Goldman Sachs on Two Year Note in Germany

February 3rd, 2015 8:35 am

This is via a fully paid up subscriber across the pond:

SCHATZ: Sources confirm a Goldman Sachs sales and trading desk note is indeed doing the rounds titled “the bullish case for the German front end (Schatz)” and expect levels of -25bp to -30bp as central scenario with -40bp realistic. “Key point is that as EUR excess liquidity grows amid ECB QE and TLTROs, non-banks will increasingly rely on banks to deposit cash back to the ECB. And banks will have to charge for (i) balance sheet and (ii) German collateral as it gets scarce due to ECB buying. The implies German repo should trade below the ECB deposit rate as seen in other ‘QE currencies’….2-year Germany may even at yields below repo rates if the ECB buys the 2-year sector sufficiently aggressive,” wrote GS, according to sources who have seen the note.

Plumbing Problem

February 3rd, 2015 7:40 am

Via Jon Hilsenrath at the WSJ:

Grand Central: New York Fed Tries to Address Plumbing Problems in Fed Funds Market

The Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced two changes in the way it tracks short-term interest rates. It will broaden the number of firms it uses to make daily calculations of the federal funds rate, which is its target interest rate. It will also calculate a new interest rate – which it calls an overnight bank funding rate – which unlike the federal funds rate will include a vast array of offshore activity in the Eurodollar short-term funding market.

On the surface these sounds like technical changes and the New York Fed played them down, saying they are “solely intended to make the calculation process more robust, and no inferences should be drawn about the stance of monetary policy from its implementation.” But they are part of an important broader narrative about the Fed’s effort to keep up with the changing plumbing of financial markets in the wake of the 2007-2009 financial crisis.

As the Fed has pumped trillions of dollars of reserves into the banking system, trading has dried up in the federal funds market where banks tap overnight reserves. There are so many reserves in the system, fewer banks have to trade for it. Moreover, much of the action has moved to non-U.S. banks, which tap the money market mutual fund sector for indirect access to these reserves. A December 2013 study by the New York Fed found that daily activity in the fed funds market contracted from $200 billion to $60 billion between 2007 and 2012.  Another study found more than half of this activity was foreign banks. (For comparison sake, about $7 billion worth of one just stock — Apple Inc. — changed hands on the Nasdaq exchange Monday.)

Fed officials have worried that when it comes time to raise interest rates, the relatively small, illiquid fed funds market might behave unpredictably and make for a poor benchmark for the vast array of other interest rates that are linked to it in the private sector. It’s one reason they looked closely last year at using some of their new tools – such as a trading contract they use with money market funds called an overnight reverse repurchase agreement – as new benchmarks.

They stuck with the fed funds rate and now they are trying to shore it up by making their calculations of daily changes in the rate as broad and deep as possible.

“The expanded computation basket improves the odds that the existing fed funds rate series might survive as a viable benchmark,” Wrightson ICAP analyst Lou Crandall said in a note to clients Monday. “If, however, the traditional fed funds series becomes more unstable in the future, the new overnight bank funding rate will provide a useful alternative for gauging actual market conditions.”

The New York Fed suggested the changes will be implemented within a year’s time, “after revisions to a Federal Reserve data collection are complete.”

-By Jon Hilsenrath

JPMorgan Duration Survey

February 3rd, 2015 7:13 am

Via Bloomberg:

IG CREDIT: Longs and Shorts Fall in Latest JPM Survey
2015-02-03 12:11:36.523 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — The JPMorgan Treasury Client Survey for the
week ended Feb. 2 vs week ended Jan. 26.
* Longs 15 vs 22
* Neutrals 63 vs 54
* Shorts 22 vs 24
* Net longs -7 vs -2
* “The all clients survey shows the fewest net longs since
January 12, 2015
* Active clients:
* Longs 25 vs 33
* Neutrals 67 vs 50
* Shorts 8 vs 17
* Net longs 17 vs 16
* “The active clients survey stands close to its four-week
moving average
* “The active clients survey stands close to its four-week
moving average</li></ul>

What to Watch for Today

February 3rd, 2015 6:49 am

Via Bloomberg:

WHAT TO WATCH:
* (All times New York)
Economic Data
* 9:45am: ISM New York, Jan. (prior 70.8)
* 10:00am: Factory Orders, Dec., est. -2.4% (prior -0.7%)
* 10:00am: IBD/TIPP Economic Optimism, Feb., est. 51.5 (prior
51.5)
* Wards Domestic Vehicle Sales, Jan., est. 13.5m (prior
13.46m)
* Wards Total Vehicle Sales, Jan., est. 16.6m (prior
16.80m)
* Wards Total Vehicle Sales, Jan., est. 16.6m (prior
16.80m)</li></ul>
Central Banks
* 10:00am: Fed’s Bullard speaks in Newark, Del
* 11:45am: Fed’s Kocherlakota speaks in St. Paul, Minn.
* 6:00pm: Reserve Bank of New Zealand’s Wheeler speaks in
Christchurch
Supply
* 11:30am: U.S. to sell $25b 52W bills, TBA 4W bills

FX

February 3rd, 2015 6:40 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

RBA Joins Parade and Market Likes Greek Proposals
– The Reserve Bank of Australia joined the chorus of central banks to ease policy
– The continued recovery in oil prices may be helping the Canadian dollar resist the Antipodean push
– The other major story today is the positive market reception to Greece’s proposals
– It was an unusual day of hawkish surprises today from Turkey and India

Price action:  The dollar is mixed against the majors.  The Aussie is the worst performer, down 1.6% and trading below .7700 to levels not seen since 2009 after the RBA cut rates 25 bp to 2.25%.  Kiwi was dragged lower as well, down 1.3% and trading close to the .7200 area for the first time since 2011.  The euro is little changed near $1.1350, as is cable near $1.5060 and dollar/yen near 117.50.  EM currencies are mostly firmer.  RUB is the best performer, helped by the continued recovery in oil prices.  TRY is also outperforming, as a higher than expected CPI print prevented the emergency rate cut that was potentially coming tomorrow.  MSCI Asia Pacific was down 0.4%, led by a 1.3% drop in the Nikkei.  Euro Stoxx 600 is up 1.2% near midday, while S&P futures are pointing to a higher open.  Greek 10-year yields are down nearly 100 bp on signs of compromise from Syriza regarding the nation’s bailout.    

  • The Reserve Bank of Australia joined the chorus of central banks to ease policy.  The 25 bp rate cut was not a major surprise but it did catch many a bit off-guard as recent data and the pace of the Australian dollar’s decline had prompted many to push out the expectation to next month.  More details will be in the monetary policy review at the end of the week, but today’s rate cut is unlikely to be the last.  There is scope for another rate cut in Q2.  The Aussie was quickly marked down by 1.5 cents to $0.7650 and recorded the session low near $0.7625 a couple of hours later.  It has found a better bid in the European morning.  The $0.7700 area may cap initial upticks.
  • The Aussie’s drop dragged down the New Zealand dollar almost as much.  The Kiwi fell through $0.7200 late in the Asian session and is straddling that area in the European morning.  The $0.7220-$0.7740 area looks like the proximate ceiling.  
  • The continued recovery in oil prices may be helping the Canadian dollar resist the Antipodean push lower.  Oil prices are higher for the fourth session.  The recovery in oil prices also appears to be aiding the Norwegian krone, which is the strongest of the majors, up 0.3% today, and the Russian ruble, which is the strongest of the emerging market currencies, with a 2.4% gain.  The winter storms, coupled with the strike at several refineries, and news of a sharp drop in US oil rigs last week have fueled a recovery.  We’ve seen an $8 dollar rally in the March WTI futures contract off last Thursday low contract low of $43.58.  
  • As we have noted before, there is a weak relationship between US rig count and production.  Specifically, the oil rig count fell by 94 last week, according to Baker-Hughes, to 1223.  This is a three-year low.  Output for the week ending January 23 was 9.21 mln barrels a day, which is the most since EIA records began in 1983.  A strike at refineries would seem to be negative for crude oil prices.  It points to increased stockpiles after EIA reported another large jump in inventory last week.  The EIA and API report new figures tomorrow.  
  • The other major story today is the positive market reception to Greece’s proposals.  The essence of the new government’s proposals is for a bond swap.  It wants to exchange its bonds in the official sector with growth-linked bonds and perpetual bonds for the ECB.  It also wants the ECB to continue funding Greek banks through a transition period lasting through May.  In exchange, it is committed to running a primary budget surplus, even if it means it cannot fulfil its public spending promises.  It also promises structural reforms and more robust tax collection.  
  • The Greek 10-year bond yield has fallen nearly 100 bp, and the 3-year bond yield has plunged over 200 bp.  Greek stocks have rallied 7-8%.  It has had a positive impact on peripheral debt, where Spain, Italy, and Portuguese 10-year yields are off 5-7 bp.  Core bond yields are 2-4 bp higher, which means spread compression.  News that Italian deflation deepened in January (-0.4% year-over-year from -0.1% in December) and that Spanish unemployment did not rise as much as expected (78k instead of the consensus of 88k) helped support the peripheral bonds as well.  
  • There should be no doubt that European officials will respond with counter-offers.  But, the fact of the matter is that for the first time since the election, there is greater confidence in our assessment that the basis of a compromise exists and that talk about a Grexit is premature.  
  • Separately, the UK reported its second better-than-expected PMI and sterling still cannot distance itself from the $1.50 area.  Resistance is seen in the $1.5080-$1.5100 range.  Yesterday the UK reported a better than expected manufacturing PMI.  Today it was a better construction PMI (59.1, up from 57.6 and vs. consensus 57.0).  Tomorrow is the most important PMI, the service sector.  It is expected to improve from 55.8 to 56.3.  
  • In the US, December factory orders and January auto sales are the main features.  Factory orders are bound to be weak after the larger than expected slump in durable goods orders (-3.4%) and the sharp downward revision to the November series (-2.1% from -0.7%).   Auto sales are expected to have slowed from the 16.8 mln unit pace in December though US-based producers are projected to have increased market share.  Two Fed presidents speak today (Bullard and Kocherlakota).  Neither are voting members.  The former leans a bit to the hawkish side while the latter is among the most dovish.  Kocherlakota has signalled intentions to step down this year.  
  • It was an unusual day of hawkish EM surprises today from Turkey and India.  In India, the central bank refrained from cutting its target rate, now at 7.75%, contrary to what some had expected.  One of the conditions for further easing is the “sustained high quality fiscal consolidation.”  Since there were “no substantial new developments” on that front since the last meeting, there was no cut.  So the carrot approach seems to be the new framework for India.  This means that any positive fiscal developments will automatically give a bid to yields, in expectation of further easing.
  • In Turkey, inflation came in higher than expected at 7.24% y/y, but more importantly, it fell short of the one percentage point decline that the central bank had signalled would be necessary for a rate cut.  Markets (including us) were expecting an emergency meeting after the print in which the bank would deliver a cut.  Now this meeting is not going to happen.  Predictably, local rates are higher today, rising as much as 25 bp across the curve. The lira strengthened about 0.5% following the release.  However, we expect the lira to remain under pressure as the government’s jawboning will surely pick up again.

 

Corporate Bond Trading Yesterday

February 3rd, 2015 6:24 am

Via Bloomberg;

IG CREDIT: Highest 4-WMA Volume in History of Trace Data
2015-02-03 11:17:08.768 GMT

By Robert Elson
(Bloomberg) — Trace count for secondary trading closed at
$13.2b vs $16.3b Friday, $13.1b last Monday; 10-DMA $16.2b.
* 4-wk moving avg was $15.6b yday, highest since at least Jan.
2005
* 144a trading added $2b of IG volume yday vs $2.1b Friday,
$2b last Monday
* Most active issues longer than 3 years
* AMZN 4.95% 2044 was first with 2-way client flows
accounting for 72% of volume
* AAPL 3.85% 2043 was next with client selling near 3x
buying
* T 4.80% 2044 was 3rd, client flows at 71% of volume
* T 4.80% 2044 was 3rd, client flows at 71% of volume</li></ul>
* VZ 5.012% 2054 was most active 144a issue; client flows took
60% of the volume with selling 1.7x buying
* BofAML IG Master Index at +153 vs +152; 2014 range was +151,
seen Dec 16; +106, the low and tightest spread since July
2007 was seen June 24
* Standard & Poor’s Global Fixed Income Research IG Index at
+183, unchanged; +182, the wide for 2014-2015, was seen Jan.
16; +140, the 2014 low and new post-crisis low was seen July
30, 2014
* Markit CDX.IG.22 5Y Index at 68.3 vs 69.4; 76.1, the wide
for 2014 was seen Dec 16; 55 was seen July 3, the low for
2014 and the lowest level since Oct 2007
* IG issuance totaled $9.5b Monday vs $18.5b last week; stats
include tenors, ratings, sectors
* 4 deals set to price today

Baltic Dry Index

February 3rd, 2015 6:12 am

The Baltic Dry Index is a measure of the cost of moving raw commodities around the globe by ship.

That index plunged yesterday and sits on the cusp of establishing a 29 year low.

Overnight Flows

February 3rd, 2015 5:55 am

At this juncture dealers report active flow in overnight Treasury trading. I have heard of bank portfolio buying in the 5 year sector as well as end user buying of 5 year spread product in that same sector. Real money in Japan has bought 7s and 10s.

Several news articles have noted that for the first time since man learned to walk erect German 10 year yields are trading below 10 year japan yields. Credit a very poor 10 year JGB auction last night for that result. That has weighed on sentiment in the long end of the Treasury market,too.

Diminished Liquidity in Treasury Market

February 3rd, 2015 5:38 am

This is an excellent article via Bloomberg on the diminished levels of liquidity in the Treasury market. Thanks to a long time reader for the heads up on this one.

Via Bloomberg:

The Treasury Market’s Legendary Liquidity Has Been Drying Up

(Bloomberg) — Trading Treasuries keeps getting tougher and tougher.

For decades, the $12.5 trillion market for U.S. government debt was renowned for its “depth,” Wall Street’s way of talking about a market’s ability to handle large trades without big moves in prices. But lately, that resiliency has practically vanished — and that’s a big worry.

Less depth has meant greater volatility. So Treasuries — the world’s haven asset during turmoil — may be prone to more disruptions, particularly as the Federal Reserve prepares to raise interest rates. And if investors begin to doubt whether they’ll still be able to buy and sell on a moment’s notice, that has the potential to elevate the U.S.’s cost to borrow.

How much depth has the market lost? A year ago, you could trade about $280 million of Treasuries without causing prices to move, according to JPMorgan Chase & Co. Now, it’s $80 million.

“It’s something that we all have to deal with,” James Sarni, a money manager at Payden & Rygel, which oversees $85 billion, said from Los Angeles. “There’s a possibility that we may want to get out of things at a time when we can’t get out.”

The shift reflects the unintended consequences of new financial regulations, which have made bond dealers less willing to hold inventory and facilitate trades, as well as the Fed’s debt purchases to shore up the economy.

The implications of a less-liquid Treasury market extend beyond Wall Street because it’s the benchmark for governments, businesses and individuals when they borrow.

Flash Crash

“The Treasury Department is constantly monitoring liquidity across all financial markets,” spokesman Adam Hodge said in an e-mail. “The Treasury market is the deepest and most-liquid market in the world and we are committed to ensuring that it remains that way.”

Diminishing market depth and a surge in volatility were both on display Oct. 15, when Treasuries experienced the biggest yield fluctuations in a quarter century in the absence of any concrete news. The swings were so unusual that officials from the New York Fed met the next day to try and figure out what actually happened.

The Fed declined to comment on the risks of increasing volatility, according to spokeswoman Susan Stawick.

Since then, the ability to trade Treasuries quickly and easily has shown few signs of improving. JPMorgan, one of the 22 primary dealers that trade with the Fed, estimates the amount of 10-year notes available to buy or sell at one time without moving prices has fallen more than 70 percent in the past year.

Bond Universe

The measure is based on the average size of the best three bids and offers on ICAP Plc’s BrokerTec trading platform during the U.S. morning. Liquidity is being squeezed as the precarious outlook for global growth has everyone piling into Treasuries.

“There aren’t enough bonds on the planet to satisfy all the buying,” said Charles Comiskey, the New York-based head of Treasury trading at Bank of Nova Scotia, a primary dealer.

Yields on 10-year notes have plunged a half-percentage point in the best start to a year since 1988 as consumer prices tumbled in Europe, China’s economy showed signs of faltering and central banks around the world stepped up stimulus to head off the specter of deflation.

As Wall Street dealers offer fewer bonds at a given price to contend with the onslaught of demand, volatility has increased. Average intraday swings for Treasuries are the now most pronounced since October, data compiled by JPMorgan show.

Blame Game

They “haven’t wanted to take the other side of trades,” said Alex Roever, the Chicago-based head of U.S. interest-rate strategy at JPMorgan. “It’s just part of the fabric of the market. Dealers are not able or willing to take as much risk, because of the position it puts them in.”

New rules adopted after the credit crisis in 2008 to limit risk-taking are partly to blame, according to Roever.

Firms with bond trading desks have slashed inventories in response to regulations such as Basel III and the Volcker Rule. Primary dealers have reduced their U.S. debt holdings more than 80 percent to $24.5 billion from a record high in October 2013, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

New supply has also been constrained by central banks such as the Fed, which have stockpiled government bonds as part of their stimulus, adding $10 trillion to their balance sheets.

“The markets have been dramatically less liquid over the course of the last five years,” said Elaine Stokes, who helps manage the $24.3 billion Loomis Sayles Bond Fund in Boston. Like many other funds, Stokes said her firm avoids “flipping in and out” of bonds and is instead holding onto the ones they buy.

Not Broken

As a result, only 4.1 percent of Treasuries changed hands each day last year, the least in records dating back to 1998, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

Although liquidity is a problem for many types of debt securities, there’s little reason to think the Treasury market is broken, according to Peter Yi, director of short-term fixed income at Northern Trust Corp., which oversees $934 billion.

Primary dealers reported an average $500 billion a day in trades of Treasuries last year, about 3 percent below the average over the prior five years.

Price swings of Treasuries as measured by Bank of America Corp.’s MOVE Index are still far below levels before the financial crisis, even after surging more than 65 percent since August. Yields on 10-year Treasuries are approaching record lows and ended at 1.64 percent last week. They rose to 1.66 percent on Monday in New York.

‘Big Shock’

“The Treasury market still remains the most-liquid market in the world,” Yi said from Chicago. “We still feel pretty confident that you can sell out of Treasury securities.”

That’s OK when everyone wants to buy. But when the Fed starts raising rates, there’s bound to be pain as investors rush to sell, said Bank of Nova Scotia’s Comiskey.

He says bond buyers have become too complacent that yields will stay low and are ignoring signs the Fed is determined to boost borrowing costs as joblessness declines and the U.S. economy strengthens — even if inflation remains subdued.

While futures traders are betting the Fed will wait until December before raising rates from close to zero, St. Louis Fed President James Bullard said on Jan. 30 in New York that rates could increase as soon as midyear. Bullard said he also sees the potential for a bubble in government debt.

“If there’s not concern, there ought to be,” Comiskey said. “That’s going to be the big shock.”

To contact the reporters on this story: Liz Capo McCormick in New York atemccormick7@bloomberg.net; Daniel Kruger in New York at dkruger1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Dave Liedtka at dliedtka@bloomberg.net; Michael Tsang at mtsang1@bloomberg.net Michael Tsang, David Gillen

 

FX

February 2nd, 2015 6:44 am

Via Marc Chandler at Brown Brothers Harriman:

 

Today at 6:38 AM