Friday, February 19, 2010

First Sign of Reserve Improvements

Great news. Bank reserves have shown the first sign of change for the better.

For January, non-borrowed reserves have finally revealed a down tick. Sure, it's no big change, but it is the first sign. They've been steadily rising as the fed "adds reserves" (aka prints money) to buy agency debt. Note that this down-tick occurred in January while the fed was still adding reserves. That means banks are starting to lend again.

It's no surprise then that the TAF and discount rates were revised this week back toward pre-crisis conditions. No doubt the fed has better data than this nearly month-old update.

Get Paid To Move Your Positions

Normally if you want to transfer your securities from one account to another you have to pay a broker to do that for you. This is certainly a preferred method in taxable accounts, since selling in one and buying in another would trigger a tax consequence and possibly incur significant costs from commissions if you have a lot of positions to move. If your securities are in a tax sheltered account though, you can use options to move those securities and generate income rather than an expense.

Options sell at a premium. If the underlying price is $70.00 and you buy a put option with a strike price of $75, you can expect to pay more than $5.00 for the privileged of selling the position at a higher price than it is at the moment. You can use that to your advantage in this position moving scenario by selling the option in the account where you want the position to be at the same time you sell the underlying in the account you no longer want it.

Here's the dollars and cents of it:

Account A:
Sell 1000 XYZ for $70.00.
Income: $70,000

Account B:
Sell 10 XYZ front month in the money $75 puts for $5.30
Income: $5,300

At Expiration:
Assign $75 put.
Expense: $75,000

Net: $70,000 + $5,300 - $75,000 = $300.

Assuming you aren't doing business with Lame Broker's LLC, the $300 net gain should be well above the cost of commissions.

The key point is you need to make this move when the markets are stable and reasonably predictable so the underlying doesn't shoot up so much in price that your option does not get assigned (unless it is also desired that you be out of the position at the strike price anyway). The days immediately after earnings is a good time to do this as you will get a good idea of price direction, and most market moving surprises about the fundamentals of a company come out at that time.

Thursday, February 18, 2010

The Fed Did Not Raise Rates

Did the Federal Reserve just come out and surprise the world with a "rate hike"? Technically, yes. It all depends on what "is" is. Read the official press release.

Notice this isn't really changing the fundamentals. What really happened was they removed some of the recent "emergency" measures.

On August 17, 2007, the Federal Reserve reduced the spread of the primary credit rate over the FOMC's target for the federal funds rate to 1/2 percentage point, from 1 percentage point, and lengthened the typical maximum maturity from overnight to 30 days.


As we pointed out in "Credit Spreads Expected to Narrow", the business cycle is alive and well. The Federal Reserve basically just sent out a press release to that effect. They've restored the spread and duration to pre-crash conditions. Yea, the spread is still not quite there, but hopefully you get the picture.

This is a change at the discount window and TAF, not fed funds. Bernanke is pushing up that rate to force banks to suck up the fed funds and entice other bond holders to find repurchase funding in the commercial paper markets. We predict it won’t have any impact on lending costs just as they say (since fed funds are still over-supplied), but to the extent the public believes this is something big, there’s some good shorting opportunities for the next day or two.

This is more to do with normalizing the old methodologies than a real rate policy change. The daily Fed Funds market shows no signs whatsoever of "improving conditions" as far as market interest rates in ring-zero financing is concerned.

All through the policy changes leading up to market collapse the Fed Funds data revealed policy changes in the days leading up the public announcements. Expect to see something move there, too, before any real rate increases happens in monetary policy. As it stands the current news is just getting a few markets back to pre-crash normality.

Thursday, February 11, 2010

Credit Spreads Expected to Narrow

This Time Is Not Different


The business cycle is alive and well. If you read the blogs and mainstream media you'll see a lot of bearish sentiment about the destruction of the American economy. Certain things won't be exactly like they were, but the interesting thing we see often is those bearish pessimists keep trying to discredit the optimists by pointing out the fallacy of "this time it's different", meaning this bubble isn't going to thrive any more than the last one.

Well, they're right on one count. The bubble won't thrive better than the last. But the one guilty of clinging to a fallacy are the bears. The "this time it's different" fallacy really points back at them. See, the bears are trying to sell us on the idea that "this time" the business cycle isn't going to happen. No sir, this time we've really shot ourselves and the stock market is just going to go right back down until the entire economic system of the world resets.

Well, maybe we exaggerate their point of view a little, but the essence is there. We contend the business cycle is alive and well and the prudent person will plan accordingly.

So how then do we interpret the budget deficits in light of the business cycle? For background on the business cycle of boom and bust one should go dig around at some of our favorite economic sites:

The Mises Institute
The Foundation for Economic Education
Cafe Hayek

Budget Deficits For Fun and Profit


Budget deficits necessitate a rise in interest rates. To attract money to Treasuries, the price has to fall since people will be competing for better returns in riskier assets. A lower price for Treasuries will attract that money to that instrument along some continuum of risk/reward which differs from one person to another. Meanwhile, the supply of Treasuries is going to be growing. To attract buyers then, the market has to push down the price of Treasuries.

On the off chance (slim as it is) that the government can’t attract buyers from the open market, the central bank will have to monetize the debt to prevent failed auctions. Hence, gold would be a good buy against U.S. dollar dilution by the central bank. This is not only true because of the recent past liquidity measures, but even more so for potential future liquidity efforts, if they arise.

Nevertheless, even if there are no more waves of quantitative easing, the last stimulus will be enough to create a wave of price inflation in the next five years. The recent sell-off in gold was simply profit taking and flight to cash on fears of Euro defaults, accentuated by program trading on the momentum and short term hysteria. Now that has subsided, we can get a wave of movement back toward long-term fundamental expectations based on centuries-old historical expectations of the boom-bust business cycle.

The beauty of this setup is that it implies higher risk in Treasuries than historical norms. Higher risk between Treasuries and corporate bonds means the spread between Treasury and corporate will narrow to the extent that businesses still know how to run a sound business. This translates to basic business-cycle fundamentals acting in opposite directions on the two sides of the spread.

Even though Keynes may not have had the big picture well understood when it comes to long term health of the economy, he was not wrong that government deficit spending stimulates demand for goods and services in the marketplace. Demand for goods and services in the marketplace is good for “business”, which translates into improving business credit default risk as cash flows improve for them.

Given then improving business credit default risks with degrading government credit default risk, we have a nice scenario that translates into narrowing credit spreads between so called "risk free" Treasuries and business risk corporates.

We're not trying to sell the value of the business cycle, or suggest it's a good thing. We simply want to point out it is alive and well. The fundamental factors that create it in the first place aren't gone. Names change and leaders switch places, but the same system that brought us all the other booms and bubbles is going to give you another one. We happen to think the global Q/E policies of every modern nation on the planet is going to make this next one a doozie. The good news is you have plenty of time to prepare for the pop and chaos that ensues from the bust.

For a more entertaining perspective, check out the viral video "Fear the Boom and Bust".

Friday, February 5, 2010

Can demand for credit derivatives really lead to economic decline?

If we read the attempted implications of "Bond Market Vigilantes Sink Stocks" right, Mr. Mirhaydari claims the surge in the CDS market is threatening to raise interest rates on sovereign debt, which will force governments to cut spending and raise taxes to counter the cost of debt, which leads to a double dip recession, which leads to a falling stock market.

It makes perfect sense except for the part about politicians giving any hoot at all about the cost of their debt. Europe certainly has rules about limited deficit spending, but does anyone else that matters to global growth have such constraints?

Still, if the rush for CDS instruments is really the impetus behind recent market movements, that money flow will eventually unwind as the speculators take their profits and look for another ride to get excited about. Maybe the only real connection that makes sense is that institutions that have the clout to speculate with CDS, bonds, equities, and commodities all over the world have found a nice little emotional roller coaster to take out for a spin, after which they’ll whipsaw the markets and ride something else up to hysterical levels when they are ready to take profit out of the CDS markets.

If Mirhaydari is correct we'll see people talking about S&P 500 at 600 within a few months. If our secondary supposition is correct, we should see a strong rebound in stocks and commodities before summer. According to Jim Jubak's analysis of leading and lagging indicators, the latter appears more plausible.