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  • Speculation is Alive and Well...

    ...and living practically everywhere. Excerpt from an email to me from a long ago retired investment banker friend; source unknown, highlights mine.

    Deflation my azz...there's waaaay too much cheap money chasing stuff out there.

    25 September 2010

    Recent bond market euphoria has given way to talk of a bubble developing. Those who had been crowing about the credit markets being open for business are becoming much more nervous.

    Certainly, the combination of plentiful cash and low interest rates has seen investors scrabbling for yield and the market has responded with a swathe of structures usually associated with the most bullish of bull markets.

    With insurance companies looking at a 4% bogey just to stand still and private bankers aiming a couple of percentage points higher, the resurgence of high-beta products was inevitable. It’s simply a case of “never mind the quality, feel the yield”, as investors ignore some of the lessons of the last crisis and pile into anything that pays.

    Examples of potential excesses abound. Just last week saw the first corporate perpetual from Asia in 13 years when Cheung Kong Infrastructure raised US$1bn. The fact that it came from an unrated and structurally subordinated SPV didn’t seem to matter, with the deal pricing at 6.625% on a US$5.2bn book despite initial whispers at 7%.

    Philippines borrower First Pacific also started discussions on its 10-year offering in the region of 7%, before ending up at 6.375%. Despite this, a deal indicated at US$300m attracted demand of US$3.4bn.

    It was a similar story in Latin America, with Pemex pricing its US$750m non-call five perp at 6.625%, having dropped down from early whispers, again in the 7% area, in gradual instalments, while Brazil’s CSN priced a perp at just 7% the previous week – putting it flat to a 30-year and flying in the face of perceived wisdom that issuers should pay 75bp–100bp for the privilege of perpetuity and the call option.

    As if to underline the point, there was talk last week that Dubai – last heard of in the middle of a debt crisis – is planning a US$1bn return and that Mexico was not only talking about a 100-year bond but also finding people to talk to.

    Despite the exuberance, a few signs were beginning to emerge last week of something of a pushback. A number of deals are drifting in the secondary market as potential follow-on buyers consider the possibility that things have gone too far too quickly.

    Many of the smarter investors who piled into aggressively priced bonds in recent weeks felt somewhat coerced and would need little excuse to dump their holdings should the market show signs of going into reverse.

    Of course, a correction, or even just a pause for breath, could be no bad thing right now, as the bigger a bubble gets, the bigger the bang when it bursts.

  • #2
    Re: Speculation is Alive and Well...

    From the FT:
    Bond holders on collision course with QE2

    By Michael Mackenzie in New York
    Published: September 24 2010 18:42 | Last updated: September 24 2010 18:42

    Rule number one among bond traders: Don’t fight the Fed...

    ...On Tuesday, bond investors were given a very strong signal that the Fed will soon start buying a lot more bonds under a form of monetary policy easing known as quantitative easing or what is being dubbed QE2...

    ...It means one likely outcome should QE2 set sail, is a lot more buying of dollar denominated assets, such as Treasuries, by other central banks.

    And that raises the spectre of a sustained and substantial buying binge of Treasuries that sends yields to rock bottom levels and way beyond their fundamental value.

    If the Fed’s inflation efforts fail, Treasury yields will be very low for a long time, but if the inflation rails are greased by QE2, owning long-term Treasury paper with a paltry yield will hit bond investors hard.

    This places investors in a bind as it’s not wise to fight the Fed and central banks when they want something. But, mindful of the lessons from the mortgage bubble bursting in 2007, investors at some point will probably need to run for the exit from QE2, and fast.


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    • #3
      Re: Speculation is Alive and Well...

      Originally posted by GRG55 View Post
      Deflation my azz...there's waaaay too much cheap money chasing stuff out there.
      The question is, how much stuff is out there, and can it be caught?

      It means one likely outcome should QE2 set sail, is a lot more buying of dollar denominated assets, such as Treasuries, by other central banks.
      Why would anyone other than the FED want to buy U.S. treasuries when they know there's a deliberate attempt to devalue the dollar?

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