Discussing Macro Economic Events
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WWDRD?

In yesterday’s Financial Times, an article appeared on Ireland’s increasing yield to would be investors of its sovereign debt. While France and Germany’s two year bonds trade at 2.83% and 2.52% respectively, Spain and Italy’s two year bonds trade 3.13% and 3.38% respectively, Ireland had to offer 25 basis points more than average European Yields.

In today’s Financial Times, further evidence of sovereign debt problems as emerging markets are having a harder time raising funds. Most countries signaled out are running high current account deficits. Translation, the sovereign currencies are poised for a revaluation, aka decline.

With current account deficits, there are no foreign reserves (dollars or Euros) to give investors comfort the debt is guaranteed. Many remember the Asian Financial Crisis, where countries debt was loaned in dollars, ran current account deficits, and were forced into dramatic currency revaluations.

Let’s hope the Federal Reserve’s Swaps work.

But the real question is: Given even Euro denominated Ireland’s problems, what would Dani Rodrik do?

November 7, 2008   No Comments

Two Months left in 2008, LIBOR’s Good News and Bad News

Since the bailout was enacted, three-month LIBOR declined from highs of 4.75% to 3.52%. Further, three-month LIBOR dropped 90 basis points in this last week.

Room to drop?

The market votes yes. Three-month Eurodollar contracts closing in December (the three-month LIBOR futures rate) is pricing at 2.63%. By June, three-month LIBOR is expected to decline to 2.48%.

Context on the market prediction is critical. We must understand how much risk is priced into spreads.

TED Spreads, the base spread of risk between private capital and riskless funds, remain large.

  • Today, three month treasuries yield .93%.
  • Investing in treasuries today for returns in March 31st, 2009 yields 1.2125%.
  • The implied treasury yield matching the Dec EuroDollar Contract is therefore .72%.
  • Further, for three month March LIBOR, projected at 2.50%, equivalent three month Treasuries yield .22%.

So, good news and bad news. LIBOR is declining, but the TED spread remains wide.

As a side note, it is now obvious that Treasury Yields have priced a massive rate cut over the coming months.

October 26, 2008   No Comments

Market highs, but only for TED

Since the First Note, The Government’s Credit Committee, with members Barney Frank, Chris Dodd, and Richard Shelby took more time to get comfortable with Hank Paulson’s proposal.

While the debate in Washington raged on, one month LIBOR increased from 3.19% to 3.70%. Three month LIBOR increased from 3.21% to 3.76%. Commercial Paper increased from 2.50% to 2.70%. Letter of Credit facilities are not expanding. Essentially the way balance sheets are funded is grinding to a halt.

So, how could most corporations raise capital faced with this problem? One answer would be to short treasury securities of the same duration. Simply borrowing the securities, selling them into the market for cash, with the promise to deliver those securities later would do the job.

And why not? Treasury securities expiring on Dec 31 are yielding a paltry 1.02%. Treasury securities expiring on Dec 15 are yielding .68%. Would a betting man believe yields would increase or decrease in the next week? Considering inflation increased over the past year and that the US will sell an additional $700 Billion of debt into the market, yields will most certainly rise.

So, given the demand to short and the rational argument that yields will increase, the fact that the spread is so significant is in fact very significant. Money that normally would buy commercial paper and be infused into interbank offerings is now moving to “quality”. That quality is the United States government backed bonds and notes.

We can quickly examine the balance sheet and income statement of the US Government to know the following:

  1. Liabilities just increased by close to $1 trillion, including Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, AIG and the proposed bailout.
  2. Projected top line tax revenue is expected to decline as housing values sink and oil relief is still far off.
  3. Inflation is still a huge risk.

So how is this quality? The simple answer is that it is not. And if the US Government is not quality, then imagine how much mistrust is in the private market right now. And this is exactly why those shorting trades are not occurring and not helping to re-balance the spread, lowering TED.

For all of 2008 until now, we heard and read the financial sector was amuck, but corporate American remained strong. Yet now, we are conceivably in a macro-economic death-spiral.

  1. If companies continue to be faced with high interest rates and refusal of credit, they will stop expanding.
  2. Further, for all those companies who did not hedge exposure (and with lack of quality counter-parties, it is conceivable this is a lot), they will be forced to pay higher rates of interest now on all existing loans and notes.
  3. To meet higher rates, companies will have to cut expenses, essentially wages. Reductions of wages will depress the economy further.
  4. Consumer spending will continue to decline, making more companies unable to meet existing obligations.
  5. Credit spreads will increase for fear of company credit and the cycle will continue.

This week will be as wild as the last one….

September 29, 2008   No Comments