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Below is a commentary published at Institutional
Advisors on 21 February 2005.
Well, pretty much everything that could go wrong went wrong for bonds last
week. First we had illustrious individuals like Master Al, Chairman of the
Fed and Paul McCulley, spokesperson for the world's largest, most successful
bond fund (how do these guys do it anyway, having been beared up on bonds for
the better part of the past year and a half???) telling us what a conundrum
it is to have bond yields at such outlandishly low levels. Then we had mostly
bond negative economic news on the growth front and especially on the inflation
front. And then, as if all that was not enough, the French announced that they
planned to introduce a new 50 year government issue. This got the rumour mill
going about potential reopening of the 30 year supply tap in US Treasuries
as well. As a result we are back to where we started the year on 10 year Treasury
Notes at 4.25%.
NOTEWORTHY: It was mostly ugly news for bonds on the economic data
front last week. Jobless Claims continue to show strength. Building Permits
are at all-time highs, the Philly Fed Survey bounced back 10 points (from 13
to 23) and - the real bond killer - core-PPI was up 0.8% in January. Not many
seemed to pay attention to consumer sentiment deteriorating or Leading Indicators
clocking a negative reading for the 6th time in the past 8 months. As far as
Master Al's testimony was concerned, politicians were largely unconcerned with
rising rates, all they wanted to drill him about was Bush's Social Security
Plans. It was rather amusing to read the left wing commentary (Krugman in the
NYT) branding Mr. G. as another partisan hack for his perceived support of
Social Security privatization, while the right wing press (Bloomberg columnist
John Berry) was kind enough to describe how that same Mr. G. undermined the
administration's plans on the same issue. The guy gets no respect, but on the
other hand he did manage to talk the bond market down for a couple of days
anyway. Next week shapes up to be sedate relative to last. Bond market participants
will pay extra attention to the CPI data to be released in Wednesday to see
if it confirms the rise observed on the PPI front last week.
INFLUENCES: Fixed income portfolio managers still bearish. (RT survey
was up 1 point to 41% bullish. I need to see this number closer to 50% to turn
negative on bonds.) The latest JPM portfolio manager survey finally achieved
perfection at 0% (yes folks, that is 0 as in ZERO, NADA, ZILCH) bulls. It don't
get much better than this. Specs are now long 45k T-note contracts (versus
a short position of 6k last week), which is neutral sentiment. The ‘smart
money' commercials are still long a bullish 155k contracts (an decrease of
65k from last week's 220k). Bonds are in corrective mode. Market seasonals
are negative going forward.
RATES: US Long Bond futures closed at 113-30, down close to $2 on the
week, while the yield on the US 10 year bond was up 18 bps to 4.26%. My bias
remains positive. The market needs to stay below 4.30% in 10s and 4.75% in
the long end to retain its positive bias. Until those levels are convincingly
broken, I consider this setback as a buying opportunity in a bull market. Until
positions and sentiment become less bearish, the dips will be shallow and the
market will continue to power to lower yields. The Canada - US 10 year spread
moved in 10 to -2 basis points. We are officially neutral on this spread at
this point. Dec05 BA futures closed the week 66 basis points through Dec05
EuroDollar futures, which was out 5 basis points from last week's close. At
62 it was an official trade recommendation to buy EDZ5 to sell BAZ5. A weakening
Canadian dollar should provide support for this spread to narrow. The belly
of the Canadian curve was a snick wider to the wings last week, but the belly
is still cheap. Selling Canada 3.25% 12/2006 and Canada 5.75% 6/2033 to buy
Canada 5.25% 6/2012 was at a pick-up of 52 basis points. As the curve continues
to flatten, the belly should continue to outperform. Assuming an unchanged
curve, considering a 3-month time horizon, the total return (including roll-down)
for the Canada bond maturing in 2012 is the best value on the curve. In the
long end, the Canada 8% bonds maturing on June 1, 2023 continue to look like
very good value.
CORPORATES: Corporate bond spreads were stable last week. Long TransCanada
Pipeline bonds were unchanged at 110, while long Ontario bonds were in .5 to
46.5. A starter short in TRAPs was recommended at 102 back in February 2004.
Credit spreads are still excessively tight; there is loads of room to the wider
side. Quality corporates should be favoured over lower rated issues. As my
colleague Bob Hoye mentioned in his Pivotal Events last week, one way to look
to position a trade to take advantage of widening high yield spreads is through
shorting MSD. MSD is the Morgan Stanley Emerging Markets Debt Fund listed on
the NYSE. This is a good instrument for retail investors to consider trading
in as a proxy for high yield bonds. It offers some diversification within the
emerging debt market, it is Exchange traded, so it can be bought or sold (shorted)
just like a stock. The chart on MSD looks like it is topping after a solid
run. Investors looking for exposure in the high yield space should consider
shorting this instrument.
BOTTOM LINE: I remain positive on bonds. The US front end is stuck
in the mud, but it is still cheap and seems to get cheaper. An overweight position
in the belly of the curve is still recommended for Canadian accounts. Short
exposure for the corporate sector was advised since February 2004. Sell BAZ5
to buy EDZ5 at a pick-up of 62 bps or better was recommended a few weeks back.
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Levente Mady,
Institutional Advisors
The data and comments provided above are for information
purposes only and must not be construed as an indication or guarantee of any
kind of what the future performance of the concerned markets will be. While
the information in this publication cannot be guaranteed, it was obtained from
sources believed to be reliable. Futures and Forex trading involves a substantial
risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Please carefully consider
your financial condition prior to making any investments.
Copyright © 2004-2008 Institutional Advisors
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