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Is Selling Bonds the Taste of Things to Come?

IMG Auteur
Publié le 16 août 2013
593 mots - Temps de lecture : 1 - 2 minutes
( 2 votes, 4,5/5 ) , 1 commentaire
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SUIVRE : Ubs
Rubrique : Opinions et Analyses

Treasury yields are on the rise as I have noted on numerous occasions recently.

The action has prompted the world’s largest hedge-fund manager, to throw in the towel on treasuries and inflation-linked TIPS.

Please consider Dalio Patched All Weather’s Rate Risk as U.S. Bonds Fell

As the bond market plunged in late June, Ray Dalio convened the clients of Bridgewater Associates LP, the world’s largest hedge-fund manager, to tell them that a fund designed to withstand a broad range of market scenarios was too vulnerable to changes in interest rates.

Bridgewater, citing months of study, said it had underestimated the interest-rate sensitivity of various assets in its All Weather fund and was taking steps to mitigate the risk, according to clients who listened to or read a transcript of the June 24 call. By the end of the month, the Westport, Connecticut-based firm had sold off enough Treasuries and inflation-linked bonds to help reduce the fund’s most rate-sensitive assets by $37 billion, according to fund documents and data provided by investors.

The move, disclosed to investors five days after the Federal Reserve said it’s prepared to phase out its unprecedented bond purchases, was unusual for the fund. As its name suggests, All Weather is designed to produce returns in most economic environments and avoid altering asset allocations when the outlook changes. All Weather incurred a second-quarter loss of 8.4 percent that was primarily tied to its $56 billion portfolio of inflation-linked debt, said the clients, who asked not to be named because the fund is private. ‘A Foretaste’

The decline at All Weather and similar funds, including those run by Cliff Asness’s AQR Capital Management LLC and Invesco Ltd. (IVZ), shows Bridgewater’s pioneering strategy for allocating assets between stocks and bonds, known as risk parity, can leave investors overexposed to rising interest rates. The losses were amplified for some funds by a selloff in inflation-linked securities that also caught Bill Gross’s $262 billion Pimco Total Return Fund (PTTRX) off guard.

“This is just a foretaste of what is going to happen,” said Ramin Nakisa, a global asset-allocation strategist at UBS Investment Bank who co-wrote a March research report titled “When Risk Parity Goes Wrong.” Nakisa called June’s selloff in Treasuries and inflation-linked bonds “a dress rehearsal” for the volatility awaiting when the U.S. Federal Reserve actually begins to taper its bond-buying program, known as quantitative easing.

All Weather trimmed its use of leverage to about 144 percent of net assets at the end of June, according to the clients who requested anonymity. Gross exposures to different asset classes declined to about $116 billion from $138 billion in the quarter, while net assets stayed at $80 billion.
Reflections on Leverage

Lovely. All Weather now has a mere 144 percent leverage? What happens if stocks, bonds, and commodities all take a dive?

Here's the deal: This selloff in treasuries may be over. Or it may not be. Anyone who thinks they know is fooling themselves.

What I do know is leverage works both ways. I also know that the Fed has so distorted the economic horizon that it is next to impossible to predict what's coming down the pike.

Stocks, bonds, and commodities other than gold all rose in union over the past few years. My bet is on an unwinding of that trade.

I see no value in treasuries, no value in corporate bonds, no value in equities, and no value in municipal bonds.

I do see value in gold, so that is where I am. Without leverage. Patiently waiting.

Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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All in all, this was actually a pretty good article by Mish. What made it so is that it speaks of a developing trend in where money is not staying. As you know, i am a big proponent of following the money. i believe that what we are witnessing is the beginning of what will be a great rotation of money out of government paper as folks begin to realize that Bernanke cannot control the interest rate curve.

The question that must be answered is where will the money go? To be sure, it will not all go to the same place. But i think it a very safe bet to assume that most of it will not get parked in banks. Not only do they not pay enough in interest to offset inflation, but it is now an open secret that should a bank get into trouble, the government will not bail them out. It will be the depositors who will be forced to save the banks. And that makes them an extremely poor choice for anyone with a still functioning pre-frontal cortex. Municipal bonds are also not likely to benefit from the rotation out of Treasuries as it is pretty obvious that they are in big trouble (Detroit) and that the Fed will not be coming to their rescue.

Some of it will go to corporate bonds. There are still a number of good, solid companies out there that will not be going away any time soon and things such as pension funds will look to them for both their relative safety and predictable yields. Another area where it will be going--this one not mentioned by Mish--will be into real estate. It is still under valued and so we can expect the formation of capital pools to start buying apartment buildings.... To be sure, we will see some of the money being directed into commodities as more folks become antsy about the ability of government to meet their obligations. Both the actual commodities as well as their producers will benefit. But as i see it, the largest beneficiary of this rotation will be the stock market over the next 2 or so years. Stocks have outperformed every other asset class since 2000 and many also pay dividends. That they pay dividends should not be overlooked, for that is a very attractive feature, especially to seniors living on fixed incomes. i realize that my call on the stock market runs contrary to what most analysts are expecting and may seem foolhardy given that these markets have taken quite a beating of late. But there will be far too much money coming out of government paper looking for a place to land. So let me go way out on a limb here and predict that the Dow will go up to 22,500 within the next 2 years. It is not a call that i feel as confident in as i did with my prediction at the end of March for gold to drop $400, but i do believe that money is going to continue to rotate out of government debt and i know that it has to go somewhere.

Where do you see it going?

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