High Yield
The Game Of Chicken Between The Fed & The PBOC Escalates
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/15/2016 15:05 -0500There’s more than a whiff of 2008 in the air. The sources of systemic financial sector risk are different this time (they always are), but China and the global industrial/commodity complex are even larger tectonic plates than the US housing market, and their shifts are no less destructive. There’s also more than a whiff of 1938 in the air, as we have a Fed that is apparently hell-bent on raising rates even as a Category 5 deflationary hurricane heads our way, even as the yield curve continues to flatten.
The Bursting of the Bond Bubble Has Begun Pt 2
Submitted by Phoenix Capital Research on 01/15/2016 08:47 -0500This is just the beginning. The bond bubble will take months to completely implode. And eventually it will consume even sovereign nations. Globally the bond bubble is $100 trillion in size: larger than even global GDP.
The "World's Most Bearish Hedge Fund" Crushed It In 2015
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2016 18:31 -0500"Your fund made 5.6% net last month, to finish the year up 20.45% net. Gains came from the short book.... Your fund remains long bonds, short equities."
Poor 30 Year Auction Concludes Weekly Issuance With Sliding Bid To Cover, Weak Indirects
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2016 13:12 -0500Yesterday's 10 Year auction was, despite the concurrent pricing of the world's biggest bond deal in the face of AB InBev's $45 billion issue, a blockbuster, with demand off the charts in every possible way. However, today's just concluded sale of $13 billion in 30 Year paper left quite bit to be desired.
The Asian Axis Of Junk Debt Evil
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/14/2016 12:00 -0500The (anti)correlations between Chinese FX and US junk debt raises an intriguing question that is somewhat chicken and egg. While Chinese financial conditions were terrible to the point of near disaster, junk bonds were, on the whole, almost inconceivably placid at the same time. But now that Chinese factors regarding the likely Asian “dollar” state have gone on and gone so far, it appears as if the US junk bubble can no longer idly withstand it. Again, all indications here are for renewed selling and participation in the “run.” Does that mean the Asian “dollar” is driving the junk bubble?
Last Bubble Standing
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2016 21:15 -0500EM debt bubble... emaciated, FX Carry... crucified, Crude...crushed, High yield bonds... burst, Chinese equities... blown, Trannies... trounced, Small Caps... slammed, Biotechs... busted, and FANGs finally FUBAR! But there is one big (very big) bubble left in the world that no one is talking about, and a rather large liquidity-busting pin beckons...
Markets In Freefall: Stocks Extend Worst Ever Start To Year
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2016 18:34 -0500Scorching Demand For 10 Year Paper: Indirects Take Down Near Record 71%, Bid To Cover Surges
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/13/2016 13:15 -0500If anyone had expected that today's record AB InBev deal would lead to a tail in the just concluded $21 billion 10-Year (technically 9 Year-10 month CUSIP M56 reopening) auction, they would be very disappointed, when moments ago the US Treasury announced a high yield of 2.09%, stopping a whopping 1.5 bps through the When Issued 2.105%, and the lowest yield since October's 2.07%. But the real stunner was the internals, where the Directs took down at modest 11.3%, but it was the foreign central bankers, aka the Indirects, who took down a whopping 71%, the second highest on record, and just 0.3% shy of the record high hit in February 2011.
You Know Negative Interest Rates Are Bad When...
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2016 16:30 -0500...the Swiss canton of Zug is asking its citizens to delay paying their taxes for as long as possible, because the cantonal government doesn’t want to take in a pile of cash, only to end up paying the bank interest on all the tax revenue.
Last-Hour Buying-Panic Saves Nasdaq From Longest Losing Streak In 31 Years
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2016 16:03 -0500
Here's The Real Reason High Yield Energy Credit Risk Collapsed This Morning
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2016 13:33 -0500A few market participants have noticed that the US High Yield Energy sector's credit risk collapsed 170bps this morning according to Bloomberg's data. This is the biggest plunge (rally) in the index of "incredibly risky stuff" on record and in the face of new cycle lows in crude, borrowing bases contracting, and rig counts crashing, this seemed odd... well here is why the index collapsed (spoiler alert - do not get excited).
Sharp Squeeze, Highest Foreign Central Bank Demand Since 2009 Lead To Scorching 3 Year Auction
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/12/2016 13:13 -0500Moments ago with the When Issued for today's $24 billion in 3 Year paper trading at 1.188%, we were confident that as a result of the substantial short overhang, the auction would price well through the WI. It did so, and by a mile: the final high yield print was a whipping 1.174%, stopping some 1.4 bps through the When Issued.
In "Very Unusual" Move, Avenue Capital's Junk Bond Fund Stops Reporting Asset Levels
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2016 22:15 -0500A month after we first noted the major redemptions at Avenue Capital Group's credit fund (note this is a different fund from Third Avenue), and just one trading day after CEO Marc Lasry strolled arrogantly on to CNBC and told the public that "I don't think it's a time to panic, I think it's actually a time where you've got opportunities out there," Morningstar reports the Avenue Credit Strategies Fund has failed to report asset levels since about mid-December.
10 Year Could Drop Below 2% Within Days, Citi Predicts
Submitted by Tyler Durden on 01/11/2016 13:47 -0500The risk of a fracture in risk markets when lower liquidity meets forced selling, is high in our view. Should this weakening of spread sectors in fixed income continue, we will see a further rally in Treasuries – back in Aug/ Sep, 10y USTs broke below 2%, and there is no reason we can’t get there later this month.




