Bond
What CDS Speculators? The Reason Why Greek Spreads Blew Up Is Because Of Bond Selling, Not CDS Buying
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 03/02/2010 21:27 -0500
There is nothing quite as liberating as jumping on the bandwagon of scapegoating that which one does not understand. The idiocy of the chorus which blames CDS "speculators" for the mysterious kidnapping and rape of the Easter Bunny and Santa Claus' stomach stapling, not to mention the imminent Greek implosion (NOT as a function of a funding crisis, but due to the one soon to be unending strike, which will commence once Greeks realize their wages are about to be cut by 250% and the new retirement age will the same as that of Yoda), is just getting surreal. And if the cheap seats housing the portly derrieres of all those CDS "experts" need yet more proof just how full of excrement their pointless multi-syllabic exhortations are, we present Credit Trader's very diplomatic presentation (diplomatic, because our version would have included a preponderance of breathless f-bombs, which is why we wisely decided against writing one), which is sufficient and necessary to hopefully shut all these empty chatterboxes up for good. Alas, that ain't happening. Either way, here is the data, which will certainly not make an impression on anyone except those why actually do understand how the CDS market works. For everyone else (the "it's like selling a warehouse full of feces... in backwardation, thank you speculators... buying crap insurance on the warehouse and then redirecting the Chipotle lunch hour crowd into it" people), start writing your disgruntled, opinionated and Thesaurus-worthy retorts. Oh, and by the way, are speculators guilty that CDS spreads on Greece have collapsed by over 120 bps in the past two weeks? Oddly, we have not heard anything about that at all in the idiotstream media.
Complete February Bond Performance Heatmap - Sea Of Red
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/27/2010 15:28 -0500
With February over, and the equity market just slightly down MTD, the January weakness in equities has finally spilled over to High Yield, where we are flowing in a see of red. This was to be expected considering the two nearly $2 billion HY fund outflows experienced in February. Below is the complete heatmap for February HY bond price performance by subsector. Each issue is presented on a size relative basis, with the grayed text giving detailed information about any one specific issue, including corporate ticker, one month change, ISIN, Name, Rating, Outstanding, and last price (compared to January 31, 2010, red is lower, blue is higher).
Greece Cancels US/China Bond Roadshow
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/26/2010 08:42 -0500As the roadshow was initially scheduled for the second half of February, this implies that the Greek bond offering is, for now, history. Furthermore, no new roadshow data has been set. It is unknown whether this is due to the massive deterioration in Greek financial perceptions over the past week, or if because the government has managed to arrange a private loan with Deutsche Bank (which hopefully does not have a downgrade put trigger as that would be the shortest loan in history).
Greek Treasuries Pancake As Bond Vigilantes Chant Death Chorus
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/25/2010 11:37 -0500
Ah, curve pancaking - better known in bond parlance as the death rattle. The Greek 4 Year GGB just traded wider of the 15 Year at a spread of -4bps (yup, negative). This, to continue the parlance lesson, means the bond vigilantes are now pretty sure how the Greek situation will play out. Oh, and Greece, all the best with that €5 billion10 year bond issuance. The 1 Year spot his exploded from just over 200 bps on January 1, to just under 5%, a rout for all short-term GGB holders. We are anxiously awaiting RBS' rebuttal.
California One Step Closer To Insolvency After State Cancels $2 Billion General Obligation Bond Sale
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/24/2010 20:59 -0500
Five days ago a great white hope appeared for the great bankrupt Golden State (Baa1/A-), in the form of $2 billion in GO bonds, which were supposed to be promptly syndicated via underwriters JPMorgan and Morgan Stanley. This would have been the first bond sale for California since November: a critical milestone as the state creeps ever closer to a full-on default. Unfortunately, the creeping just turned into a casual jog after Jane Wells just tweeted that California has cancelled its bond sale "after legislature fails to approve cash management flexibility bill [the] Treasurer said he needed to attract investors." And seriously, did California think it would succeed where so many other high yield issuers have recently failed?
So as Lockyer contemplates how to best approach DC about a bailout, here are recent California CDS levels. Pick your entry point.
Europe Demands More Austerity Measures From Greece As Critical Bond Auction Looms
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/23/2010 09:13 -0500A delegation consisting of EU, ECB and IMF "experts" came to Greece, saw and said "more cuts." Greece, in turn, is doing all it can to soft circle enough support to come to market with a €3-5 billion 10 year bond issue, and has no option but to oblige. The troubled PIIGS member has so far proposed a 5.5% maximum cut in gross salaries to civil servants via entitlement cuts, while the EU is now suggesting an average 7% cut. How this will be accepted by Greece's already striking unions, whose protesters earlier barricaded and shut down the primary building of the Athens Stock Exchange, is unknown but will hardly inspire enthusiasm for wage cutting programs.
Greek (Dis)Information Update: No Greek Bond Offering This Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/21/2010 14:31 -0500As we head into a new week, one of the bigger development expected out of Europe will be "imminent" launch of a €5 billion Greek bond issue, to prefund some of the nearly €20 billion in maturities expected over the next 3 months. However, bulls who expect this "good news" to force short covering may have to put the champagne on ice. Dow Jones previously quoted the former Public Debt Management Agency head Spiros Papanikolaou (who was replaced by former Goldman operative Petros Christodoulou), "There will be another syndication, most likely 10 years. We will go for EUR3 billion to EUR5 billion and depending on the market reaction it could be more, although a 10-year bond is a bit more difficult" to make their case that the new auction is imminent. Yet it is this very same Papanikolaou, who when quoted by Debtwire, pours cold water all over the bulls plans: "Reports about us imminent issuing a ten-year bond auction are totally inaccurate - there is no truth in it at all." And so the great Greek disinformation sopa opera continues.
And Some More Horrible News: Lipper FMI Reports $916 Million In High Yield Bond Outflows, Following $1 Billion Outflow In Prior Week
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2010 17:17 -0500![]()
And just what HY investors did not want to hear after the Fed shocker: Lipper FMI just reported that High Yield bond funds saw $915.77 million in outflows for the week ended February 17, while bank loan mutual funds saw $160.9 million in inflows. Keep in mind last week was one of the largest outflows in HY in recent history at just under $1 billion. The high beta dumpage is officially on.
Are Bond Vigilantes Now Focusing On UK Gilts?
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/18/2010 14:54 -0500
The chart left is not indicative of the widening in the sovereign credit of some backwater PIIGS country. It shows the rather substantial move higher in 10 year British Gilt yields over the past week. Are the bond vigilantes slowly but surely (and as very much expected) moving from the periphery, where all the low hanging fruit has been picked, to the core, where the acceleration is only just starting? To be sure, the Gilts are easy targets: with QE unaninmously voted out, and increasing budget deficit, there is little to like.
Spain Prices €5 Billion 4.65% 2025 Bond At 99.831, Midswaps + 0.85
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/17/2010 09:52 -0500Spain's 15 year €5 billion 4.65% offering has priced at 99.831, as expected 85 bps over midswaps. The issue is rated Aaa/AA+.
PIMCO's MBS Purge Continues As Foreign Bond Holdings Hit Record, Cash Rules
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/12/2010 15:48 -0500
The latest data released by PIMCO's Total Return Fund indicates that the firm's flagship fund added another $8 billion in AUM, which at January 31 stood at $210 billion. This is a $74 billion increase in AUM compared to January 2009. More importantly, the composition of TRF demonstrated that the recent trend away from MBS and Treasuries and into cash and non-USD denominated foreign bonds persists. Gross has now booked $88 billion in profits in MBS since QE started, which brings his MBS holdings to an all time low of $31 billion. All the extra cash has gone into foreign non-US denom bond holdings, which hit a new high of $38 billion, presumably mostly in Bunds, Brazilian and Russian holdings, and, well, cash, which at $19 billion hit the highest level since June 2008.
$1 Billion In High Yield Outflows Leads To "Market Top" Speculation In Junk Bond Land, Pulled Deals
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/12/2010 14:11 -0500Even as AMG data was strangely missing late last night according to Prospect News' High Yield Daily, EPFR Global of Cambridge, Massachusetts, which uses a different methodology from AMG (i.e. a working one), indicated a major $1 billion outflow in high yield bond funds. This follows a $335 million inflow and a $137 million outflow in the past two weeks. Subsequently, Dow Jones confirmed the EPFR data, indicating that Lipper FMI recorded $984 million of outflows for the week ending Wednesday. As HY fund flow data is critical when pitching refi deals to junk companies, this key inflection point will likely stall not only the HY new issuance market, but will lead to substantial drops in secondary market prices for junk bonds.
Breaking Down Europe's 2010 Bond Issuance
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/11/2010 15:36 -0500With the ever increasing, and rightfully so, interest on European gross and net bond issuance, we present BofA's latest calendar breakdown of weekly and monthly Bond and Bill redemptions, coupon payments and gross issuance for the key European countries. Using this data, one can determine the net financing needs by country by month, to determine when a supply squeeze is likely to occur. As can be seen, there is a cash crunch for the Eurozone in the Feb-April period as €324 billion in near-term Bills have to be rolled over, while for Bonds the redemption peak hits in Q3, when €176 billion in Bonds have to be redeemed, while coupon payments peak at the same time. Focusing on rollover risk indicates that while Spain, whose 21% of debt rollover concern had been discussed previously, is at risk, Italy is just as much in jeopardy, with 20% of debt requiring to roll in 2010. Another potential flashpoint is the country of Austria, which is only second to Portugal (77.1%) in the amount of debt held by foreigners, at 76.3%.
Portugal Prices €3 Billion 10 Year Bond At 99.841, 4.823% Yield, 140 bps Over Swaps, 163.7 bps Over 2020 Bund
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/10/2010 11:18 -0500Portugal has managed to price the much anticipated €3 billion 10 Year bond.
Terms:
- Price: 99.841
- Yield: 4.823%
- Coupon 4.80%
- 140 bps over Swaps
- 163.7 bps over 10 Year Bund
- Ratings Aa2/A+ (ha ha ha ha)
Brazil's BES Investimento Pulls Bond Deal On"Market Conditions", Company Is Local Unit Of Portuguese Bank
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 02/05/2010 09:49 -0500This week showed just how jittery the IPO sentiment was, with so many IPOs pulled on "market conditions" even including perpetual cash cows such as porn sites. Now the weakness in the market is shifting to bonds. The latest casualty is Brazil's BES Investimento bank which has postponed a $350 million bond on "market conditions." We are not so sure if the reason is with "market conditions" or whether the true reason has to do with BES being a local unit of Portugues bank Banco Espirito Santo S/A. We anticipate any corporate entities that have a relation with an increasing number of European countries will soon become locked out from the capital markets.


