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Unnatural Acts

Bruce Krasting's picture




 

With some trepidation, last night I called up a guy who manages a hedge fund (with some of my money in it) and asked, “So, how’d we do?” He says, ”We’re down 3% for the month. We got creamed on our longs but we were hedged, so the net was not so bad.”

I say, “Gee that’s great news! So you were long puts?” He gave a surprise response:

"No puts. We were long a bunch of long dated Treasury zero coupon bonds."

My guy’s defensive tactics worked very well in September. I think there was some of the biggest % moves in history in bond land. Consider this chart. Zeros were up 25% while the S&P was down 8%.

 

 

This trend has been going on for months. This chart looks at the last three. Note that Zeros are up 50%! Note also how tight the inverse correlation is.

 

 

I find this troubling. While I can get comfortable with a balanced portfolio where bonds counter cyclically provide a natural hedge, I do have trouble with hedge funds using the bond market as a synthetic “Put” against long equity exposure.

The reason for my concern is the leverage that is involved in creating a viable hedging mechanism. Based on recent results the hedging ratio of long zeros as a hedge against long stocks is about 3 to 1. So a billion of stocks is “hedged” when a $350mm long zero position is coupled with it. A zero has the duration equivalent of 4+Xs a straight ten-year. So another way of thinking of this is that to “hedge” $1 of S&P one would need to “own” (It's all leveraged) about $2 in ten-year bonds.

 

I think this an unnatural act of a sort. Leveraged bets in bonds are just that. A bet on bonds. They are not supposed to be a hedge against equity exposure. But they are. So what does that mean?

I conclude that we are in a bubble for bonds. There are people who own them for the wrong reasons. It’s speculation, not investing, that’s driving the bond market. So we are in the worst kind of bubble. A speculative one.

Please don’t read this as a recommendation to get short bonds. It’s not. I think we are in a bond bubble, but I don’t see that changing anytime soon. That said, a final thought from the fellow who runs money.

We’re concerned that our hedges are going to decouple. Interest rates can’t go much lower from here. It’s possible that global stocks can go down and US interest rates don’t follow suit.

If that happens we will have to respond. We may be forced to unwind the zeros and just buy more traditional insurance. The problem is that the alternative is very costly.

What he is saying is that he would be a net seller of Treasuries with a long duration and a net buyer of equity put protection. By itself, this would tend to exert downward pressure on stocks and also downward pressure on long dated bonds.


Where’s the Good News?


 

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Sat, 10/01/2011 - 18:59 | 1729779 Thisson
Thisson's picture

"I would recommend you panic."  Hugh Hendry.

 

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nuysYXlJ43I

Sun, 10/02/2011 - 12:40 | 1730885 AmericanFUPAcabra
AmericanFUPAcabra's picture

Excellent video! may 2010 speaking bout Greece never reaching austerity...dotdotperiod

Sat, 10/01/2011 - 15:26 | 1729331 css1971
css1971's picture

WTF? You aren't panicking yet? Haven't you seen what's coming?

 

Sat, 10/01/2011 - 15:46 | 1729370 WestVillageIdiot
WestVillageIdiot's picture

I panicked in 2007 and 2008 and paid dearly for it.  Be an adult and think things through.  Hedge yourself and face reality.  Be careful but not too careful.  I have seen people panic and I have seen people prepare.  The people that are prepared seldom panic and the people that panic seldom prepare.  Which are you? 

Sat, 10/01/2011 - 18:59 | 1729783 Thisson
Thisson's picture

You must have only half-panicked.  You sold your stocks but failed to buy gold, right? right?

Sat, 10/01/2011 - 13:48 | 1729153 Moe Howard
Moe Howard's picture

Not yet. I'll let you know when the time is right. No need to thank me.

Sat, 10/01/2011 - 13:56 | 1729159 Pool Shark
Pool Shark's picture

 

 

Nope. Now is the time to panic:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o7dp9OSqpdU

 

Sun, 10/02/2011 - 00:36 | 1729529 Manthong
Manthong's picture

Dang.

With that title I thought it had something to do with donkeys and Tijuana.

OT,  but speaking of unnatural acts, can anybody shed some light on this?

“In early September, gold leases up to three months maturity turned to negative interest rates. That meant that a party leasing gold would not only not be charged any interest, the lender would actually pay money to a party borrowing the gold. Late last week, the six-month gold lease rate also turned negative. At the beginning of last week, the interest rates on silver leases up to three months maturity also turned negative. These are not normal market conditions. “

http://www.numismaster.com/ta/numis/Article.jsp?ad=article&ArticleId=24149

 

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