Ten Year Tips Auction Today

November 17th, 2016 7:39 am

Ian Lyngen and Aaron Kohli of BMO Capital Markets produce an informative piece each morning on the fixed income markets. I have excerpted from today’s piece thier comments on today auction of 10 year TIPS:

    The 10yr TIPS reopening also looms large on Thursday and though we’re not particularly enthused by the value that the note offers, we expect a decent auction nonetheless. Much of this is attributable to the fact that flows have been extraordinarily heavy with the TIP ETF attracting nearly 1.5bn in the month of November alone, with some large purchases coming in early November as breakevens continued to improve and more cash finding the fund after the election. Such heavy buying is likely to keep the note well bid, though we find very little value in breakevens at current levels. 5y5y, as measured by the swaps curve has retraced virtually all its recent losses and is close to 2015 highs. We expect either a small tail at rich levels or a stop through if there is any material concession after Yellen and the CPI release.

Tulip Mania

November 17th, 2016 7:04 am

Via Barron’s:

Ahead of the Crowd

What to Do With a Stock Up 1,000% in One Week?

DryShips is a prime example of what can happen when investors let politics get ahead of fundamentals.

Nov. 16, 2016 3:11 p.m. ET
Careful with those Trump trades.

DryShips shares (ticker: DRYS) have been halted after they closed at $73 on Tuesday and were indicated to open at over $100 on Wednesday. On Election Day, they sold for $4 and change. This one could end badly.

The Athens, Greece, shipper of steel, coal and other dry goods hasn’t reported a profit since 2010, and is estimated to have a negative net asset value. It has suspended payments on its debt to preserve cash, and has sold ships. Last quarter, it operated an average of about 20 vessels, barely half its fleet of a year ago.

With investors fearing bankruptcy, shares had sank so quickly that this year management performed three separate reverse splits: a 1-for-15 one effective Nov. 1; a 1-for-4 one approved in July; and a 1-for-25 one approved in February. Adjusted for these, and for potential dilution, DryShips has 752,000 shares outstanding, according to its third-quarter report published Nov. 9.

That means that at $100 a share, the company would be worth more than $75 million, arguably a lot for a company that could conceivably end up with no equity value.

“Yo–what the heck is going on?” wrote Wells Fargo Securities analyst Michael Webber on Wednesday, summarizing questions from investors. The spike in DryShips shares has been accompanied by rallies in Seanergy Maritime (SHIP), Euroseas (ESEA), Eagle Bulk Shipping (EGLE) and Scorpio Bulkers (SALT).

There is some fundamental support for shipping investors. U.S. lawmakers have cracked down on Chinese steel dumping. (See U.S. Steel Shares Could Rise 50% in a Year,” Oct. 15.) That has made steel more expensive, along with the coking coal used to make steel. Dry shipping rates have improved. Donald Trump’s victory has sparked a move into stocks with energy and building exposure, including shippers. But some stock movements seem to have gotten far ahead of fundamentals.

The math is no help for short-sellers, who can get squeezed into buying back shares at sharply higher prices as losses mount. The combination of a Trump trade and a short squeeze appears to have led to something of a melt-up in DryShips stock. “We do not believe this lasts,” wrote Webber on Wednesday.

That’s a signal to investors to be careful about letting political enthusiasm drive investment decisions. A Trump administration might indeed prove lucrative for banks, builders, shippers, coal companies and so on. But details are so far few, and there are many factors that affect such companies that have little to do with politics.

A lower-risk Trump trade, we wrote last week, is to buy shares of companies with high effective tax rates–and otherwise good investment prospects. (See “10 Stocks Set to Win Big With Trump Tax Cuts,” Nov. 11.) A cut in the corporate tax rate looks like a sure thing, and the impact to bottom lines is calculable, not theoretical.

Hey Abbot

November 17th, 2016 6:58 am

Via Bloomberg:

CREDIT MORNING CALL: Expect the Biggest Issuance in a Month
2016-11-17 11:53:30.775 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Expectations surrounding a hefty Abbott M&A-
deal leave the market thinking today may be the largest session
since October 19, Bloomberg strategist Robert Elson writes. That
day saw Saudi Arabia pricing $17.5b with WFC, MS, UPS, MDLZ
bringing the session to just shy of $30.

* The Abbott deal may be $15b, possibly larger, as it terms
out bridge loans for its ~$25b acquisition of St. Jude
* Some market participants have suggested the deal may not
come forward until next week
* More likely though, with volatility and risk factors being
what they are, today seems to be the more reasonable
approach
* It should be pointed out that tomorrow may also be in play
* Friday sessions this year have included some major
deals, including $8b NWL, $6b AT&T, $5.5b MS
* One might argue that there are not that many viable issuance
dates left in the month and year while there are, in theory,
other M&A-related deals that would like to wrap up or at
least get started before Dec. 31
* Possible deals include: GE/BHI, Qualcomm/NXP
Semiconductors, AT&T/Time Warner, Bayer/Monsanto

* Additionally, Chevron Phillips Chemical wrapped up investor
calls yesterday leaving it also possible for today

* Bottom line: Today appears to be the best window. The week
is already at $26b vs expectations of $30b and perhaps $40b.
ABT is the likely candidate today to get us to those
numbers. The boss used to say, “there may not be fire when
you see smoke, but that sure is the way to bet.”

Big Firms Hype TIPS

November 17th, 2016 6:32 am

Via Bloomberg:

Updated on
  • U.S. selling $11 billion of 10-year inflation-linked debt
  • TIPS returns in 2016 more than double regular Treasuries

The roster of firms lining up to recommend Treasury Inflation Protected Securities before a sale of the debt on Thursday is starting to look like a “Who’s Who” of bond giants.

BlackRock Inc., Fidelity Investments and Pacific Investment Management Co., which oversee almost $9 trillion combined, have all issued warnings that consumer-price gains will accelerate and are endorsing TIPS after U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s victory. DoubleLine Capital LP’s Jeffrey Gundlach and Goldman Sachs Asset Management began recommending the securities last month, amid signs costs in the economy were picking up.

While U.S. inflation has trailed the Federal Reserve’s 2 percent target for more than four years, Trump’s infrastructure spending pledges are fueling expectations of a pickup. TIPS have returned 4.8 percent this year as of Nov. 15, versus 1.7 percent for nominal Treasuries, based on Bloomberg Barclays index data. The outcome of the $11 billion 10-year TIPS auction Thursday will offer a verdict on the staying power of the reflation trade, in the face of global headwinds including tepid economic growth in Europe.

Benchmark Treasury 10-year note yields declined three basis points, or 0.03 percentage point, to 2.20 percent as of 6:12 a.m. in New York, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader data. The 2 percent security due in November 2026 rose 1/4, or $2.50 per $1,000 face amount, to 98 1/4.

“After this election year, it’s likely that the inflation will move higher — fiscal stimulus and protectionism are inflationary,” said Mihir Worah, co-manager of the $83 billion Pimco Total Return Fund in Newport Beach, California. TIPS “will outperform Treasuries again next year.”

A bond-market gauge of expectations for U.S. consumer prices over the next decade climbed this week to the highest since April 2015. The measure, known as the break-even rate, which represents the extra yield investors demand on regular 10-year notes over similar-maturity TIPS, reached 1.97 percentage points. The difference has risen from below 1.2 percentage points in February. The debt pays interest on a principal amount that rises with consumer prices.

The president-elect’s pledges include tax cuts and spending $500 billion or more over a decade on infrastructure, a combination that’s seen as spurring quicker growth and inflation in the world’s biggest economy. Trump has also blamed China and Mexico for American job losses and threatened punitive tariffs on imports.

The Wall Street consensus is for inflation to accelerate. The U.S. consumer-price index will climb to 2.2 percent in 2017, from 1.2 percent this year, according to the median forecast of economists surveyed by Bloomberg.

“TIPS have an important place in portfolios today,” Rick Rieder, chief investment officer for global fixed income at BlackRock, which oversees $5.1 trillion, wrote in a report after the election. “We are probably going to see a significant shift from monetary policy stimulus to fiscal policy initiatives. This may well aid in accelerating the pick-up in inflation.”

Pimco, which oversees about $1.5 trillion, has been warning about the prospect of inflation since last year. It reiterated its TIPS recommendation after Trump’s surprise victory in the Nov. 8 vote. Gundlach, co-founder of DoubleLine Capital in Los Angeles, who predicted Trump’s election, recommended TIPS in October. Goldman Sachs Asset Management did the same last month.

There are some forces that may restrain inflation. For one thing, the dollar is surging as bets mount on a quicker pace of Fed rate increases. A gauge of the greenback against 10 major peers reached the highest since February on Wednesday, raising the prospect that a stronger U.S. currency will keep down import prices. The economic momentum at home may also be buffeted by limp global demand.

‘Deflationary Headwinds’

“There’s a case to be made for inflation,” said Ed Al-Hussainy, senior global interest-rate analyst at Minneapolis-based Columbia Threadneedle Investments, which oversees $460 billion. “But external deflationary headwinds are still with us,” such as weak growth in Europe and the stronger dollar.

At the most recent auction of inflation-linked Treasury securities, on Oct. 20, investors showed limited interest. The $5 billion sale of 30-year TIPS drew the second-lowest demand since 2010, as measured by the bid-to-cover ratio.

Of course, that was before the election result sent shockwaves through financial markets and upended investors’ assumptions about the outlook for economic growth and inflation.

Fidelity, which manages $2.1 trillion, is in the camp anticipating higher U.S. government spending will push up inflation.

“TIPS may benefit from rising inflation expectations,” Bill Irving, co-manager of the Fidelity Government Income Fund, wrote in a report on the company’s website following the vote.

FX

November 17th, 2016 6:27 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

Consolidation Gives Dollar Heavier Tone

  • The US dollar is trading with a heavier bias today as its recent run is consolidated
  • The UK reported a huge jump in retail sales; Australia reported October jobs data overnight
  • The US data calendar features the October CPI, housing starts (and permits), weekly jobless claims, and the November Philadelphia Fed survey
  • Today will be the first time Fed Chair Yellen speaks since the election and the sharp rise in US yields
  • Central banks of Mexico and Chile meet

The dollar is mostly softer against the majors, but trading in very narrow ranges.  The euro and the Swedish krona are outperforming, while the yen and the Aussie are underperforming.  EM currencies are mostly firmer.  The CEE currencies are outperforming, while MYR, KRW, and PHP are underperforming.  MSCI Asia Pacific was up 0.3%, with the Nikkei flat.  MSCI EM is up 0.1%, with Chinese markets rising 0.2%.  Euro Stoxx 600 is up 0.2% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a lower open.  The 10-year UST yield is down 3 bp at 2.20%.  Commodity prices are mostly higher, with Brent oil up 1.1%, copper up 0.2%, and gold up 0.4%.

The US dollar is trading with a heavier bias today as its recent run is consolidated.  The euro is trying to snap the eight-day slide that brought it to nearly $1.0665 yesterday, the lows for the year.  It is almost as if participants saw the proximity of last year’s lows ($1.0460-$1.0525) and decided to pause, perhaps to wait for additional developments, such as Fed Chief’s Yellen’s testimony before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress.

The dollar rose to about JPY109.75 yesterday.  Recall that it had slumped to JPY101.20 in the first reaction to the US election news a week ago.  The market appears to be pausing ahead of the psychologically important JPY110 level.  The 50% retracement of this year’s dollar decline is seen near JPY110.35.  The 38.2% retracement of the dollar’s retreat from the multi-year high set in the middle of 2015 was JPY109.30.  The 50% is found near JPY112.45.

The dollar was pulling back in the Tokyo session when the BOJ stepped in and surprised market participants.  It did not intervene in the foreign exchange market, however.  Under the new monetary policy framework that is facilitating a steeper yield curve, it offered to buy unlimited amounts of one-to-five year JGBs at fixed rates.  This helped stabilize the JGB market, which was being dragged into the rising yields that had swept the global markets, emanating from the US.  The debt purchases also appeared to help put a floor under the dollar near JPY108.50.    

That the BOJ focused on the short-end of the coupon curve suggests that it was not particular concerned about the rise in the 10-year yield.  The yield on the 10-year bond rose five consecutive sessions coming into today, reaching a high yield of 5 bp.  It closed just above 1 bp today.  

The UK reported an over-the-top jump in retail sales, but the foreign exchange market was nonplussed.  Sterling is slightly firmer against the dollar, but like yesterday has spent today within the range seen on Tuesday (~$1.2380-$1.2530).  Sterling is flat against the euro.  

Headline retail sales rose a dramatic 1.9% in October, following a 0.1% rise in September.  The change in the weather is thought to have spurred a shopping spree for clothes and shoes.  Those products account for about 12% overall retail sales and rose 5.1%, the most in more than two years.  Home goods and food purchases rose by 0.8% each.  Of note, internet sales surged by nearly 27%, the largest rise in almost six years.  On a year-over-year basis, UK retail sales are up 7.2%.  Last October retail sales stood only 4% above the previous year comparison.

The Australian dollar also has not responded as one might expect to news that the country had created 41.5k full-time jobs in October.  The unemployment rate eased to 5.6% from 5.7%.  The Aussie punched through $0.7500 yesterday, and buyers on a pullback that have emerged in recent months near these levels have been notable in their absence.  It has been unable to benefit from a weaker US dollar today.  Short-term speculators have been caught leaning the wrong way in terms of positioning.  The immediate risk is the mid-September lows near $0.7440.  A break signals a test on $0.7400, which the Aussie has not traded below since the end of H1.

Australia’s jobs data was not all that.  The impressive full-time job growth does not offset the revised 74.3k full-time job loss in September (initially a 53k loss).  And the decline in the unemployment rate appears to be a function of a decline in the participation rate (to 64.4%).   Ironically, as the Reserve Bank of Australia has moved to a neutral stance from its easing bias, the market has turned the Aussie away from the $0.7700 area that has provided a formidable cap for the last several months.  

The US data calendar features the October CPI, housing starts (and permits), weekly jobless claims, and the November Philadelphia Fed survey.  Core CPI is expected to hold steady at 2.2%, but the headline rate may edge up to 1.6% (from 1.5%).  It would be the highest reading of the year.  Housing starts are expected to recover after the 9% drop in September.  The Philly Fed survey is expected to be a little softer but ultimately little changed.  The Atlanta Fed’s GDPNow tracker is estimating Q4 GDP growth at 3.3%.  It will update its estimate after today’s data.  

Today will be the first time Fed Chair Yellen speaks since the election and the sharp rise in US yields.  Before the Joint Economic Committee of Congress, she is unlikely to deviate from what has already been said.  The last two FOMC statements acknowledged that the opportunity to take another step toward normalization of monetary policy is approaching.  Even the doves at the Fed, like Chicago President Evans and Governor Tarullo, seem more receptive to a rate hike than they appeared to be previously.  

If pressed, Yellen will likely agree that it is premature for the Fed to respond in word or deed to the campaign promises of substantial fiscal stimulus.  There will be plenty of time to react when more precise details are known.  She may also be asked the size of the Fed’s balance sheet.  There have been some press reports quoting some economic advisers of the President-elect, apparently wanting the Fed to reduce its balance sheet.  The Fed has said it will do so after the normalization process is well underway.  Yellen can be expected to defend the independence of the Federal Reserve while trying to avoid antagonizing some of its critics, who may see an opportunity with a Republican Congress and President to alter the Fed’s mandate.  

Lastly, Yellen may also be asked about inflation expectations.  The survey results suggest little change from low levels, but the market-based break-even rates have risen sharply.  The 10-year breakeven (the difference between the yields of the conventional note and the inflation-protected security) jumped from 1.55% at the end of September to almost 2% at the start of this week.  Yellen will likely be careful about reading too much into the rise, recognizing the liquidity premium means that the breakeven is sensitive to the direction of U.S. Treasuries, with the TIPS acting like a high beta version.  This means that during periods of rising yields, TIPS yields typically rise faster than Treasuries.

Banco de Mexico meets.  Consensus sees a 50 bp hike to 5.25%, but it’s a tough call and some look for more aggressive action.  The markets are split on the decision.  Of the 23 analysts polled by Bloomberg, 14 look for a 50 bp hike to 5.25%.  However, 1 sees no hike, 4 see a 75 bp hike, and 4 see a 100 bp hike.  The swaps curve is pricing in a 50 bp hike, while the 1-month Cetes rate is pricing in 75 bp.  We think 50 bp seems most likely, but acknowledge significant risks of a bigger hike.  We also do not think this will be the last hike of the cycle.

Banco de Chile also meets.  No change is expected to the 3.5% policy rate.  While the weak peso warrants caution, falling inflation probably has the bank tilting dovish with an eye on starting the easing cycle in 2017.  CPI rose 2.8% y/y in October, within the 2-4% target range but below the 3% target for the first time since November 2013.  The latest central bank survey shows markets looking for the first 25 bp rate cut in Q1, followed by another 25 bp cut later in the year that takes the policy rate to 3% at end-2017.   

Treasury Market Musings

November 17th, 2016 6:24 am

In overnight trading the BOJ action to stem the rise in yields was the highlight. The central bank intervened and promised to buy both 2 year and 5 year bonds. Dealers report that in overnight trading yen funded buyers were better buyers of 5 year through 30 year sectors.

In the overnight trade the yield curve is mixed with small changes. That masks the move from levels which prevailed at about this hour yesterday morning and which manifests a flatter yield curve. So when compared to yesterday morning levels the 5s 10s spread has narrowed to 55.6 from 56.4. Similarly 10s 30s is 71.5 vs 72.0 at this hour yesterday. The big winner in this 24 hour comparison is the 5 year note. The 2s 5s spread is in to 64.3 from 69.2 yesterday morning. The 2s 5s 10s butterfly has rallied to 64.3 from 69.2.

TIPS breakevens have manifested small mixed changes over the twenty four hour period. Five year spreads are unchanged at 173 . Ten year spreads are a basis point richer at 185 and 30 year spreads have narrowed t 201 from 202.

Treasuries are richer to European bonds in the 10 year sector. The 10 year Bund spread has narrowed to 191 from 193 yesterday and vs Gilts in that same sector Treasuries are better by three as that spread has narrowed to 93 from 96.

Today is all about Ms Yellen. I await her comments on fiscal policy and what a plan of fiscal stimulus will do to alter monetary policy decision making. I think it will be instructive to learn if she believes that what has transpired in the election marks the end of the multi decade bull market in bonds. I also await her response to questions which indicate a new  populist impulse to narrow the Fed’s independence.

Credit Pipeline

November 17th, 2016 6:04 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: Volume Remains High; Issuance Will Be Focus Today
2016-11-17 10:41:48.24 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Secondary IG trading ended with a Trace
count of $19.2b vs $20.3b Tuesday, $20.2b last Wednesday.

* 14th highest of any Wednesday since Nov. 2005 when TRACE
volume count began
* Tuesday’s $20.3b was 5th highest Tuesday on record
* Monday’s $18.2b was 2nd highest Monday on record
* 10-DMA $15.6b; 10-Wednesday moving avg $18.1b
* 144a trading added $3b of IG volume vs $3.2b Tuesday, $2.4b
last Wednesday

* Trace most active issues longer than 2 years:
* V 3.15% 2025 was 1st with client and affiliate trades
accounting for 63% of volume; client selling 2.3x buying
* HFC 5.875% 2026 was next with client and affiliate
trades taking 84% of volume
* PFE 3.00% 2026 was 3rd; client buying twice selling
* DEXGRP 1.875% 2021 was the most active 144a issue with
client selling split volume with trades between dealers
50/50

* Bloomberg Barclays US IG Corporate Bond Index OAS at 129 vs
128, a new low for the year and the lowest level since May
2015, vs 130
* 2016 wide/tight: 215 (a new wide since Jan. 2012)/128
* 2015 wide/tight: 171/122
* 2014 wide/tight: 137/97
* All time wide/tight back to 1989: 555 (Dec. 2008)/54
(March 1997)

* Current markets vs early Wednesday:
* 2Y 0.993% vs 1.009%
* 10Y 2.192% vs 2.274%
* DOW futures +7 vs -25
* Oil $45.59 vs $45.32
* ¥en 108.98 vs 109.69

* IG issuance totaled $9.75b Wednesday vs $5.45b Tuesday,
$10.9b Monday
* November totals $41.25b; YTD $1.52T, up 8% y/y

Some Corporate Bond Stuff

November 17th, 2016 6:02 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: Volume Remains High; Issuance Will Be Focus Today
2016-11-17 10:41:48.24 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Secondary IG trading ended with a Trace
count of $19.2b vs $20.3b Tuesday, $20.2b last Wednesday.

* 14th highest of any Wednesday since Nov. 2005 when TRACE
volume count began
* Tuesday’s $20.3b was 5th highest Tuesday on record
* Monday’s $18.2b was 2nd highest Monday on record
* 10-DMA $15.6b; 10-Wednesday moving avg $18.1b
* 144a trading added $3b of IG volume vs $3.2b Tuesday, $2.4b
last Wednesday

* Trace most active issues longer than 2 years:
* V 3.15% 2025 was 1st with client and affiliate trades
accounting for 63% of volume; client selling 2.3x buying
* HFC 5.875% 2026 was next with client and affiliate
trades taking 84% of volume
* PFE 3.00% 2026 was 3rd; client buying twice selling
* DEXGRP 1.875% 2021 was the most active 144a issue with
client selling split volume with trades between dealers
50/50

* Bloomberg Barclays US IG Corporate Bond Index OAS at 129 vs
128, a new low for the year and the lowest level since May
2015, vs 130
* 2016 wide/tight: 215 (a new wide since Jan. 2012)/128
* 2015 wide/tight: 171/122
* 2014 wide/tight: 137/97
* All time wide/tight back to 1989: 555 (Dec. 2008)/54
(March 1997)

* Current markets vs early Wednesday:
* 2Y 0.993% vs 1.009%
* 10Y 2.192% vs 2.274%
* DOW futures +7 vs -25
* Oil $45.59 vs $45.32
* ¥en 108.98 vs 109.69

* IG issuance totaled $9.75b Wednesday vs $5.45b Tuesday,
$10.9b Monday
* November totals $41.25b; YTD $1.52T, up 8% y/y

BOJ Fires Warning Shot at Bond Bears

November 17th, 2016 6:00 am

Via Bloomberg:

  • Benchmark yields had climbed at fastest pace since August
  • 10-year touched 0.035%, the first time since mid-February

The Bank of Japan fired a warning shot at the government bond market Thursday, announcing its first offer to buy an unlimited amount of securities to maintain its yield-curve target.

The so-called fixed-rate operation yielded no bids, a sign that the move was more of a demonstration exercise than an intended transaction in notes. Officials acted amid relative calm in the market, but in the wake of a global bond sell-off in the past week that had driven up yields across the globe — and in the process put pressure on Japanese government bonds as well.

“It’s a surprise that the BOJ took action today,” said Souichi Takeyama, a rates strategist at SMBC Nikko Securities Inc. in Tokyo, a unit of Japan’s second-biggest lender. “Markets won’t test levels above these fixed rates as these will be seen as reflecting the BOJ’s upper limit.”

Japanese 10-year notes turned positive this week for the first time since Sept. 21, the day Governor Haruhiko Kuroda announced a shift in policy aimed at pegging them near zero. An index of expected JGB market turbulence has surged to the highest since September’s policy announcement amid bets U.S. President-elect Donald Trump’s stimulus policies will drive up global inflation.

The central bank announced two operations, one to buy two-year notes at minus 0.09 percent, and another for five-year debt at minus 0.04 percent. They drew no bids. That came after two-year yields rose as high as minus 0.095 percent on Wednesday, up 18 basis points in five days. The BOJ introduced the tools after deciding in September it would control the yield curve.

The 10-year JGB yield was at 0.01 percent as of 3:29 p.m. in Tokyo, after jumping as high as 0.035 percent on Wednesday, a level unseen since mid-February. It had fallen to a record minus 0.3 percent in July. The five-year yield was minus 0.1 percent, and that on the two-year security was minus 0.16 percent.

“The aim is to send a warning to markets about a significant surge in rates,” said Keiko Onogi, a fixed-income strategist at Daiwa Securities Co. in Tokyo. At the same time, “there are questions as to why the BOJ conducted this operation now, when the market had already stabilized after the surge in yields to yesterday,” she said.

Kuroda said in parliament following the announcement that the central bank won’t automatically allow Japanese rates to rise if rates rise in the U.S. He reiterated the BOJ is aiming for a 10-year yield of “about” zero percent, and that it can’t achieve a yield target of exactly one level.

In a footnote to its Sept. 21 statement on monetary policy, the BOJ said it stands ready to conduct fixed-rate JGB purchase operations at set or unlimited amounts “in case of a spike in interest rates” to prevent yields from “deviating substantially” from target levels.

Bonds worldwide lost more than $1.2 trillion last week, surpassing the taper-tantrum of June 2013 as the largest ever slump in market value, according to Bank of America Corp. indexes.

“The BOJ will have welcomed the rise in Japanese stocks and decline in the yen following the Trump Shock, but they’ve shown they aren’t going to stand for a jump in JGB yields,” said Naoya Oshikubo, a rates strategist at Barclays Plc in Tokyo. “It’s the strength of that stance rather than the actual levels at which the BOJ offered to buy the debt that’s pulling down yields.”

Trump Advisers Favor Shrinking Fed Balance Sheet

November 16th, 2016 10:38 pm

Via Bloomberg:

Trump Allies Urge Fed to Cut Balance Sheet and Revive Credit (1)
2016-11-16 12:27:08.216 GMT

By Rich Miller
(Bloomberg) — Bond investors may have another reason to
worry after Donald Trump’s election last week: Some of his
allies are not fans of the Federal Reserve’s big balance sheet
of bonds and want the central bank to shrink it.
They argue that the Fed’s debt portfolio has damaged the
economy by channeling credit to corporations and the federal
government instead of to new, more dynamic small businesses. The
central bank’s policies also have hurt savers and retirees, they
say.
The Fed’s bond purchases “have been very harmful,” David
Malpass, a senior economic adviser on the Trump transition team,
said in an e-mail. It “needs to communicate a plan for
downsizing its balance sheet.”
House Financial Services Committee Chairman Jeb Hensarling,
who worked closely with Vice President-elect Mike Pence when the
latter was a lawmaker, has also called on the central bank to
reduce its $4.5 trillion balance sheet.
“It is way past time for the Fed to commit to a credible,
verifiable monetary policy rule, to systematically shrink its
balance sheet and get out of the business of picking winners and
losers in the credit markets,” the Texas Republican said at a
June 22 hearing on the central bank’s policies.
Bond prices have nosedived since Trump was elected
president on Nov. 8 as investors concluded that his proposals
for lower taxes and higher military and infrastructure spending
would lead to faster economic growth and increased inflation.
A move to reduce the Fed’s bond holdings could put further
downward pressure on prices by adding to the supply investors
would have to absorb. Fed Chair Janet Yellen may get a chance to
address the issue Thursday in testimony to the Joint Economic
Committee of Congress.

Pro-Growth

“The Fed’s policies have contributed to the weakness in
middle-class income by helping bond issuers, primarily the
government and large corporations, at the expense of small
businesses and savers,” said Malpass, who is president of Encima
Global in New York.
The “pro-growth solution” would be to encourage bank
lending, taper the Fed’s bond holdings and hold down the
interest rate it pays commercial banks for their excess
reserves, he said.
In a Nov. 11 interview on Bloomberg Radio, Trump adviser
Judy Shelton echoed Malpass’s concerns.
Shelton, who is co-director of the Sound Money Project at
the Atlas Network in Washington, suggested that the Fed’s
policies were channeling low-cost funding to “wealthy investors,
and corporate borrowers and even big government” instead of to
“the average person with just a bank savings account.”
Trump was critical of the Fed during the presidential
campaign, at one point charging that its low interest rates were
fomenting a “big, fat, ugly bubble” in the stock market. He also
complained that the central bank had been more political than
his Democratic opponent, Hillary Clinton — a charge that Fed
Chair Janet Yellen repeatedly denied.
With two slots vacant on the Fed’s seven-seat board, Trump
will have an opportunity to nominate monetary policy makers more
to his liking when he takes over as president in January. He’ll
also have a chance to pick a new chairman and vice chairman in
2018, when Yellen’s term and that of her deputy, Stanley
Fischer, expire.

December Hike

The Federal Open Market Committee is widely expected to
lift interest rates when it meets next month after raising them
at the end of last year for the first time since 2006.
Policy makers have said they anticipate maintaining the
size of the balance sheet “until normalization of the level of
the federal funds rate is well under way” without specifying
when that would be. Under that strategy, the central bank has
been reinvesting principal payments from its bond holdings back
into the market.
The debate over the Fed’s balance sheet will heat up during
the Trump presidency, with about $1.2 trillion of its stock of
Treasury securities set to mature from 2017 through 2020.
Yellen has defended the Fed’s asset purchases, arguing that
they helped lower long-term interest rates, spurring economic
growth and reducing unemployment in the process.
“Our purchases of Treasury and mortgage-related securities
in the open market pushed down longer-term borrowing rates for
millions of American families and businesses,” she told the
Fed’s annual Jackson Hole, Wyoming conference on Aug. 26.
Some former Fed officials, though, have been critical of
the central bank’s stance.
In an April 29 presentation that Malpass spoke approvingly
of, Peter Fisher told economists at an event in New York that
the Fed had discouraged banks from lending money by flattening
the yield curve with its bond purchases.

“When yield curves steepen, lenders profit from wider net-
interest margins between borrowing short and lending long,” said
Fisher, who worked at the New York Fed from 1985 to 2001 and is
now a senior lecturer at Dartmouth University. “This provides a
powerful incentive to engage in maturity transformation and
expand the supply of credit.”
Fisher, a former Treasury official in the George W. Bush
administration who is not on Trump’s advisory team, said in a
telephone interview Tuesday that the Fed should allow its
balance sheet to shrink by not reinvesting the proceeds of debts
it holds when they mature. That would encourage banks to lend
more.
He said outright asset sales by the Fed would not be a good
idea now, given the steepening of the yield curve that has
already taken place in the wake of Trump’s election victory.
“The results of Fed policy have been highly disappointing,”
Malpass said. “The Fed needs to have independence but get
results that are more consistent with a growing economy.”