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Showing posts with label Bank of Japan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bank of Japan. Show all posts

Friday, November 17, 2017

Vulnerability in the High Yield and Leveraged Loan Markets

This is a research report I wrote up earlier today on a specific vulnerability that worries me in the riskier areas of fixed income. 

Summary
Over eight years after the end of the Great Recession, the economic recovery that has slowly but surely powered the United States into a 4.1% unemployment rate and sent stock market indexes to dozens of record highs this year has now spread around the globe. With heavy-handed support from leading central banks, financial markets are thriving, with suppressed volatility and generally-positive economic data supporting both advanced and emerging economies. Unconventional monetary policies employed by G20 central banks, particularly the European Central Bank (ECB) and Bank of Japan (BOJ), have led to an asymmetric recovery in certain sectors of global financial markets, however, whether directly or indirectly. In this report, unconventional monetary policies will be connected to the increasing deterioration of covenants in riskier sections of the fixed income market, and concerns over systemic risk posed by such sectors of the fixed income market will be outlined.








            Introduction
In response to the 2007-2008 financial crisis and succeeding deep recession, central banks in advanced economies found that their conventional monetary policy tools were not as effective as desired. Faced with the zero lower bound dilemma, leading central banks asserted themselves into uncharted territory with the use of new monetary policy measures. The most visible and widely-discussed tool at hand was that of quantitative easing (QE), the process by which a central bank purchased their nation’s sovereign debt (for the ECB, up to 33% of each EU member’s sovereign debt), in a bid to stimulate the economy and lower borrowing costs for consumers. Through such QE operations, the G4 central banks (the Federal Reserve, the ECB, the BOJ and the Bank of England) purchased securities that sent their balance sheets to a combined 37.4% of their cumulative GDP.

Figure 1. Source: Bloomberg
            The composition of the balance sheets for each central bank vary, however. For example, the Federal Reserve invested its $4.5 trillion balance sheet primarily in Treasury securities, as well as agency debt and mortgage-backed securities (MBS):

Figure 2. Source: Bloomberg
            In contrast, the European Central Bank has accumulated nearly 33% of each European Union member’s sovereign debt, the threshold of which was set by the Bank and is unlikely to be increased due to German opposition to the continuation of QE. The ECB also undertook significant purchases of corporate bonds, a program which also is still ongoing. The Bank of Japan has employed the most unconventional monetary policy of the G4 banks, and perhaps of the world. Indeed, the BOJ now employs ‘Quantitative and Qualitative Easing’ (QQE) and ‘Yield Curve Control’ (YCC), as well as maintaining a benchmark interest rate of -0.4%. The YCC portion involves the Bank of Japan maintaining the 10-year Japanese government bond yield at a rate of around 0.00%. The Bank had stepped in with offers to buy an unlimited amount of bonds at a rate of 0.11% earlier this year, when the 10-year yield began climbing, in a motion similar to that of a central bank offering to defend its currency peg if necessary. As part of its QQE program, the Bank of Japan now holds significant stakes in the Japanese sovereign debt market, Japanese corporate debt, Japanese stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs), all in bids to suppress volatility and encourage consumer spending.
            The successes and failures of these varied monetary easing programs are not for discussion in this report. Rather, we aim to focus in on the Federal Reserve’s quantitative easing operations, and its consequences as reflected on riskier portions of the fixed income market- namely, leveraged loans and the high-yield corporate debt sectors.

            The Federal Reserve’s QE program was designed to decrease borrowing costs for consumers, and the suppressed nature of the 10-year Treasury note yield shows that this has happened.


Figure 3. Source: Bloomberg
            With Treasury yields continuing to plumb record low levels over the last several years due to the Federal Reserve’s QE, investors have been driven to riskier assets in their search for yield. A primary beneficiary of this tactic (a deliberate one, at that) has been the stock market, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite setting over 100 record closes combined this year. While this is due in large part to investor enthusiasm over the expected agenda of President Donald Trump, stock markets were strong and looking stronger in the months leading up to the 2016 presidential election.
            In a sign of investors’ search for yield, even riskier assets have seen stronger returns than stocks. A prime example of this is the return offered on Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s High Yield corporate bond index.


Figure 4. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis – FRED.
            On an indexed basis, where the beginning of the 2007-2009 recession was set to 100, the S&P 500 has seen its value increase by a multiple of 1.8, through the end of October 2017. BAML’s High Yield Total Return Index, however, has seen its value more than double over the same period, appreciating by a multiple of nearly 2.2 through October 2017. It is no secret that investors who favored junk bonds over the last eight years have been handsomely rewarded- even today, the effective yield of BAML’s High Yield corporate bond index still tracks above the 10-year U.S. Treasury note, but that’s where the concern starts.


Figure 5. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis – FRED
            The effective yield has hit record lows on multiple occasions since the end of the previous recession, with the most recent nadir in 2014, though even today junk bonds hold a slim premium over Treasuries.
            Let’s recall the purpose of a premium. We first recognize that U.S. Treasuries are the risk-free rate, as the U.S. government will not default on its debt (this has been called into question over the last decade, but for all intents and purposes, we will leave this assumption undisturbed). To hold an asset that is riskier than Treasuries, therefore, leaves investors demanding compensation for retaining that risk. Such compensation comes in the form of a premium, the higher yield compared to Treasuries. Relative to Treasuries, highly-rated investment grade corporate bonds (i.e. AAA-rated or AA-rated) will trade with a small premium to Treasuries, as they are quite unlikely to default. Riskier corporate bonds, such as A-rated bonds, will contain a larger premium with their correspondingly-higher risk, and so on. Junk bonds, sitting at the bottom of the ladder, are those with the highest risk, and thus the highest premium… until this economic expansion.


Figure 6. Source: Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis – FRED
            Above is a graph depicting the spread between Moody’s Seasoned Baa-rated corporate bond yield and the 10-year Treasury note yield, in percentage points. While we remain above the record lows reached prior to the 2007-2009 recession, we continue trudging further down the scale. This depression of the spread indicates investors are willing to receive less of a premium to hold these risky bonds over U.S. Treasuries, as investors continue to hunt for yield.
            At first blush this chart is not all that impressive, but let’s view it in tandem with Figure 5. The Baa-10 year Treasury spread in Figure 6 is low, but the effective yield of BAML’s High Yield corporate bond index is at or near record lows. So, while the premium for Baa corporate bonds isn’t as low as it was in 2006, the actual yield of those Baa corporate bonds is lower, leaving investors with less income overall. That drive for income we discussed earlier only pushes investors deeper into riskier segments of the financial markets, and makes them more willing to take on risk to receive income. This is an intended consequence of the Federal Reserve’s QE program, but it’s a consequence that is beginning to lead to deteriorating credit conditions.

Credit Boom
            The Federal Reserve’s intent to make investors become more willing to take on risks has combined with the Federal Reserve’s lowering of borrowing costs to increase lending to make a dangerous entity in high yield bonds and leveraged loans. Let us first review the volume of total U.S. corporate bonds, U.S. leveraged loans, and U.S. high yield bonds in a historical sense, respectively.
Figure 1. Source: Bloomberg.

Figure 2. Source: Bloomberg.

Figure 3. Source: Bloomberg.

            It is not difficult to ascertain the trend in the broad corporate bond market. As shown in Figure 1, we are already well past the previous year-to-date record of U.S. corporate bond issuance, with just over $1.7 trillion in corporate debt issued through mid-November. The same is found in the leveraged loan market, with volume once again surging past the previous year-to-date record to clock in now at $1.2 trillion. We are not yet at a new year-to-date record in the U.S. high yield sector, currently in at $300 billion through mid-November. It remains to be seen if a new year-to-date record will be achieved in 2018 or later, but is unlikely to happen this year.
            The volume of these riskier loans is a testament to investors’ increasingly-frenzied hunt for yield. Unfortunately for investors, this has placed the bargaining power in the hands of the lender & debt issuer, given if one investor doesn’t like the terms, another investor that is more driven for income will take those same terms. This has led to a startling deterioration in the quality of investor protections on high yield and leveraged loan securities, as evidenced in the following quote from a Bloomberg article:

“Protections have gotten so lax in the $1 trillion market for U.S. leveraged loans that if an offering comes with decent covenants, lenders take it as a sign that something’s wrong with the deal.
“You do have to think twice when you see a loan with a covenant these days,” says Thomas Majewski, managing partner and founder of Eagle Point Credit Management.
It’s not a crazy assumption in a market where 75 percent of new loans are now defined as “covenant-lite,” meaning a company could, for example, rack up as much debt as it wants regardless of its performance. In such a lenient atmosphere, the reasoning goes, a loan must be a stinker if a borrower has to resort to promising even standard protections.”
            Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-21/safety-becomes-stigma-in-loan-market-that-s-ditching-covenants

Speaking from a common sense viewpoint, one could (and perhaps should) find it alarming that investors continue to eat up leveraged loans which come with increasingly fewer protections for investors. The phenomenon is not limited to the United States, either – in Europe, “cov-lite” loans have emerged as a popular security for those searching for income – despite a different name, the concept of less protection for investors is the same.
Moody’s, which publishes its Covenant Quality Index, has also noted the decline in protections for investors.


Figure 4. Source: https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2017-09-21/safety-becomes-stigma-in-loan-market-that-s-ditching-covenants
            Another quote from the aforementioned article, this time from a Moody’s executive, once again strikes a risk-averse investor as quite alarming.

“ “It’s basically the worst it’s ever been in terms of loan covenant protections,” says Derek Gluckman, senior covenant officer at credit-rating firm Moody’s Investors Service. And that includes the heady pre-crisis year of 2007. ”


Conclusion
It is a sense of dread that many may have felt when looking back on the subprime mortgage industry after it succumbed during the financial crisis. Back then, investors were also hunting for extra income, and the issuance of such securities seemed to benefit all parties involved: the issuer, underwriter and trader for the associated fees and profits, and the homeowner for getting a home. But, of course, it all came crashing down when those investors began to realize just how deteriorated the subprime loans have become.

            It is important to distinguish between the subprime crisis, which was severely exacerbated by a lack of regulation and truly abhorrent lending practices, and this concern over riskier sections of the fixed income market. It remains to be seen how these deteriorating leveraged loans and high yield corporate bonds will fare when (not if) financial conditions begin to tighten. The Federal Reserve is expected to once again increase interest rates next month, and gradual tightening of monetary policy is also expected through the Federal Reserve’s balance sheet tapering. While it remains plausible companies are able to rein in the weakest links of such deteriorating credit instruments, history tells us it’s far more appetizing for both the corporation and the investor to put profits first and handle the consequences later.

Wednesday, October 5, 2016

Everything That Buys Bonds Isn't Gold

I’ve been under the weather for the last two weeks as of this writing, contracting things from strep throat, to a common cold, to a finger infection, to pink eye, and now something with my tonsils. It’s been the less fun part of the school year to date, especially seeing how none of my friends have come up with any of the symptoms I’ve dealt with. The grass is always greener on the other side, as they say. The same can’t be said for gold, however.

TradingView
The big story on the Street from Tuesday came from the battering of Gold, as the price of this commodity fell by about $40 amidst a storm of news that didn’t bode well for the metal. This drop, the biggest in three years, was fueled in large part by hawkish comments from two Federal Reserve regional bank presidents; Loretta Mester of the Cleveland branch, and Jeffery Lacker of the Richmond branch. These comments fall in line with what we’ve seen other higher-ranking Fed officials say in recent weeks, that the economy is more-or-less primed for an interest rate hike. Reports also surface during the day Tuesday that the European Central Bank will aim to back off from its aggressive quantitative easing program, as the world of QE-eligible bonds becomes ever more scarce. This scarcity is in part due to investors unwilling to let go of bonds they already have, and central banks already owning a significant chunk of the sovereign bond market.
The Bank of Japan announced a ‘refocus’ of its QE program at its last meeting, which seemed to adjust their primary goal to maintaining the yield curve, in a sign of surrender that the effectiveness of quantitative easing is on the decline.

The combination of hawkish Fed presidents and signals that central banks may be less willing and/or less able to effectively utilize QE sent the dollar on a tear, with the Dollar Index Spot (DXY) jumping from 95.695 on October 3rd at the close to 96.169 on October 4th at the close. DXY is currently down slightly as I type this around noontime Wednesday, but the effects on gold remain.

As a mere college student, trying to learn as much as I can as things unfold, looking back on gold’s drop reveals that there were signals and reasons to be short gold. In addition to the stream of hawkish comments from Fed members in the last several weeks, technical analysis presented a big signal that gold was due to drop.

TradingView
We saw a flag back in Q1 and Q2 as gold steadily marched upward, and this flag broke off in late May on a downward breakout point. Gold rapidly gained value yet again in late June after Britain’s Leave vote in the referendum concerning membership in the European Union, as investors sought haven assets amidst the shock to the system (you’ll recall JPY also dropped below 100 yen to the dollar immediately after the referendum’s results were announced). From there, gold entered a Descending Triangle, which came to an abrupt end when the metal dropped $40 in its breakout point on Tuesday. Should gold follow the ‘typical’ path in the wake of a Descending Triangle, suppressed prices should continue over the next few weeks.
From there, I see two possible routes for Gold:

1) The Federal Reserve opts to hike benchmark interest rates in its November 1-2 meeting, favoring a relatively strong economy against uncertainty surrounding the presidential election. Gold suffers another drop as USD strengthens. Equities may also take a hit, save for financials, as I don’t believe the markets have fully priced in the potential for a November rate hike.

2) The Federal Reserve does not hike interest rates in its November meeting, citing uncertainty over the election, but strongly suggesting a December rate hike if data continues to support it (of course…). Gold jumps on a combination of election uncertainty and a weaker dollar, but is subject to a correction downward after the election, particularly if Clinton wins, as the markets appear to be heavily pricing in right now.


To summarize, Gold’s pullback was to be expected from a number of viewpoints, including via technical analysis and the continuation of hawkish Federal Reserve members. Other factors could have been used to identify a pullback, but as a college student without regular access to a Bloomberg, those two will have to suffice. Suppressed gold prices compared to the last 4 months are anticipated to persist into November, when a fork in the road comes up as a consequence of the next Federal Reserve meeting.
I’m hoping each night I go to sleep that I’ll wake up and not be sick and/or not feel sick, because the grass is certainly greener when the body feels healthy. And while the grass may get greener for me when I get my full health back, gold’s shine looks to stay a little dulled for the short and medium terms.

Andrew

Thursday, September 22, 2016

Central Banks at Center Stage

I'm typing this post with a case of strep throat, so forgive me if my thoughts seem a bit disjointed or otherwise incomprehensible at times. It just so happens that this past weekend was the much-anticipated Oklahoma vs Ohio State football game, which I had the honor to attend. While the main show was indeed the football game, a number of other factors played an equally important role in the experience. This included nearly coming to blows with a very drunken fellow student, an intense storm just prior to the game's original start time, among other things. This week, while central bank decisions are taking center stage, there are a number of factors working on the exterior of the stage still playing a big role in our current economy.

Let's begin with the latest FOMC forecast for the long-term.

Federal Reserve
The infamous dot plot above shows many FOMC members wishing to hike the benchmark interest rate from 0.25-0.50 percentage points to an average 1.25-or-so percentage point interest rate in 2017, a rather ambitious goal given the global struggles to see stronger economic growth. By 2019, most FOMC members would prefer to see the benchmark interest rate somewhere around 2.50 percentage points, again a rather ambitious outlook and one I'm personally wary of, as we're already in/near year 8 of this economic expansion, making it one of the longest on record. A bull can't run forever.

The vote to maintain the current interest rate of 0.25 to 0.50 percentage points landed at 7-3, a pretty strong signal that some members inside the Fed are getting a little antsy with respect to keeping interest rates low, and I agree. The Fed almost seems scared these days, worried that even a minimal jolt to the economy could bring everything crashing down, and thus the best way to keep things steady is to keep interest rates steady. This mindset has created a whole other level of problems alone, but that's a post for another day.

Federal Reserve
Another interesting graph from the Fed's decision yesterday, and one of those exterior factors dancing around central banks, was the projected PCE inflation. I don't have my protractor on me at the moment, but that's nearly a 90-degree angle from observed PCE inflation through 2015 to projected PCE inflation through 2016. The FOMC is essentially expecting inflation to reverse course and start chugging its way back up at this very moment in time. Unfortunately, the FOMC is notorious for being too optimistic on the future of the economy, particularly in the current expansion. When accounting for this, it becomes difficult to see a 2% PCE inflation mark earlier than 2018.

The Federal Reserve isn't the only central bank that had their monetary policy meeting this week; the Bank of Japan also met up.

At their previous meeting, the Bank of Japan announced it would re-evaluate its current monetary policy, which set off concerns amongst investors if this was a warning shot, if the BoJ might stop pushing ahead with negative interest rates and QE. This week, the Bank of Japan came out and modified their policy slightly, now to a yield-curve based goal. The BoJ will now aim to keep 10-year Japanese government bonds around 0%, and while this is still very accommodative monetary policy, it's also a cessation that plunging further into negative interest rates right now, when the benefits are beginning to be questioned, is not the right move. It's part of a larger cessation that the Bank of Japan is running out of tools, something we've all known for a while, but no one really knew when the Bank would begin realizing that. One could effectively argue that this realization moment came at their last meeting, when the BoJ opted to re-evaluate its policy, but carrying through with that re-evaluation into this week's meeting reaffirms that more than incredibly accommodative monetary policy is needed to stimulate the economy.

Central banks will continue taking center stage, perhaps the Romeo and Juliet of this monetary policy opera. However, Mercutio, Tybalt, and Benvolio are also on stage, and while they aren't the main focus right now, you can bet that what they do will influence what the two main characters do. In our case, inflation, equity pricing, bonds, and more play our 'secondary characters', but their influence down the road will prove anything but.

Andrew

Monday, September 12, 2016

Monetary Easing Wells Running Dry?

As a former meteorology major, I found myself intrigued by how steadfast a drought can be. Case in point, the Southwest remains in a deep drought after several years without a good, prolonged rainfall weather set-up. There was even a rumor or two about some water wells running dry in the Northeast as western New York is experiencing a pretty notable drought at this point. It just so happens that the monetary easing wells across the world may be running dry, too: not for a lack of 'water', but a lack of confidence that pulling up more water will further benefit the global economy.

StockCharts.com
A look back at the last month of trading across the Dow Jones Industrial Average shows how large Friday's drop in stocks was. The index shed just under 400 points on the day, closing down just over 2.1%. Other American equities didn't fare any better, with the Nasdaq dropping 2.55% and the S&P 500 closing down 2.45%.

Global bonds took a significant hit worldwide after Friday's apparent broad turning-of-the-tide in central banks, and yields continue to rise as I type this at roughly 2:00 AM on this Monday. European peripherals are looking a bit shaky, too:

Investing.com
Italy's 3-year government bond yield has risen over 117% as of 0700 UTC Monday, but even as I type this sentence about a minute after that screenshot, the yield has jumped to 139% in the last day. Longer-term bonds are generally showing 2% to 10% gains, with bonds beyond 10 years hovering near 3%. 

Elsewhere, Ireland's 10-year government bond has jumped over 30%, Spain's 10-year and 30-year bonds are both up over 2% in the last day, with their 3-year bond up nearly 70% as of this typing at 0704 UTC. Emerging markets have been acknowledged as a substantial part of the bond rally, as the hunt for yield has bled from developed economies into these riskier, but profit-producing bonds. Now, as we see a global bond sell-off continuing on from Friday into this workweek, one can't help but entertain the thought of what the global economy will look like even a month from now if this kind of anxiety over potential central bank hawkishness persists.

Forgive me, I feel like a guest at a party who's been talking for far too long. Let me introduce how we got here. Back on Friday, global markets began to wake up and smell the reality that is the limits to central bank action. The last week or so has seen the European Central Bank, the Bank of Japan, and the Federal Reserve all display increased hawkish tones in their actions. From the ECB, we saw President Mario Draghi refrain from any further monetary easing. The Bank of Japan was found to be in a tough spot, with concerns that it is running out of debt to purchase as part of its monetary easing program. And, to put it all together, usually-dovish Boston Federal Reserve branch president Eric Rosengren indicated it is plausible that normalization in monetary policy is coming much sooner rather than later. Financial markets reacted quickly and in typical knee-jerk fashion.

StockCharts.com
The CBOE's volatility index (VIX) jumped nearly five points on Friday, up about 40% on the day. Given how low volatility has been since July, some form of rebound in volatility was expected. I like to think of this aggressive monetary easing as the equivalent of feeding the financial markets Xanax, in that it calms the markets, makes everything feel all fine and dandy. But now that there's signs central banks may be backing off, it's quite a sobering reminder and a signal that the 'Xanax effect' in the markets isn't invincible.

Already on this Monday morning, Asian markets took a hint from the American markets on Friday and continued the sell-off. The Nikkei 225 fell by nearly 300 points (1.73%), while Hong Kong's Hang Seng index is currently down about 685 points, or 2.85%. Using stock futures, American and European markets will see the slide continue Monday, and further drops are definitely still on the table, especially if the Fed's Lockhart, a typically-dovish member, turns hawkish. 

The fact of the matter is we're in the ~eighth year of this economic expansion, one of our longest in history. Every peak is followed by a valley, and whether or not the valley is coming sooner rather than later, the reluctance of central banks to continue propping up financial markets may hinder any further expansion, should a halt to easing come to fruition. It's time to start seeing how much central banks are willing to conserve the 'water' in their monetary policy wells, because the well's starting to look a bit dry.

Andrew