Showing posts with label cross currency basis swap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cross currency basis swap. Show all posts

Sunday, September 22, 2019

The US Federal Reserve Has Lost Control: As Repo Rates Skyrocket, Rumblings in US Money Markets Reverberate Across the World!



NEGATIVE Repo Rates can happen when there is a shortage of cash or particular collateral security, like negative-yielding bonds, are put up to borrow against. Therefore, trying to borrow against a negative-yielding bond can present a crisis. The standard Repo contracts, such as the Global Master Repurchase Agreement (GMRA), have been drafted under the implicit assumption that general collateral (GC) Repo Rates would only ever be positive—Martin Armstrong

The US Federal Reserve Has Lost Control: As Repo Rates Skyrocket, Rumblings in US Money Markets Reverberate Across the World!

From Yahoo/AFP: (September 20) The New York Federal Reserve Bank said Friday it will inject billions into the US financial plumbing on a daily basis for the next three weeks in an effort to prevent a spike in short-term interest rates. The Fed will offer up to $75 billion a day in repurchase agreements -- exchanging secure assets for cash for very short periods -- through October 10, it said in a statement. In addition, it will offer three 14-day "repo" operations of at least $30 billion each. Banks have struggled in recent days to find the cash needed to meet reserve requirements which has pushed up short-term borrowing rates, prompting the New York Fed to pump billions into US money markets with repo operations over the past four days. However, in a sign a cash crunch could be easing, demand for liquidity on Friday did not significantly exceed the amount offered, as it had on two prior days. After October 10, the New York Fed will "conduct operations as necessary to help maintain the federal funds rate in the target range, the amounts and timing of which have not yet been determined." [bold mine]

The US Federal Reserve has been forced to respond to magnified signs of instability in the money markets as evidenced by rocketing of Repo Rates that has caused considerable dislocations on the Fed’s floor monetary system.

Operating under an ample reserves framework, by establishing a “floor” or a limit at which bank lending of reserves with other counterparties, the rate of interest rate on excess reserve (IOER) supposedly influences the Fed Fund rates as “No bank would lend reserves to another bank at a rate less than the rate it could receive by simply keeping cash parked at the Fed”. (Ng and Wessel, May Brookings 2019)

And because of repurchase agreements involve the participation of nonbanks, the overnight-reverse-repurchase agreement rate (ON RRP), one of the three rates in the Fed’s monetary stance supposedly sets a floor on market repo rates. (Money and Banking June 2019)

By the way, repos or repurchase agreement (repo), as defined by the Investopedia represents “a form of short-term borrowing for dealers in government securities. In the case of a repo, a dealer sells government securities to investors, usually on an overnight basis, and buys them back the following day. For the party selling the security and agreeing to repurchase it in the future, it is a repo; for the party on the other end of the transaction, buying the security and agreeing to sell in the future, it is a reverse repurchase agreement.”

But theory and reality has gone asunder.

As free banking wizard George Selgin presciently observed, “If market rates don't keep step with the IOER rate, monetary policy isn't working properly. And if they don't budge when the IOER rate changes, monetary policy isn't working at all…”
Figure 1

The gap between the Effective Fed Fund (EFF) rates and IOER widened to 2009 levels. Negative spreads between the EFF and IOER emerged as far back in late March of this year. ON RRP rocketed past 2008 and 2001 recession levels last week. ON RRP has been ascendant since 2016! (see figure 1)

The consensus have dismissed and rationalized these to the “$35 billion money market outflows to fund September 15th quarterly corporate tax payments; settlements for outsized Treasury auctions; and the approaching end to the quarter (where money center banks generally reduce balance sheet leverage for financial reporting and regulatory purposes)”, however as some astute pundits have been pointing out, the scramble for short term liquidity didn’t happen overnight; it had been building through time intensifying as it ages.

Should such money market turmoil be ignored in the face of today’s uncharted environment where USD-CNY has broken the 7-threshold, sovereign bonds with negative yields which recently hit a $17 trillion as bond yields etched record low around the world, inverted yield curves gripped advanced economies, systemic leverage running at uncharted levels, global central bank in a rush to slash rates*, US financial assets at a historic 5.6x GDP, and others…?
Figure 2

*As a side note, rate cuts were announced by the US Federal Reserve (2nd for the year), Bank Indonesia (3rd time), Peoples’ Bank of China (2nd cut on loan rate), and Hong Kong Monetary Authority (2nd) this week. In contrast to the general trend, Norway’s Norges Bank increased its policy rate for the fourth time in 2019. (figure 2)

Should these just be considered coincidences? It can’t be. The perspicacious Doug Noland of the Credit Bubble Bulletin explicates: (bold added)

It is surely No Coincidence that this week’s “repo” ructions followed last week’s spike in yields and resulting deleveraging. Is it a Coincidence that the marketplace experienced a powerful “rotation” that saw the favorite stocks and sectors dramatically underperform the least favored? Is it a Coincidence that hedge fund long/short strategies have been clobbered, in what evolved into a powerful short squeeze and dislocation? Surely, it’s No Coincidence the so-called “quant quake” foresaw this week’s quake in the repo market.

Let’s expand this inquiry. Is it a Coincidence that this week’s money market upheaval followed by a few months dislocation in the Chinese money market? And is it mere Coincidence that U.S. money market instability erupted on the heels of the ECB’s decision to restart QE?

There are No Coincidences. Chinese money market issues and currency weakness were fundamental to the global yield collapse. Trade war escalation risked pushing China’s vulnerable Credit system and economy over the edge. Global central bankers responded to sinking bond yields with dovish talk and monetary stimulus, feeding the unfolding bond market dislocation. Collapsing market yields and dovish central banks stoked melt-up dynamics in stocks and sectors seen benefiting from a lower rate environment. Growth stocks were caught up in speculative melt-up dynamics, while short positions in underperforming financials and small caps were popular hedging targets. Both momentum longs and shorts became Crowded Trades

The world doesn’t operate in a vacuum. And actions have intertemporal consequences.

Figure 3

And why have primary dealers been hoarding USTs and why the accelerated stashing of these in 2019? (figure 3)

The brilliant exponent of the Eurodollar, Mr. Jeffrey P. Snider from Alhambra Partners explains: (bold mine)

How do we know which is which? Very, very easy. Every single price and yield up and down the curve says there is and has been overwhelming demand in the financial public for UST’s. So much so, people and financial entities are willing to pay premiums on them, to gain less in yield for UST’s than they would through other financial alternatives (such as the Fed’s reverse repo; why are T-bills yielding less than the RRP if there isn’t excessive demand for T-bills?)

If you are in the camp of dealers stuck with UST’s, then special factors. If you instead look at actual price evidence and apply basic common sense, dealers purposefully hoarding UST’s, unwilling to part with them apparently at any price, then you appreciate the significance of building systemic pressures which is instead more and more exposed by what are normal calendar bottlenecks no one would ever otherwise notice. The problem is therefore so much bigger than the fiscal US government deficit. Systemic monetary problem.

At the same time, DTCC’s agency fails have been climbing since June 2019. (figure 3 middle window) Collateral settlement fails, according to the DTCC, could be anchored from miscommunication, constrained technology, insufficient collateral, and counterparty insolvency.

When aggregate “fails” on a particular security balloon, it is likely a symptom of the scaling of bottlenecks and shortages of collateral settlements. And when reinforced by counterparty problems, the issue becomes systemic.

And now we proceed to the relationship between repo rates and swaps.

From Bloomberg Yahoo (September 20): Meanwhile, the costs of borrowing dollars in funding markets is still elevated. In currency swap markets, handing over yen in return for dollars for one week -- a time period which covers the crucial month end -- now costs you the equivalent of 2.4% on an annualized basis. It was just 0.2% a week ago. The same is true in cross-currency basis -- where banks and financial institutions can swap floating-rate payments in different currencies -- with the premium for the Australian dollar over its U.S. counterpart collapsing by the most in eight years during Asian trading hours on Friday. Finally, the spread between U.S. Treasuries and interest rate swaps reached a record low Wednesday. That’s an indication that traders are getting anxious about the rate at which they can finance bonds, and are starting to use swaps instead. [bold mine]

In other words, the US dollar scarcity has been spreading across the US financial markets, and subsequently, around the world.

Back to Mr. Snider: And so, ultimately, if dealers aren’t willing to sell UST’s, and that’s what all the evidence says, why would they be hoarding them like this? Not because they fear a breakdown in fed funds, the Fed being backward about everything, but because they recognize the non-trivial risks of a breakdown in repo – which is merely confirmed by the increasingly abnormal behavior in fed funds as in other more relevant and important markets like swaps.

The mainstream has advocated several fixes to the current bout of money market tremblor led by the re-imposition of LSAP or Quantitative Easing (QE) and or the Standing Repo Facility (SRF) among others.

Good luck with that.

Sunday, August 04, 2019

US-China Growing Friction: The Thucydides’ Trap in Motion; Flight to Safety? Record Global Negative Bond Yields and Surging Gold Prices

US-China Growing Friction: The Thucydides’ Trap in Motion; Flight to Safety? Record Global Negative Bond Yields and Surging Gold Prices

US-China Friction: The Thucydides’ Trap in Motion
Figure 1

The first tweet is from the New York Times reporting the withdrawal of the US administration from the Intermediate-Range Nuclear Forces Treaty (INF).  The offshore yuan’s near low record close last Friday as reported by the South China Morning Post’s tweet.  Displayed in the lowest window is Bloomberg’s 5-year chart of the offshore yuan, the CNH.

These unfolding events are interrelated and don’t exist in isolation.

These are part of the pieces of a puzzle falling into place.

The other pieces:

-Hong Kong’s massive popular protest against the Chinese government, which the Xi government blames on US government meddling.  The Chinese military, the People’s Liberation Army PLA, has been threatening to intervene in Hong Kong’s riots. If they do, what happens to the one country two systems?

-The Chinese government suspended individual tourists from entering Taiwan, which the latter’s government protested. Such actions appear to be in response to the Taiwanese President’s recent visit to the US, the proposed US government’s $2.2 billion worth of arms sales in early July and a US warship sailed through the Taiwan Straits a week ago that stirred friction. Taiwan alsoreported test-firing missiles as military exercises were held by the Chinese government nearby. Likewise reported last week was a collision between a Chinese warship and a Taiwanese freighter near a Taiwan controlled island.

-North Korea, a staunch ally of the Xi government, was reported to have carried out its 3rd missile test in just over a week.

-The buildup of China’s military forces at South China Seas appears to be intensifying with a reported secret deal for Cambodia to host a Chinese military base. Last week, the Philippine defense minister accused the Chinese Government of “bullying” over claims in the South China Sea.

-Following the US Trump’s “let us down” diatribe on Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s 25 bps cut, the Trump administration decided toslap 10% tariffs $300 billion in Chinese imports.

-China’s biggest bank, the Industrial and Commercial Bank of China, has reportedly rescued Bank of Jinzhou with a Rmb3bn ($436m) representing a 10.82% stake. Notes the Financial Times, “Investors have grown concerned over the health of the Chinese banking system in recent weeks following the government takeover of Baoshang Bank, the first such incident in nearly two decades.”

-and other factors (repression of the Chinese minorities, e.g. Uyghurs, Tibetans etc.)

As Doug Noland of the Credit Bubble Bulletin opined,

“The administration is hellbent on cornering the wounded animal. China’s historic financial and economic Bubbles are in trouble. Beijing has been working intensively to stabilize its money market and corporate lending markets. More generally, China’s overheated Credit system has become deranged. Financial conditions have recently tightened dramatically for small banks and financial institutions, while real estate finance remains in a runaway speculative Bubble blow-off. System Credit is on track to approach a record $4.0 TN this year, as Credit quality rapidly deteriorates…”

“President Trump sees the opportunity to use China’s weakened economy to extract trade concessions. As it drifts closer to a systemic crisis of confidence, Chinese finance is the more pressing issue. Remember how such circumstances tend to unfold: very slowly then suddenly quite quickly.”

The offshore yuan’s near-record low has signified a symptom of the escalating cracks in China’s economy, which was punctuated by this week’s second bank bailout by the largest state-owned.

With increased vulnerability, China’s slowing economy has been percolating to the political front, domestically and internationally.

And US President Donald Trump, with eyes on the 2020 re-election, could be pressuring its central bank, the US Federal Reserve, to ease to support the stock market, whose record highs he has owned, and the statistical GDP. Mr. Trump may have also used its bilateral trade relations with China as a fulcrum to influence the FED’s policies. Yes, the Executive branch now determines US monetary policy, as well as, the world.

And trade wars aren’t just about trade per se, but about including demand for changes in the domestic political institutions and geopolitical sphere of influence, which the Chinese government has been pushing back.

Put differently, decaying relational frictions between US and China haven’t been limited to trade but have been expanding to cover geopolitics, which reeks of the Graham Allison’s Thucydides’ trap defined as the rivalry between an established power and a rising one often ends in war.

And as China’s highly fragile economy reels from its massive scale of malinvestments built from an overdose of debt and which if pressured more by the US through trade tariffs and other barriers and by political pressures (Taiwan, Hong Kong, South China Sea, INF…et.al.); justifying these as provocations, the Xi Government may respond with military actions!

Through the escalation of geopolitical impasse, the dynamics of the Thucydides’s trap has been in motion.

There have been an estimated more than 130k Chinese workers (Pogo, construction, etc…) some living in reported exclusive enclaves, plus about 1.4 million Chinese tourists in the Philippines. Though the Philippine government denies this, how many of them work as undercover agents of the PLA? Should a conflict between the US and China breakout, will these PLA cells not be used to sabotage military targets of their adversary here?

Panic Buying Bonds, Record Negative Yielding Bonds, US Dollar Illiquidity and Surging Gold Prices!
Figure 2

Panic buying of global treasuries intensified last week.

Negative yields spread to Germany’s 30-year bund, a first-ever. Yields of 10-year US Treasuries plummeted to 2016 levels. Yields of Canada’s 30-year bonds relative to its overnight rates turned negative the first since 2008!
Figure 3

Supply of negative sub-zero bonds hit broke through $14 trillion last week. On Friday, a whopping USD 621.2 billion, thesecond-biggest single-day jump, pushed global negative-yielding bonds to a record $14.52 trillion! Also, a record 43% of global bond markets outside the US trade at negative territory!

Subzero rates don’t imply profuse liquidity conditions.

Cross currency markets have signaled higher borrowing cost on the USD, reaching their highest level this year!

Instead of borrowers paying interest to lenders, negative-yielding bonds mean the opposite, lenders paying borrowers to borrow: a negative return of investment for fixed income instruments! Capital consumption!

Have the panic buying of negative-yielding fixed income instruments been about momentum? Or have it been about frontrunning of global central banks in anticipation of massive money printing operations? Aside from the FED, central banks of Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Hong Kong, Russia, Turkey, and Saudi Arabia cut interest rates last week.

Or have the frantic bids on treasury markets have been about collateral, paying governments to safe keep assets?
Figure 4
It’s easy to see why.

The global economy increasingly has borne the onus of the US dollar illiquidity. The global manufacturing index has transitioned to a contractionary phase, raising the risk of a global recession.

In the meantime, foreign governments and central banks have been piling on into expanding the US dollar payment buffers,through the swiftly growing repo pool, contributing to higher costs of currency swaps.

And increasing strains in the global economy, financial conditions, and the geopolitical sphere have been prompting global central banks to stockpile on gold reserves, a 3-year high. Gold prices reach multi-year highs this week.

Have all these have been pointing to a bullish stock market? Or to the heightening risks of a violent adjustment process?

Can global central banks, now powered by President Trump, stave off the fast decaying global financial and economic, as well as, geopolitical conditions from aggravation?