weekend that said central bank officials are considering an exit strategy for the massive stimulus measures that have been fueling the economy since late 2008. Stocks finished mixed Monday.

Currently, the Fed buys $85 billion a month of mortgage-backed securities and Treasuries. And just last month, the central bank said it stands ready to either "increase or reduce the pace" of those purchases in response to economic activity.

"The article does not say that the Fed will start tapering the pace of bond purchases immediately, but it provides a window into sentiment at the central bank," said Zach Pandl, senior interest rate strategist at Columbia Management. "Faced with conflicting information on the economy, Fed officials have decided to see the glass as half full. They are thinking about the exit, not about how to do more."

The fear that the Fed may begin to unwind its loose monetary policies sooner rather than later put pressure on U.S. Treasuries, with the 10-year yield spiking to a nearly two-month high of almost 1.96% before settling around 1.92%. Just a month ago, yields were hovering around 1.6%. Treasury prices and yields move in opposite directions.


Meanwhile, the Dow Jones industrial average slipped about 0.2%, while the S&P 500 and Nasdaq finished barely higher. But the gain in the S&P 500 was enough to push it to another record close.

The Fed's policies have been widely given credit for boosting stocks over the past few years.

As investors debate the Fed's next moves, here are five more things investors were watching:

1. Stocks remain near record highs as valuations creep up. Although the Dow fell Monday, it finished last week at a record high. The Nasdaq closed at its highest level since November 2000.

With stocks up so sharply this year, valuations have also crept higher. At its closing high last week, the S&P 500 traded at more than 16 times 2012 earnings, the highest P/E ratio in three years according to Eddy Elfenbein of the blog Crossing Wall Street.

However, stocks are still trading at less than 15 times 2013 earnings estimates.

2. Retail sales unexpectedly rise: Retail sales edged higher in April, as strong car sales and spending on building supplies helped make up for weakness in other sectors. Economists had expected sales to decline.

Mark Luschini, chief investment strategist for Janney Montgomery Scott, said retail spending "continues to show remarkable resilience," especially after the expiration of the payroll tax holiday earlier this year.

3. Earnings continue to roll in: Companies will continue to open their books this week, with Macy's (M, Fortune 500), Wal-Mart (WMT, Fortune 500) and J.C. Penney (JCP, Fortune 500), as well as networking firm Cisco Systems (CSCO, Fortune 500) on deck.

Shares of Tesla Motor (TSLA)extended last week's rally. The electric car maker reported its first quarterly profit last week, and a separate report said Tesla sales outperformed German luxury brands.

SolarCity (SCTY), whose chairman is Tesla CEO Elon Musk, reported a quarterly loss after the closing bell Monday. Shares fell after hours but they had surged to an all-time high in regular trading Monday. Shares of other solar firms were energized by SolarCity's advance earlier in the day. Shares of First Solar (FSLR), SunPower Corp. (SPWR), LDK Solar (LDK) and ReneSola (SOL) also rose.

Most major companies have announced their first-quarter earnings and results have been pretty good. According to S&P Capital IQ, of the 453 S&P 500 companies that have reported first quarter results, 301 have beat analysts' estimates, 115 have missed, and 37 have met.

4. Disappointing data from China: Asian markets ended mixed after a report showed China's industrial production expanded in April, but failed to meet expectations. The Shanghai Composite declined 0.2% and the Hang Seng dropped 1.5%.

But the weakening yen pushed the Nikkei up 1.2%. Tokyo's benchmark index has rallied by 42% since the start of the year based on optimism about the country's aggressive monetary policy.

5. Muddy Waters reportedly shorting Standard Chartered: Standard Chartered (SCBFF) fell into the spotlight after famed short-seller Carson Block of Muddy Waters Research was reported to have announced he is betting against the bank, saying its assets were deteriorating.

European markets finished the day mixed, losing momentum after a strong performance last week.  


First Published: May 13, 2013: 10:13 AM ET
Hibah Yousuf @CNNMoneyInvest May 13, 2013: 4:51 PM ET
Article from http://money.cnn.com/

BOJ may seek ways to calm bond yields, policy on hold


By Leika Kihara
TOKYO | Thu May 16, 2013 11:29pm EDT
Article from http://www.reuters.com/article/


(Reuters) - The Bank of Japan is expected to stand pat on monetary policy next week despite jitters over the recent jump in bond yields, hoping it can stem the volatility by fine-tuning market operations.

The central bank may front-load bond purchases or offer funds via market operations more frequently if the bond market turbulence persists, which are technical steps that can be taken by its bureaucrats without approval by the nine-member board.

It is expected to hold off on easing policy through further increases in asset purchases, having already pledged in April to double its bond holdings in two years to expand the supply of money at an annual pace of 60 trillion ($588 billion) to 70 trillion yen.

The recent bond selloff, which sent the 10-year yield to a one-year high of 0.92 percent on Wednesday, has highlighted the dilemma the central bank faces as it attempts to generate inflation in a country mired in price falls for 15 years.

"The BOJ is walking a very narrow path trying to engineer a gradual, not a sudden, rise in long-term rates backed by improvements in the economy," said an official with knowledge of the central bank's thinking.

The BOJ unleashed the world's most intense burst of stimulus last month, promising to inject $1.4 trillion into the economy in less than two years to meet its pledge of achieving 2 percent inflation in roughly two years.

By gobbling up 70 percent of the bonds newly issued by the government, it hopes to nudge Japanese investors out of the safety of bonds and into riskier assets like equities.

The rise in Tokyo shares to a 5-1/2-year high shows this may be starting to happen.

BOJ officials say they would accept a natural rise in long-term interest rates that reflect prospects of an economic recovery and future inflation.

But the intensity of the BOJ's purchases caused disruptions in the market by drying up liquidity, making bond prices vulnerable to sharp swings that could potentially lead to a damaging sell-off hard to control.

The pace of bond price falls and the huge volatility has made some central bankers nervous, but not enough to consider additional policy steps at the two-day policy meeting that ends on Wednesday next week.

LACK OF SOLUTIONS

Japan's economy expanded at an annualized 3.5 percent in the first quarter, the fastest in a year, offering evidence that Prime Minister Shinzo Abe's sweeping stimulus is beginning to work.

The BOJ may thus revise up its assessment of the economy to say it is picking up, compared with the previous month's view that it is "bottoming out with some signs of a pick-up."

But a sustained sharp rise in bond yields will hurt corporate capital expenditure, the soft spot of an otherwise more robust economy, and strain Japan's already tattered finances by boosting the cost of funding its huge debt pile.

Finance Minister Taro Aso appeared sanguine so far, telling parliament on Friday that it made sense for investors to shift funds out of bonds and into equities given recent sharp rises in Tokyo stock prices.

For now, the central bank hopes to use market operations to stem the volatility. It did so on Wednesday by offering to inject 2.8 trillion yen into the Tokyo money market, more than three times the size usually offered in a single day.

If volatility persists, the BOJ may also consider increasing the amount of bonds it buys each month from the current 7.5 trillion yen until bond prices stabilize, sources say.

But there is no guarantee that such minor tweaks in its bond-buying program can soothe market jitters for long. Wednesday's huge fund injection failed to prevent bond yields from ending higher for a fourth session.

Expanding stimulus, by pledging to increase bond purchases even more, could backfire by draining already thin liquidity in the market.

"The bond market has been distorted by the BOJ. It's reliant on central bank purchases more than ever, and a lack of liquidity will keep it vulnerable to sharp swings," said Masaaki Kano, chief Japan economist at JPMorgan Securities.

"The BOJ probably didn't expect so much volatility, and simply boosting its bond purchases won't solve the problem."

($1 = 101.9600 Japanese yen)

(Editing by Kim Coghill)

JAPAN


Leika Kihara
TOKYO | Thu May 16, 2013 11:29pm EDT
Article from http://www.reuters.com/article/