Friday, 3 August 2007

Yen to gain as leverage dominoes fall

This is a great article on the structure of the Yen carry trades:

London, August 2 (Reuters) - The great repricing of risk now happening in global markets will undermine the lure of the yen carry trade, supporting the Japanese currency and hitting higher yielders like the New Zealand dollar.

It will take months at a minimum for the near panic now gripping credit markets from mortgages to leveraged loans to be resolved, and it's likely that more shocks will emerge. This means volatility in markets stays high, the appetite for risk is suppressed and everything that involves borrowing money is, on the margin, less attractive.

The carry trade, variously estimated at between $20 billion and $1 trillion, is perhaps the world's biggest bet. It is narrowly defined as borrowing cheaply in yen and buying investments in other currencies that pay a higher rate of interest. But many investors also fund in yen to make bets in any number of markets that they think will go up. The trade, popular with hedge funds which often borrow many times the capital they commit, is sweetness itself, so long as the yen doesn't appreciate.

Official rates in New Zealand, a popular play for carry traders, are at 8.25 percent, against a 0.50 percent overnight rate in Japan, while Iceland boasts a 13.3 percent nominal discounted rate. But, like so many other leveraged bets now coming unstuck, it can be very painful if markets move the wrong way. Thus far the yen has appreciated 3.8 percent on a trade weighted basis during recent tensions, according to Barclays Capital. That will have piled pressure on investors holding leveraged yen short positions.

The New Zealand dollar has been hit, plunging more than seven percent against the yen since July 24. During this period, yen strength has been highly correlated with stock market weakness. Volatility in yen has risen along with other measures, such as the Chicago Board Options Exchanges' Volatility Index <.VIX>, the so-called "fear gauge." "The (yen) needs to be watched closely at this juncture for if its steady appreciation starts to accelerate the walls could come tumbling down on the carry trade and that could make the recent market panic look like a picnic," Bear Stearns currency strategist Steve Barrow wrote in a Wednesday note to clients.

SMALL FRY MAY BALANCE RISKS
But while hedge funds, which may be exposed to other volatile markets, may be quick to rein in carry trade bets, it is an open question if increasingly influential Japanese retail investors will. Japanese salarymen and housewives, not satisfied with puny local interest rates, have been big buyers of high-yielding debt in other currencies, often trading from computers at home or using mobile phones. While the size of this market is hard to measure, some estimates show it accounting for a quarter of all spot foreign exchange trading during Tokyo hours.

These small fry are less aware of global trends and may only capitulate after a long and grinding rise in the yen, rather than because of the latest hedge fund collapse or prime mortgage default. At issue too, is the Bank of Japan, which is expected to raise interest rates to 0.75 percent in late August in a move which would eat into the interest rate differential carry trades exploit. While even a small decrease in the carry trade could have a big market impact, some very bearish analysts are expecting more.

Tim Lee, of piEconomics in Stamford, Connecticut, sees an imminent unwinding of the carry trade. "Over the last few years we have been experiencing an enormous credit bubble that has been based on a willingness to ignore risk, both credit risk and exchange rate risk," he said in an email interview. "Necessarily therefore credit has been drawn in the low interest rate currencies and funds have been placed in the high interest rate currencies. The whole bubble is now beginning to collapse, and the process of collapse cannot be reversed."
By James Saft, a Reuters columnist. The opinions expressed are his own. At the time of publication James Saft did not own direct investments in any securities mentioned in this article. He may be an owner indirectly as an investor in a fund.

Wednesday, 1 August 2007

Future, hedge or just a gamble

This is a really excellent article from The Dominion Post. Well worth the read:

They have been called the glue of the modern economy – and the financial equivalent of weapons of mass destruction. John McCrone ponders the $US500 trillion world of derivatives.

The world economy is worth US$50 trillion (NZ$65.3 trillion). The global derivatives market – the intricate network of bets taken on the world economy – now totals US$500 trillion.

Feeling nervous? Sound anything like a house of cards to you?

A derivative is a financial contract that speculates on something happening to a real-life asset. It is a future, an option, a hedge, a swap, an arbitrage, a securitisation – a gamble, to be blunt. Some say derivatives are the glue that binds the world economy. They explain the relatively smooth ride of recent years. Others say they are toxic, a timebomb, the financial equivalent of weapons of mass destruction. Either way, they have swollen to become the bulk of the financial markets. As in Las Vegas, the casino seems to have taken over the town.

And this must have implications for the ordinary investor.

Many will feel that they can afford to view the derivative markets with bemused detachment. They may have read about the recent subprime mortgage woes in the United States and its connection with exotic financial instruments called CDOs – collateralised debt obligations. Investment bank Bear Stearns is having to stump up US$3.2 billion to cover two of its CDO funds, whose value somehow evaporated overnight. When you hear of some of the crazy US mortgage lending practices, it seems less of a surprise. They have these ninja loans. No income, no job and no assets? No problem. Can't afford the repayments on one house? Well, we will lend you enough to buy five – an instant rental property empire. Your first two years of interest will be dirt cheap and when the real rate kicks in, you simply sell a few places. With rising house prices, everything will be covered. Sweet!

Plainly, some loose lending has been going on. Some of the institutions like Barclays and Merrill Lynch which have lost out big on the Bear Stearns CDOs should really have known better. But the subprime story seems remote. The equation changes, however, if this kind of financial sloppiness is now systemic; if the US$500 trillion stack of trades proves to be pretty much a mass of speculative froth. One man who should know is Sydney derivatives expert Satyajit Das, who has been working in the business since 1977. A former trader for Citicorp, Merrill Lynch, Commonwealth Bank and the TNT Group, Mr Das has written a couple of standard textbooks and now lifts the lid on the industry in his expose Traders, Guns & Money. Mr Das is feeling twitchy. "We have built an edifice that is extremely complex, extremely interlinked and extremely leveraged. Which means that ultimately a small shock could have absolutely unforeseen consequences. "Then it comes down to the question of whether there is enough wealth in the system, and enough political and regulatory will, to bail people out. At some stage – and I don't know whether it's in three months, three years or 30 years – there is going to have to be a day of reckoning."

Because of the size and global reach of the derivatives market, if it is one festering bubble of risk, then a market "correction" could be bigger than any other financial crash in history, Mr Das says. He is not the only commentator worried. Fabled US investor Warren Buffett labelled derivatives as weapons of mass destruction when it cost him US$400 million just to unwind a tangled legacy of deals in a company he had bought. Other derivatives pioneers, like Richard Bookstaber of the US hedge fund FrontPoint, have been muttering of the dangers of a market melt- down. And what the doomsters say is that ordinary investors cannot escape the fallout. Every pension fund, every high street bank and large corporation, will now have some exposure to the derivatives business. Mr Das says that for the first third of his career, the use of derivatives was relatively sane. Futures and options were employed to hedge risk.

Hedging strategies developed to smooth commodity prices like grain and tin then gradually spread to other areas of finance like exchange rates. Exporters would pay a premium to reduce their exposure to currency fluctuations. In the 1970s, things began to get really creative with interest-rate swaps. Mr Das says that as a large institutional investor, you might have the problem that you held a fixed-rate bond, but really you wanted a floating rate deal. The problem was your own company charter prevented you from doing this. A derivatives trader could arrange to swap the income from your bond for the floating rate that someone else was earning on some matching asset.

And the beauty of this virtual ownership was that it could be off the balance sheet. Who would know? Mr Das says the first time he was involved in an interest-rate swap, it was like winning the lottery. As the go-between, his bank picked up US$18 million in fees on a US$200 million deal. Everyone loved the ingenuity of this new financial engineering. It made almost anything seem possible.

If, for instance, Britain had an inconvenient rule that foreigners must pay tax on share dividends, investors would use derivatives to create a virtual holding. For a fee, a British bank would buy the shares for them. The investor would then buy an option to buy the shares at some future date – an option priced to include the tax saving. Every year people found more tricks they could play with derivatives. Mr Das says the traders behaved like bandits and if a deal did blow up on a client – which was not infrequent – then all concerned would find ways quietly to bury the problem. It was rarely in anyone's interest to wash dirty linen in public.

He says the real shift came in the late 1980s when it was realised derivatives could be used to speculate as well as hedge. Instead of playing safe by balancing both sides of a deal, a derivative would just take a naked bet on some future event. And because the only cost to get into the game was the derivative's premium – you did not need to actually own an asset, just buy the option – the bets could be hugely geared. For every dollar put up, $10 or even $100 could be in play. It is leverage that allows the total of deals now to have reached US$500 trillion. Mr Das says if all the bets could be unwound, then only perhaps US$5 trillion of real money would be found. The rest would be an elaborate web of IOUs. The move to gambling with derivatives was quite deliberate, he says. The world had become hungry for returns.

Traditional stocks and bonds just did not have enough juice. Pension funds and other institutional investors were being expected to earn 10 to 12 per cent year in, year out, and so derivatives became a way to manufacture investments with a greater element of risk. Derivatives shifted up another gear in the early 2000s when credit derivatives – the packaging of loan and debt obligations – became the "newest, bestest, thing" in high finance circles. Again the first credit deals were hedges. Banks used credit default swaps (CDSs) to insure against the risk of clients defaulting on loans.

But once the risk element of loans had been separated from the loans themselves, Mr Das says, the fun with speculation and leverage could begin. Eventually the CDO was spawned. A CDO is a bundle of loans usually split into three tranches – equity, mezzanine and senior notes. Equity investors are promised the highest rate of return but also have to cover the first few loan defaults. For a smaller return, mezzanine investors suffer any further defaults once the equity investors have been wiped out. Senior note holders stand third in line, well back from the fray, so a CDO is a way to turn a pot of middling-grade loans into an apparently AAA structure with a skim of high- paying B and C-grade junk bonds. Banks loved CDOs because they were a way of getting their loan risk off balance sheet, enabling them to take on yet more lending. Mr Das says the ability to juggle risk also encouraged slack lending practices like subprime mortgages.

With a booming global economy, even the diciest bets have been paying off. But because of the highly leveraged nature of many of the CDOs – some of which are, in fact, CDO2s, or CDOs which combine the mezzanine and equity tranches of many other CDOs – any tightening of the markets can bring a sudden unravelling.

As has just happened in the past few months with Bear Stearns.

Mr Das says the problem is that derivatives are always based on models and future forecasts. And the more remote from real- world assets the derivatives market becomes, the more chance there is for excessive optimism to colour the predictions.

The question is: will we continue to see isolated collapses or some day a general tumbling of the dominoes?

The list of those hit by derivatives trading down the years is impressive: Procter and Gamble, Orange County, Gibson Greeting Cards, Barings Bank, Metallgesellschaft, Chase Manhattan, Allied Irish Bank, Sumitomo, Parmalat, National Australia Bank, Barclays Capital and LTCM. Of course, the ability of the financial system to shrug off shocks like the US$6.6 billion lost in a month last year by natural gas hedge fund Amaranth Advisors is cited as evidence that the global web of derivative deals is indeed acting as a glue.

Deutsche Bank market chief Anshu Jain recently told Economist magazine that during the past few years: "The market has been characterised by calm, continuous, and even benign conditions. Derivatives are a big part of explaining that phenomenon." However, Mr Das says the real story was that worried institutions rallied around to take over Amaranth's bad trades, allowing them to be liquidated slowly and quietly. If Amaranth's positions had simply been allowed to flop, then many other connected deals would have been knocked down as well, sparking a real market rout.

Mr Das says there is a limit to how many of these billion-dollar blow-ups the market can swallow. And the worry is that no one really knows what percentage of derivative deals are secretly junk.

Meanwhile every year, the monster grows 15 per cent or 20 per cent larger. Feeling nervous?
Traders, Guns & Money is published by FT Prentice Hall.

Monday, 30 July 2007

UK, Denmark and NZ most exposed to house price and interest rate shocks

Fitch Ratings said in a special report published today that the UK, Denmark and New Zealand exhibit the greatest macroeconomic vulnerability to a combination of weakening property prices and rising interest rates.

"Given record levels of household debt, rising interest rates and after several years of strong house price inflation in many countries, Fitch has assessed a range of indicators of household balance sheet vulnerabilities and house price valuation measures," said Brian Coulton, Head of Global Economics & Europe, in Fitch's Sovereign team. "For overall vulnerability, New Zealand ranks first, Denmark second and the UK third as the most exposed countries. Japan, Germany and Italy are the least vulnerable."

Fitch has ranked countries by the degree of estimated house price overvaluation and household balance sheet exposure to interest rate risk, compiling an overall index of vulnerability for 16 advanced industrialised economies. A range of financial indicators have been used to estimate these exposures, discussed in detail in the report.

On the house price front, France is the most exposed country to housing overvaluation, followed by UK, Denmark and New Zealand, which all exhibit the highest (i.e. most vulnerable) rankings, reflecting rapid house price growth including relative to incomes and rents. The US, Spain and, to a lesser extent, Ireland, show lower risk on this front although housing supply dynamics - not captured in the exercise - undoubtedly play an important role in current and prospective house price movements.

With regard to balance sheet exposure, the Nordic countries and Australia and New Zealand have the highest ranks. Norway is the most exposed to household debt vulnerability followed by New Zealand, Australia, Denmark, Finland and then Sweden. However, on this score, the UK fares somewhat better thanks to lower debt and interest service ratios and overall household net worth. France also scores much better on balance sheet risk, sharply reducing its overall vulnerability.

Again, the US and Spain fare relatively well but this may be misleading to the extent that both countries currently have high overall household debt service ratios (i.e. including interest and principal repayments), an indicator that has not been captured in the study due to data limitations. Moreover, both Spain and the US have arguably experienced the largest interest rate "shocks" among countries in the sample as real policy rates have moved rapidly into positive territory in the last couple of years.

The full report, "House Prices and Household Debt – Where are the Risks?" is available on the agency's public website, www.fitchratings.com.

Saturday, 28 July 2007

NZD has topped, retracement headed to 0.7400 area

The NZ dollar has topped out at 0.8109, nearly 17% from the lows seen at 0.6715 in March 2007. Now looks to retrace and could pull back into the 0.7400 area before stabilising.

The reason?

Not our economy, Not the RBNZ actions, Not any Government moves.

Purely offshore pressures.

See story below: Volatility sweeps global markets.

That's the reason: the rise of global risk aversion; something the RBNZ has been praying would happen.

Investors are pulling money home, worried about potential losses. It could run some way yet, as the US property market disasters come home to roost.

That means, currencies that were weak, like the Yen and Swiss franc, will be stronger, as funds are repatriated.

Currencies that were strong, like the NZD, AUD and GBP, will be weaker, as funds are withdrawn.

That means the NZD will weaken.

Might not go too far yet, but that is the trend, with the first target 0.7500.

What would stop this going too far are calm markets.

8.25% return is hard to beat, and that means the NZD cannot stay down for long. Equally the Japanese will not want a strong Yen, and may talk of intervention again.


But for now, and the next few weeks, the NZD is finally on the back foot.

Volatility sweeps global markets

From the BBC site:

US stock markets have dropped sharply, extending a global share sell-off amid fears about the effect of higher interest rates on the world economy.

There are concerns that higher rates will hit corporate profits and takeover deals, and dent consumer spending. European markets were also jittery, with London's share index closing down for a fourth day and ending at its lowest level since the middle of March. Analysts have warned that markets could remain volatile for a number of weeks. "I think you've got bargain hunters out there for sure and I think you've got some people who are still scared," said Randy Frederic of Charles Schwab & Co. "We're seeing the convergence of a whole host of sort of unrelated or only slightly related issues," he explained.

Share fall
By the close of trading in New York, the Dow Jones Industrial Average of leading shares was 208.1 points, or 1.5%, lower at 13,265.47.
Since Monday the index has lost 4.2%, its worst weekly decline in almost five years. The wider measure of the US stock market, the S&P 500, ended down 1.6%, while the Nasdaq index, which largely tracks technology stocks, was 1.4% lower. Earlier, the FTSE 100 index of leading shares on the London market had closed 36 points, or 0.6%, lower at 6215.20. France's Cac-40 index of leading shares and Germany's Dax also declined. In Asia, the Wall Street slump on Thursday led to Japan's Nikkei closing down 418.28 points, or 2.4%, at 17,283.81, while Hong Kong's index ended 2.7% lower.

Credit crunch
The main underlying problem is that many investors are worried about an impending credit crunch. In past years, financial markets, companies and consumers have all benefited from low interest rates and easy access to money, helping fuel a boom in spending, house price inflation and corporate takeovers.

Now, interest rates are rising and set to stay higher as central banks try to rein in inflation. A large part of the rise in share prices in the past year has been driven by the takeover boom, with private equity bidders pushing up the value of the firms they are targeting. Most of these deals are paid for with borrowed money and the banks who have loaned this cash have been laying off a large proportion of the loans by selling them to other investors.

However because investors are bruised by their losses in the US sub-prime mortgage market, they are now less keen now on buying the risky loans from the banks, taking away the credit needed for takeovers and prompting share prices to fall. "When there's uncertainty about financing, then private equity is not so quick to make deals," said Elliot Spar of Ryan Beck & Co.
Fred Dickson of D.A Davidson & Co said that: "We've had this massive change in investor expectations in terms of new deal flow." "The lifeguards have shouted, and investors are now starting to heed their warnings and head back to shore."

Downhill track
At the same time, oil prices have climbed, raising fears that inflation could also pick up again because of higher energy costs. US markets bounced back slightly on Friday after figures showed that the US economy had grown more quickly in three months to June than analysts had first thought. US Commerce department data showed that, on an annual basis, the US economy grew by a robust 3.4% in the second quarter of 2007. However, the respite was short-lived as analysts fretted that the figures may increase the chances of further interest rate rises in the US.

Link:
BBC News

Saturday, 30 June 2007

NZD now over 0.7700

As expected, the NZD has moved over 0.7700, as posted previously in April.
Still looks to have the legs to test into the 0.7900/0.8000 area, but starting to look overdone there.

Some reasons:

NZ is a democracy.
NZ is AAA rated.
NZ does have sovereign fiscal surpluses.
NZ has no exchange control.
NZ has free and open borders.
NZ has an independent legal system.
NZ is benefiting from a commodity boom, especially in dairy prices.
NZ is well away from the trouble spots of the world.
The USD itself is weak.
Japanese and Swiss interest rates are low.

Oh, and New Zealand has the highest interest rates in the industrial world.

Certainly a factor, but not the only factor. If high interest rates created strong currencies, then latin american countries in the past would have had the strongest currencies in the world.

NZ exporters need to sell on value not on price. NZ exporters need to be the Prada of their industry. The currency should not be an issue. By arguing for a lower NZD all the time what they are really saying is "this is crap and the only reason you will buy it is because it is cheap".

NZ lamb and NZ products should be expensive on the world markets because they are the best.
There is no comparison between NZ lamb feeding on fresh grass and living in a clean, green environment, drinking pure water etc and what they call a herd in Europe feeding on meal pellets and god knows what.

Until we learn this lesson and stop selling on price certain exporters will always be bleating.

The recent debate in the UK had the Irish companing our lamb was too cheap! We should immediately put the price up so that we are the most expensive..because we are the best!!

Excellence attracts customers, just look at New Zealand wine.

Friday, 4 May 2007

A few good men

This was too good to pass over:

I've stolen this from Rod Drury. It's a great take-off of the Jack Nicholson speech in A Few Good Men.

Sales: “You want answers?”
Finance: “I think we are entitled to them!”
Sales: “You want answers?!”
Finance: “I want the truth!”
Sales: “You can’t handle the truth!!!”

Sales (continuing): “Son, we live in a world that requires revenue. And that revenue must be brought in by people with elite skills. Who’s going to find it? You? You, Mr. Operations? We have a greater responsibility than you can possibly fathom.

You scoff at sales division and you curse our lucrative incentives. You have that luxury. You have the luxury of not knowing what we know: that while the cost of business results are excessive, it drives in revenue.

And my very existence, while grotesque and incomprehensible to you, drives REVENUE! You don’t want to know the truth because deep down in places you don’t talk about at staff meetings … you want me on that call. You NEED me on that call!

We use words like comps, migration, discounts, flex licensing, global purchase agreements, butt-fusion. We use these words as the backbone of a life spent negotiating something. You use them as a punch line!

I have neither the time nor inclination to explain myself to people who rise and sleep under the very blanket of revenue I provide and then question the manner in which I provide it. I would rather you just said “thank you” and went on your way. Otherwise I suggest you pick up a phone and make some sales calls. Either way, I don’t give a damn what you think you’re entitled to!”

Finance: “Did you expense the lap dances?”
Sales: “I did the job I was hired to do.”
Finance: “Did you expense the lap dances?”
Sales: “You’re goddamn right I did!”

Hat tip: David Farrar