Showing posts with label bonds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bonds. Show all posts

Sunday, September 18, 2016

Commoditization of fixed income


  • The first piece is the commoditization of fixed income.
  • The next piece of the puzzle is the false perception of a high-yielding U.S. Treasury market.
  • The final piece is the question of how much control central banks really have over the situation.


sauce


Only time will tell if central banks are able to find creative solutions to normalizing interest rates without a disastrous side effect like a bond panic or a yield curve inversion. In the meantime, investors have been allocating away from equities and into bonds all year, with bond funds adding $189 billion in assets year-to-date. 
Within bond strategies there is a flood out of alternative credit and more nontraditional areas of the market into the lowest-yielding — even negative-yielding — high-quality areas. The bond pile-up is alarming for several reasons, and one needs to examine all the pieces of the puzzle to see the bigger picture. 
The first piece is the commoditization of fixed income. Warren Buffett’s quote comes to mind here: “The problem with commodities is that you are betting on what someone else would pay for them in six months. The commodity itself isn’t going to do anything for you. ...” Today negative-yielding bonds more closely resemble commodities.
Bonds have long served as the anchor in a conservative portfolio: a safe haven asset with an income component designed to produce a consistent return stream. As the amount of negative-yielding debt exceeds $10 trillion globally, bonds increasingly cease to trade based on fundamentals, such as yield, in favor of what someone else will be willing to pay for them in the future. For a prime example, look no further than 4 percent Swiss government bonds maturing in 2049. Today these bonds trade above par at more than $130, giving them a negative yield. With premiums of this magnitude, bonds are effectively commodities, and investors are using the greater fool theory as an investing strategy.
The next piece of the puzzle is the false perception of a high-yielding U.S. Treasury market. Compared with the negative nominal yields in Japan and parts of Europe, the yield on U.S. ten-year Treasuries appears attractive, trading at about 1.6 percent. Treasuries also look attractive compared with government bonds from other developed markets such as Canada, with 1.1 percent, or the U.K. gilt’s 0.7 percent or the 1.5 percent in South Korea. On a real basis, however, these yields are significantly negative as well. Adjusting for inflation, they range from –1 to –0.1 percent. Furthermore, at a real yield of –0.7 percent, the ten-year Treasury isn’t even the best house in what appears to be a very dangerous neighborhood for investors. From an endowment whose return target includes inflation to individuals planning on spending their retirement savings, this circumstance has significant implications for many investors.
The final piece is the question of how much control central banks really have over the situation. In our view at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, it is tenuous at best. Whereas central banks have shown they are extremely capable of driving rates lower, they have yet to show their ability to drive market rates up. Should we see more hikes from the Fed, what is to prevent a further flattening of the yield curve? Last year’s hike has already led to significant flattening. The difference in yields between ten- and two-year Treasuries is a mere 80 basis points. To put this situation in perspective, this figure was close to 300 basis points in early 2010 and, since the beginning of 2009, has averaged almost 200 basis points, which makes the current spread two standard deviations below the recent average.
So the Fed’s — and other central banks’ — choices are either to continue to push rates lower, a strategy that is proving to do nothing for economic growth and actually hurts financials, or to push rates higher with little impact on market rates and the added risk of creating panic in the bond markets.
Perhaps this is one reason why we’ve seen the Fed managing in accordance with market sentiment: interpreting essentially the same constructive stream of economic data differently, depending on where markets are at the time of a meeting. The bottom line is that in the wake of unprecedented quantitative easing, central banks have painted themselves into a corner and lost their ability to alter market rates.
So where does this leave us? One way or another, market forces will eventually prevail and return the income component to bonds. In the meantime, investors should consider diversifying into strategies with a much broader toolbox across traditional, alternative and private markets. This recommendation is because a long-only, best-ideas approach focused exclusively on public fixed-income sectors looks very limited on the upside and is acquiring a meaningful downside as the incongruence between economic data and central bank policy grows. A more constructive approach would be to allocate to strategies, not sectors: strategies that target a specific risk-return profile and take a relative-value approach across traditional, alternative and private markets from both a long and short standpoint, as well as lend liquidity in exchange for yield. This approach may be investors’ best bet at continuing to find attractive, risk-controlled returns while waiting for market normalization.

Friday, September 9, 2016

Bonds sold off Sept 2016

wonder if it lasts. doesn't look like it will persist.




Sunday, August 21, 2016

Bonds carry the same absolute risk as equities, just different volatility

both can go to zero.

equities, when no one wants to buy yours.

bonds, when the company cannot return you your capital anymore.

just the speed and paths are different.

now, what about treasuries? ;)

Monday, August 8, 2016

US treasuries yields turn negative for Japanese buyers on carry trade

can more rate cuts save this fixed income play?

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-08-07/bond-market-s-big-illusion-revealed-as-u-s-yields-turn-negative

Last month, yields on U.S. 10-year notes turned negative for Japanese buyers who pay to eliminate currency fluctuations from their returns, something that hasn’t happened since the financial crisis. It’s even worse for euro-based investors, who are locking in sub-zero returns on Treasuries for the first time in history. 
Ten-year yields in the U.S. are currently 0.23 percentage point below a basket of bonds from Australia, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Spain and Switzerland on a hedged basis, versus 1.4 percentage points above on an unhedged basis, according to data compiled by BlackRock. At the start of the year, hedged Treasuries yielded over a half-percentage point more.

In Japan, where 10-year government bonds yield less than zero, the advantage for Treasuries has dwindled from a percentage point at the start of the year to less than 0.1 percentage point now. Without much added value for overseas investors, it’s harder to see foreign demand driving Treasuries to new records, especially as the Federal Reserve moves toward gradually raising rates.

But now, because the rate has turned negative, they’re effectively paying interest to lend the yen, which eats into their bond returns. That’s on top of the Libor rate they’ll need to pay for borrowing the dollars, which currently stands at 0.79 percent over three months. The basis, as it’s known, is currently minus 0.62 percentage point for yen-based investors, which is close to the most expensive in five years. For those with euros, the basis is minus 0.42 percentage point. That’s more than twice as costly as the average over the past three years.

Sunday, August 7, 2016

comments on Rolf’s View of the World and Singapore’s Economy – The whole world has been leveraging up! (Part 3)

comments on: http://www.rolfsuey.com/2016/08/rolfs-view-of-world-and-singapores.html?showComment=1470506201574#c4614877967689040021

not an inapt comparison.

"Imagine you held currencies worth US$35 since 1970. Fast forward more than 40 years today, while the paper US$35 currencies are still the same dollar notes, the purchasing power of the currencies have fallen dramatically.  In retrospect, if you bought 1 ounce of gold in 1970 which cost US$35, the dollar value of that ounce of gold is worth US$1,350 at present time. This is a whopping increase of >38 times."

and you see the effect on longer dated bond prices.

During the GFC, QEs were used to acquire assets of longer maturity as well as the distressed mortgage backed securities from US government sponsored Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, thereby lowering longer-term interest rates. Thanks to QE1 implemented in Nov 2008, just one year after the worst crisis since Depression, business remarkably went back to usual. Subsequently, QE2 took place in Nov 2010, followed by QE3 in Sep 2012. 

it will require coordinated central banks together with coordinated fiscal policies.

Janet Yellen, the current Fed chairwoman was left behind an enormous public debt problem in US today (~19 trillions) that I reckon there is no way she can turn back, but to continue the artificial support of the world’s economy. It is possible that any major tightening of money supply will possibly lead to collapse of the entire market. 

for the personal, just simply reduce your debts.
but the interesting immediate consequences of a gradual rate hike is the effect of this on currencies and trade balances.
as of now, it seems while EU and BOJ haven't abandoned their monetary stimuli, the Fed will continue to hold off any rate hike.
BOJ's recent action has caused a noticeable reaction on long dated treasuries.

When debt becomes so huge, even a less than substantial increase in borrowing rate can bring about significant interest repayments.  

productivity growth can no longer lead to jobs and higher income due to technology.
it may become more relevant again with higher acceleration of consumption demand.
consumption demand by itself will not help much, only acceleration of its growth will.
productivity growth is an old metric. and i suspect increasingly irrelevant.

Recently he also discussed the biggest worries in US now is the low productivity growth that will eventually lead to economic stagnation particularly in most developed OECD countries.  

i believe this stimulus disappointment was the best move by BOJ at this current juncture due to previous stimulus moves resulting in higher yen.
http://shiohmekiah.blogspot.com/2016/08/boj-buying-up-japanese-etfs-and.html
the problem with Japan is a mentality problem that won't go away easily.
but demographics are changing and the younger guard are bringing back some energy and new ideas and new changes.
it will take time though.

Just recently, PM Abe had announce another round, >28 trillions yen ($265b) of stimulus. However its effectiveness remains to be seen. Many suspect if this strategy is to fail, Japan may need more dramatic strategy ahead, such as "helicopter money"! 

surprisingly, I think the cheap devaluation of GBP and EUR (without spending upfront money, they may pay for it with legislation and restructuring of economic policies later on) has given them some help. we may see this positive aid in figures later this year granted confidence hasn't totally abandoned EU with the recent bank stocks collapses and being kicked out of STOXX and the recent terror attacks and the recent migration of more elites from Europe to US and other countries.
the problem with europe is long term and cannot be solved easily.
They will still do better as a trading bloc but it is not so simple; binding one size fits all legislation, binding currencies out of sync with the economies, tyranny of the majority votes in EU, conflicting interests.
they can do better with a looser structure but the EUR is important for them.

The recent Brexit does not bode well for the EU. About half of UK imports come from EU. In particular France and Germany are UK largest trading partners after the U.S. Brexit also further dampened the solidarity in EU.  Already cohesiveness is low because the core economies do not like the idea that they need to support the countries that cannot pay their bills, which includes Greece, Portugal, Spain, Ireland and Cyprus who defaulted resulted in the Euro Debt crisis after the GFC.

China has devalued this year too.
but comparatively, they are quite nice already. they didn't devalued too much.
even given their long transition pains from export to self sustainable economy.
they are already being nice to global community so far.

BOJ buying up Japanese ETFs and creating new shares but only maintained bond buying

BOJ buying up Japanese ETFs and creating new shares.
but they did not increase the bond buying.

but people shouldn't see this ETF buying as BOJ owning half of Japanese stock market.
why? see: http://www.etf.com/etf-education-center/7540-what-is-the-etf-creationredemption-mechanism.html

with the disappointing stimulus and the market reaction to it, this might have been the best action by the BOJ resulting in a pause of the bond yields collapse and pause in yen strengthening.


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-10-28/owning-half-of-japan-s-etf-market-might-not-be-enough-for-kuroda



Japan’s central bank already owns more than half of the nation’s market for exchange-traded stock funds, and that might just be the start. The Bank of Japan will boost stimulus on Friday, according to 16 of 36 economists in Bloomberg’s latest survey, with 12 saying it would do so by increasing its annual ETF-buying budget. With 3 trillion yen ($25 billion) a year in existing firepower, the BOJ has accumulated an ETF stash that accounted for 52 percent of the entire market at the end of September, figures from Tokyo’s stock exchange show.


http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2016-04-24/the-tokyo-whale-is-quietly-buying-up-huge-stakes-in-japan-inc





They may not realize it yet, but Japan Inc.’s executives are increasingly working for a shareholder unlike any other: the nation’s money-printing central bank. While the Bank of Japan’s name is nowhere to be found in regulatory filings on major stock investors, the monetary authority’s exchange-traded fund purchases have made it a top 10 shareholder in about 90 percent of the Nikkei 225 Stock Average, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg from public data. It’s now a major owner of more Japanese blue-chips than both BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest money manager, and Vanguard Group, which oversees more than $3 trillion.

They may not realize it yet, but Japan Inc.’s executives are increasingly working for a shareholder unlike any other: the nation’s money-printing central bank. While the Bank of Japan’s name is nowhere to be found in regulatory filings on major stock investors, the monetary authority’s exchange-traded fund purchases have made it a top 10 shareholder in about 90 percent of the Nikkei 225 Stock Average, according to estimates compiled by Bloomberg from public data. It’s now a major owner of more Japanese blue-chips than both BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest money manager, and Vanguard Group, which oversees more than $3 trillion.
The central bank said in December that it plans to buy additional ETFs that weigh holdings based on metrics that include research spending and employee wage growth, but it hasn’t started those purchases yet because the funds don’t exist.

https://next.ft.com/content/4fd7dd18-5523-11e6-befd-2fc0c26b3c60

“The BoJ clearly disappointed the market today with neither an increase in the amount of Japanese government bonds to be bought or a further cut in the policy rate,” said Michael Moen, a portfolio manager at Aberdeen Asset Management in Singapore. 
“The measures announced today to increase ETF purchases and to increase the USD lending programme will not have a material impact on the inflationary outlook,” he said. The BoJ cut its forecast for inflation in the year to March 2017 from 0.5 per cent to 0.1 per cent but kept its forecast for the following year unchanged at 1.7 per cent. The decision to keep policy on hold came after new data showing Japan is still mired in deflation, with prices down 0.4 per cent on a year ago in June.

Saturday, August 6, 2016

Negative yields are a sign of idiocy in desperation and everyday loss of capital in native currency is already in play


http://www.bloomberg.com/view/articles/2016-07-27/maybe-negative-yields-are-a-sign-of-prosperity

Keep in mind that if you buy securities at a yield of negative 1 percent a year, and equities are yielding 4 percent on average, your insurance cost on the safer securities is roughly 5 percent of the upfront investment.  So on $10 trillion of safe securities, that is an insurance premium of roughly $500 billion -- a relatively small chunk of the $300 or $400 trillion of total global wealth.  In percentage terms it is cheaper than the homeowner’s insurance many of us pay for every day. 
firstly,
instead of paying 5% to ensure my money is safe from being invested in equities in the first place, here's a radical thought: don't invest in equities.

secondly,
if your cash currency is dropping at a annualized compounded rate of -5.19% from 1GBP = SGD 3 to presently 1GBP = SGD 1.76 for the past 10 years, and your income growth is not keeping up, here's another thought: haul ass to Singapore/United States.
hint: a lot of europeans are already doing so and the pace picked up recently due to the symptons of stress in the terror attacks. e.g. Nice lorry rolling, Munich mall shootings, Brussels bombing...


Thirdly,
US equities are at all time highs. what are you smoking?
and on the other hand, if you can't take risk (loss of capital), switch your currencies.

Fourthly,
Buy a property and start a business.

Lastly,
on a personal level, you can do any of the above. for institutions, there is always some place you can park your money. don't be lazy.


Sunday, July 31, 2016

comments on smol Equities and Bonds can't be both right. Right?



long duration fixed income investors moving to short term to lower their risk in recent times. you can't change the spots on leopards, fixed income investors will always prefer fixed income. and then there's the positioning by funds too. when even the old and new bond kings go bearish on longer duration bonds, you know there is just one last attempt to hit the highs.
if you are confused by the above paragraph, I have posted some hastily written articles. or you can just google for the info.
some nice stuff there smol.
"With 30 year bonds yielding so low, in the days of old, short term treasuries will be yielding much higher to give an inverted yield curve."


abe and kuroda playing pingpong. neither wants to be responsible.
seriously, time is running out for these deflationary markets.
time to bring on the fiscal spending bazooka.
else it's not just changes in the monetary policy environments,
it's the change in public political sentiments!
"Let's see whether Japan got the guts to be the first country to experiment with "helicopter money" this week."


half the bonds out there in the DM world are negative yielding.
"11 trillions of sovereign bonds globally are now in negative yield. Who owns these bonds? "


nice. correlations work.... until they don't. a nice example is the recent decoupling between oil and us equities.
"Corelation between asset classes change all the time. During GFC, asset classes that have low co-relation become highly co-related. I think not all bonds are created equal."


devaluation of renminbi. right now, it's businesses and asset plays, not just properties.
"You think why rich mainland Chinese are bidding up properties in Canada, Australia, HK, and Singapore?"


how soon? no idea. is there coordination between CBs? no idea.
"Now, when the music stop and central bank start to drain the water back, which glasses will be emptied first and which glass will not be completely emptied?"


haha. a standard idea sold to people who don't know what to do.
"All these years, I've been told to hold both bonds and equities to take advantage when either asset class drops."


nope. SGD is extremely teng (tough to chew) at the moment still. but other currencies are dropping.
"But what am I suppose to do now when both are rising? Both are rising due to increase liquidity cause by QE right? Does this mean that the value of my cash holdings will fall due to inflation?"


is that a leading question? lol
" In that case, am I suppose to buy some precious metal to protect the value?"


what do you think of that, TI?
" Or will it be better to get some ETF to ride on the liquidity wave? Wouldn't this QE bubble burst anytime? It's doesn't make sense to keep printing when it's not back by any assets except our confidence in the paper right?"


that's your reaction? so funny lol and no, i am not making fun of you.
"Why are there so much considerations? Not passive at all leh! 我被骗了"


i imagine it is tough. the risk is so high.
"I tell you, it cannot be fun to be money managers working for pension funds or insurance companies right now.How to secure the "promised" income for your pensioners and policy holders when 10 year US treasury is yielding below 2%???"


somemore still got people recommending crowd funding leh. I see the 13.5% yield on Epicentre for $1m and I go huh? why the management of Epicentre do this? do they need it? what's their vested stake? somemore got so many promoters woh. what are they earning?
"3) Small time newbie "ah longs" losing their money in peer-to-peer lending..."


they go by tranches. the ones where yields are guaranteed means they already bought them. and if the prices go up, they sell to lock in the promised yields and get some float. It's really the mark to market ones that are scary.
by my reckoning, some 'accredited investors' are going to get some real accreditations.
"If it's institutions then quite cham, can't worm their way out of the "promised guaranteed plus chop capital protected with variable bonus interest else my banking hall let you burn" investment that they have sold to their clients, without fearing that these investments will go up in smoke IF the party ends (honestly I think few really knows which direction the market will trend now right?)."


so long ago. such a dangerous time then.
"In the past, where need to invest. Just save put in the bank double digit interest compound. Where got all the rubbish of 5-6% return portfolio per year that we are all shouting now from our portfolio. "


they charge, bank run, lower reserve, unlawful. so they also forced to find yield. else unprofitable, bank selloff. see european banks. it's fun so far.
"Then now negative interest which is the central bank preventing commercial bank to hold money but instead lend it all out. Bank will never charge consumer negative interest. "


I always maintained bonds have the same risk as stocks.
risk is defined as permanent loss of capital.
the volatility is different, that's all.
"" Don’t forget that bond prices crashed in late 2008, and many stopped paying dividends."


lol are you positioned?
"In investing, its all about positioning - before the event happens."


don't like that. lol
they doing their best already.
I don't know about their market knowledge of all these current batch.
(LHL and tharman are really smart people though.)
but they did put in their heart. even upped the CPF RA rates via a tiered system.
I just hope they are not eating into reserves again. (I am a miser.)
and not squeezing juice out of the GIC rock.
forcing people an impossible target sometimes result in disasterous consequences.
"Those of us who worked in corporate and experienced a top management change would appreciate.Promises made by the previous management to you become words written on water :("


nice.
"Just look at ASEAN - how many are run by the military in the background? So far so good? That's because we have a BIG STICK!"


gan en
"If I look at Taiwan and HK for the past 10 years; and Japan for the past 30 years... I am just grateful how life has turned out for me and my family."



Monday, July 25, 2016

The Bond King Gundlach on Brexit and since then

http://www.barrons.com/articles/jeffrey-gundlach-on-stocks-trump-and-gold-1468036872
dated 11th July 2016


Despite your risk aversion, you like emerging market bonds. What is the story there? 
It is a dollar play. The weaker dollar has been very good for emerging market debt, which is up 12% year to date. We expect the dollar will continue to be weak. For the past year or so, maybe even longer, there has been an incredible correlation between the probability that the Fed is going to hike interest rates and the value of the dollar. The probability of a rate hike is pinned to the ground right now. The market says there is almost zero chance the Fed will raise interest rates through November of this year. The dollar is going to have a hard time, despite the fact that it has been strong recently on the Brexit upset.

since then



How much lower could yields on Treasury bonds go? Could we see a 1% yield? 
We just passed the all-time low on the 10-year yield of 1.39%, which we saw in July 2012. It is no surprise the 10-year has been strong after Brexit. I’m not at all convinced that we are going to see much lower yields in the U.S. But even if we do, you’re talking about a de minimis profit. Even if the 10-year yield drops another percentage point, how much will you make? Less than 10%. There are better ways to speculate.

since then
Such as? 
Gold miners have a very high probability—if you bought them today and were disciplined—of making 10%. One of the things driving markets lower is a declining belief in—and enthusiasm for—central-planning authorities and the political establishment. In this environment, gold is a safe asset. There’s an 80% chance of making 10% in gold; the probability of a 10% gain on Treasuries is 20% at best. I’ve never seen a worse risk-reward setup.

since then

That doesn’t make for a very exciting portfolio. 
Our portfolios are high-quality bonds, gold, and some cash. People say, “What kind of portfolio is that?” I say it’s one that is outperforming everybody else’s. I mean, bonds are up more than 5%, gold is up substantially this year [28%], and gold miners have had over a 100% gain. This is a year when it hasn’t been that tough to earn 10% with a portfolio. Most people think this is a dead-money portfolio. They’ve got it wrong. The dead-money portfolio is the S&P 500.

since then


Thursday, July 14, 2016

Even german bunds turn negative yields

http://www.euronews.com/business-newswires/3219551-germany-becomes-second-g7-nation-to-issue-10-year-bond-with-a-negative-yield/

Germany on Wednesday became the second G7 nation after Japan to issue 10-year bonds with a negative yield, highlighting a willingness among investors to hold top-rated debt even as yields across the world collapse.
Germany’s 10-year government bond yield turned negative for the first time at an auction, fetching the lowest average yield on record for such paper at -0.05 percent.
Ten-year yields in Germany – the euro zone’s benchmark issuer – have been trading below zero percent in the secondary market for the past three weeks and hit a record low last week at around minus 0.20 percent.
The negative yield at Wednesday’s auction means investors buying the 10-year Bund and holding it to maturity would receive back less than they paid. That’s a trade-off many investors are willing to make to hold safe-haven German paper against the backdrop of global uncertainty, unprecedented monetary stimulus from the European Central Bank and a tepid inflation outlook.
“This auction is a symptom of what we’re seeing globally,” said Orlando Green, European fixed income strategist at Credit Agricole. “We are in a positive market environment for bonds right now and investors remain relatively long German Bunds.”
The coupon on the new German bond was zero percent for the first time, indicating investors are willing to miss out on annual interest payments to hold German bonds, considered one of the safest assets in the world.
A collapse in developed market borrowing costs has swept more than $11 trillion worth of bonds globally into negative territory, a move that has gathered pace since last month’s decision by British voters to back leaving the European Union.

Fund flows from bonds to stocks?

http://en.xinfinance.com/html/In_depth/2016/241462.shtml

Matthew believed that global capital is willing to invest in stock markets instead of bulk commodity markets like gold, mainly due to two factors. Firstly, compared to traditional hedge types including gold, the stock market has better liquidity which can meet the rapid cash-making requirement of these investors. Secondly, the central banks worldwide are arousing a new round of easing monetary policy, which will benefit the stock markets much more than bulk commodity investment types.

Lesser quantity of investable assets resulting in higher equities prices?


Larry Fink says:

  • More outflows from mutual funds
  • Recent rally caused by short covering
  • Huge inflows in fixed-income meaning risk off
  • Cash on sidelines
  • Supply squeeze of investable assets (we saw some of this in REITs, HY bonds)


"I don't think we have enough evidence to justify these levels in the equity market at this moment," Fink said Thursday on CNBC's " Squawk Box ."  
 He said the recent rally has been supported by institutional investors covering shorts, or bets that stocks would fall, and not individual investors feeling bullish. "Since Brexit , we've seen ETF flows almost at record levels ... $18 billion of inflows," Fink said.  
"However, in the mutual fund area, we're continuing to see outflows." What that tells you is retail investors are pulling out, he said. "You're seeing institutions who were short going into Brexit ... all now rushing in to recalibrate their portfolios."  
 Besides the stock mutual fund outflows, Fink said he's been seeing huge inflows in fixed-income products. "So you're seeing a risk-off trade, as we call it, around the world."  
 "I would not be surprised — I'm not predicting it — if somebody told me the 10-year Treasury is at 75 basis points, I would not be surprised ," Fink said. There's also $55 trillion in cash on the sidelines, he estimated. "You're seeing a massive reservoir of cash building up." Fink said extraordinary central bank asset purchases has been inflating stocks prices. "I don't think we should be at new [stock] highs," he said. "All the stock repurchases, you're seeing this reduction in investable assets."

Sunday, July 10, 2016

Markets: are we there yet? - 2016

Recently, it looks as though we are coming to a crucial point in the markets. 

Both US Stocks (S&P 500) and Bonds (global government bonds) are at All Time Highs.

Normally, when you are worried, you divests your stocks into bonds, so risk off.
when you are greedy, you sell your bonds and buy more stocks, so risk on.

However, developed markets government bonds yields are at all time low while US stocks are at all time highs. This is compounded by the persistent devaluation of developed markets currencies (less Japan) by the actions of central banks. On the other hand, you have all time lows in commodities with agricultural lows, energy coming off an all time low and gold and silver seemingly resuming their climb from more than a decade ago after the recent 4-5 years bear.

Summing up, we know that generally that

for bonds,


for currencies,


for stocks,


Note of caution: in trending markets, they can trend for a long long time.









Where have the government bond yields gone?

swiss yields turned negative.




half the world turned negative




who's left?

Friday, July 8, 2016

Historical Bond Yields 1740 to 2010


I must have posted this before but couldn't find it. So here it is, for my easy reference and for you to ponder over.

Thursday, June 2, 2016

A grey swan event coming to an end? and the shorting of credit - Bill Gross


We have had 40 years of a good run, 
bonds and real estate included!




He then goes on to explain why the "carry" trade will no longer provide the kind of returns investors are used to.
  • Duration is unquestionably at risk in negative yielding markets. A minus 25 basis point yield on a 5-year German Bund produces nothing but losses five years from now. A 45 basis point yield on a 30-year JGB offers a current “carry” of only 40 basis points per year for a near 30-year durational risk. That’s a Sharpe ratio of .015 at best, and if interest rates move up by just 2 basis points, an investor loses her entire annual income. Even 10-year U.S. Treasuries with a 125 basis point “carry” relative to current money market rates represent similar durational headwinds. Maturity extension in order to capture “carry” is hardly worth the risk.
  • Similarly, credit risk or credit “carry” offers little reward relative to potential losses. Without getting too detailed, the advantage offered by holding a 5-year investment grade corporate bond over the next 12 months is a mere 25 basis points. The IG CDX credit curve offers a spread of 75 basis points for a 5-year commitment but its expected return over the next 12 months is only 25 basis points. An investor can only earn more if the forward credit curve – much like the yield curve – is not realized.
  • Volatility. Carry can be earned by selling volatility in many areas. Any investment longer or less creditworthy than a 90-day Treasury Bill sells volatility whether a portfolio manager realizes it or not. Much like the ”VIX", the Treasury “Move Index” is at a near historic low, meaning there is little to be gained by selling outright volatility or other  forms in duration and credit space.
  • Liquidity. Spreads for illiquid investments have tightened to historical lows. Liquidity can be measured in the Treasury market by spreads between “off the run” and “on the run” issues – a spread that is nearly nonexistent, meaning there is no “carry” associated with less liquid Treasury bonds. Similar evidence exists with corporate CDS compared to their less liquid cash counterparts. You can observe it as well in the “discounts” to NAV or Net Asset Value in closed-end funds. They are historically tight, indicating very little “carry” for assuming a relatively illiquid position.





Thursday, May 19, 2016

Bond prices move opposite interest rates


Desperate for yield, investors are buying government bonds that come due further and further in the future. If you lend your money to the government, you expect to get it back. It’s not for nothing that British government bonds are ‘gilt-edged,’ and the U.S. Treasury yield is considered ‘risk-free’ in financial models. What could possibly go wrong?
Unfortunately, a lot. A small move in the yield on these increasingly popular 40-, 50- and sometimes even 100-year bonds can have a crippling effect on their capital value.
Anyone who might sell before they mature (hint: that’s everyone alive today for the longest-dated bonds), should consider how they'd feel if their supposedly safe bond had lost a quarter of its value in two months. It happened to the rock-solid German 30-year bund, just last year.
This calculator lets you play with interest rates and see just how big an impact changes to yield can have on the price of long-dated bonds. You might be surprised by how big the losses could be, if the drops in yield of the past couple of years go into reverse.

See how a rate hike of 1% results in 25% down in bond prices!





Tuesday, May 17, 2016

20 years of SGS 10yr bonds - April 2016


almost 20 years of SGS 10yr bonds 

https://secure.sgs.gov.sg/fdanet/BenchmarkPricesAndYields.aspx

May 1998 to May 2016 (Monthly)
END OF
PERIOD
AVERAGE
BUYING RATES
OF GOVT
SECURITIES
DEALERS

10-YEAR
BOND YIELD
AVERAGE
BUYING RATES
OF GOVT
SECURITIES
DEALERS

10-YEAR
BOND PRICE
1998May--
Jun5.30102.50
Jul5.43101.45
Aug5.6999.50
Sep5.25102.85
Oct4.36109.90
Nov4.62107.70
Dec4.48108.75
1999Jan4.35100.20
Feb4.4499.45
Mar4.22101.25
Apr3.98103.15
May4.4699.30
Jun4.5998.35
Jul4.8396.60
Aug4.7597.15
Sep4.5998.35
Oct4.6597.95
Nov4.5498.80
Dec4.5698.65
2000Jan4.4899.25
Feb4.27100.80
Mar4.20101.25
Apr4.17101.50
May4.4899.25
Jun4.6799.65
Jul4.53100.75
Aug4.57100.45
Sep4.45101.36
Oct4.34102.25
Nov4.17103.60
Dec4.09104.18
2001Jan3.69107.37
Feb3.54108.58
Mar3.66107.53
Apr3.62107.80
May3.56108.22
Jun3.6499.86
Jul3.62100.06
Aug3.55100.60
Sep3.41101.80
Oct2.97105.45
Nov3.49101.05
Dec3.9797.28
2002Jan3.9197.76
Feb3.8098.61
Mar3.9897.23
Apr3.9197.83
May3.9397.65
Jun3.7098.38
Jul3.7298.18
Aug3.5199.88
Sep3.31101.61
Oct3.04103.83
Nov2.97104.40
Dec2.55107.95
2003Jan2.44108.88
Feb2.24110.58
Mar2.05112.16
Apr2.10111.62
May1.89113.42
Jun2.2899.69
Jul3.0793.00
Aug3.7287.98
Sep3.5489.46
Oct3.9586.47
Nov4.0385.97
Dec3.7588.10
2004Jan3.3990.84
Feb3.3691.19
Mar3.0793.41
Apr3.2692.03
May3.3191.73
Jun3.6899.53
Jul3.53100.76
Aug3.34102.34
Sep3.29102.79
Oct3.09104.42
Nov2.91105.98
Dec2.58108.72
2005Jan2.94105.63
Feb3.05104.62
Mar3.14103.86
Apr2.87106.08
May2.63108.01
Jun2.62108.03
Jul2.62107.93
Aug2.82106.26
Sep2.85105.96
Oct3.03104.47
Nov3.22103.05
Dec3.21103.06
2006Jan3.35101.97
Feb3.50102.19
Mar3.59101.42
Apr3.51102.03
May3.43102.74
Jun3.57101.49
Jul3.51102.02
Aug3.40102.98
Sep3.20104.64
Oct3.19104.70
Nov3.02106.10
Dec3.05105.85
2007Jan3.18104.69
Feb3.08105.49
Mar2.91106.88
Apr2.68108.80
May2.92106.71
Jun2.86107.15
Jul2.98106.12
Aug2.92106.54
Sep2.70108.27
Oct2.81107.30
Nov2.81107.23
Dec2.68108.26
2008Jan2.21111.94
Feb2.40110.36
Mar2.27111.32
Apr2.44109.83
May3.51104.16
Jun3.59103.49
Jul3.21106.74
Aug3.19106.93
Sep3.21106.69
Oct2.95108.87
Nov2.29114.90
Dec2.05117.03
2009Jan2.07116.66
Feb2.06116.71
Mar2.03116.81
Apr2.04116.58
May2.6199.03
Jun2.5999.20
Jul2.41100.77
Aug2.47100.29
Sep2.45100.42
Oct2.5599.56
Nov2.47100.29
Dec2.6698.70
2010Jan2.5499.70
Feb2.6998.48
Mar2.8397.34
Apr2.6798.62
May2.79104.09
Jun2.37107.87
Jul1.95111.86
Aug1.99111.33
Sep2.02110.96
Oct1.98111.27
Nov2.29108.35
Dec2.71104.54
2011Jan2.57105.70
Feb2.60105.44
Mar2.48106.39
Apr2.41106.98
May2.3998.79
Jun2.3199.46
Jul2.02102.02
Aug1.64105.44
Sep1.62105.64
Oct1.75104.36
Nov1.68104.96
Dec1.63105.42
2012Jan1.54106.17
Feb1.48106.66
Mar1.66105.02
Apr1.55105.91
May1.46106.60
Jun1.61114.17
Jul1.40116.17
Aug1.38116.23
Sep1.47115.25
Oct1.34116.42
Nov1.30116.62
Dec1.30116.56
2013Jan1.42115.20
Feb1.52114.17
Mar1.54113.84
Apr1.37115.30
May1.81111.19
Jun2.51102.11
Jul2.47102.42
Aug2.67100.66
Sep2.35103.44
Oct2.15105.17
Nov2.40103.02
Dec2.56101.61
2014Jan2.46102.40
Feb2.46102.40
Mar2.49102.10
Apr2.42102.69
May2.24104.21
Jun2.32103.47
Jul2.46104.82
Aug2.27106.49
Sep2.47104.60
Oct2.29106.21
Nov2.19107.07
Dec2.28106.21
2015Jan1.88109.78
Feb2.23106.52
Mar2.27106.12
Apr2.25106.32
May2.4299.62
Jun2.6997.25
Jul2.6397.77
Aug2.8596.00
Sep2.5498.61
Oct2.4699.27
Nov2.5198.85
Dec2.6098.15
2016Jan2.26100.97
Feb2.28100.82
Mar1.84104.51
Apr2.00103.12
  • Data reflects bid rates quoted by SGS Primary Dealers to each other based on standard market lot transactions as specified in the Rules and Market Practices of the SGS Market. Prices quoted to non-Primary Dealers may be different, subject to factors such as transaction size and administrative costs.
  • Figures before 2000 are the modes of closing bid prices quoted by SGS primary dealers.
  • Figures after 2000 are the average of closing bid rates quoted by SGS primary dealers.
  • Overnight repo rates are closing offer rates quoted by SGS primary dealers.
  • The 7-year benchmark was discontinued on 1 February 2011.
  • The final 3-month T-bill was issued on 20th June 2013.
  • The final 6-month T-bill was issued on 27th December 2013.
  • The SGS Overnight Repo rate was discontinued on 1 January 2014.
  • Yield is quoted as % p.a.
  • Bond price is quoted in S$ per S$100 of principal amount, excluding any applicable accrued interest (i.e. on clean basis).