Spreads on U.S. corporate bonds on Thursday approached their widest levels since the bankruptcy wave of 2002 on worries about hedge fund selling of a wide range of corporate, mortgage and municipal bonds.Zero Hour 9:00 AM - I'm a rocket Man - Elton John
Spreads, the extra yields that corporate bonds pay over US Treasuries, gapped out across the board, though banks and brokers were especially hard hit on fears of more writedowns as mortgage problems spread.
"Basically the gears of capitalism are pretty much grinding to a halt," said Mirko Mikelic, portfolio manager for Fifth Third Asset Management in Grand Rapids, Michigan. "What started as a little subprime problem has kind of morphed into a bigger problem for the bigger economy."
Average investment-grade spreads had closed on Wednesday at 264 basis points over Treasuries, just 8 basis points shy of a record set on Oct. 10, 2002, a year of massive bankruptcies, according to Merrill Lynch data going back to December 1996. Thursday's widening was likely to put the index at or close to a new record, analysts said.
"What's driving it is this massive deleveraging that's going on within some of the hedge funds and the mortgage bond funds," said Dan Sheppard, a director at Deutsche Bank Private Wealth Management in New York. "They can't make margin calls and so they're basically selling just about anything they can their hands on."
"The key problem here is just zero liquidity out there," said Fifth Third's Mikelic. "Investment banks are not wanting to provide any liquidity across the board -- not in muni market, not in the mortgage market, not in the corporate market."
Zero Hour Liquidity Discussions
- Financial System Broken - Markets 'Utterly Unhinged'
- Carlyle Capital Hit With Margin Calls And Default Notice
- Hedge Funds Continue To Unravel
Zero Hour Stability
Inquiring minds may be asking "Does Stability Breed Instability?" That's a good question. Sticking with the corporate bonds theme, please consider the following chart.
SWYSX (Schwab Yield Plus Select) Weekly Chart
click on chart for sharper image.
Just what does Schwab propose SWYSX to be?
Let's take a look at the fund summary. Emphasis is mine.
The investment seeks high current income with minimal changes in share price. The fund primarily invests in investment-grade bonds. It may invest in bonds from diverse market sectors based on changing economic, market, industry and issuer conditions. The fund may invest to 25% of assets in below investment-grade bonds that are rated, at the time of investment, at least B by at least one nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO) or are the unrated equivalent as determined by the investment adviser. It maintains an average portfolio duration of one year or less.Carlyle Capital Misses More Margin Calls
Bloomberg is reporting Carlyle Fund Gets Default Notice After Margin Calls.
Carlyle Capital Corp. missed four of seven margin calls yesterday totaling more than $37 million, the Amsterdam-listed fund said today in a statement. The company expects to get at least one more notice of default related to the margin calls.Cockroach Theory
Started by David Rubenstein in 1987, Carlyle expanded its mortgage investments last year, selling $300 million of shares in Carlyle Capital. The fund used loans to buy about $22 billion of AAA rated mortgage debt issued by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, securities that Carlyle says have the "implied guarantee" of the U.S. government. Even those bonds have slumped, leading to the failure of hedge funds led by Peloton Partners LLP.
"The credit crisis is spilling over to the next asset class, agency bonds," said Philip Gisdakis, senior credit strategist at UniCredit SpA in Munich. "There's never just one cockroach. If you see one highly leveraged hedge fund going bust, then there's another on the way."
Carlyle said last month its agency mortgage securities "have the implied guarantee of the U.S. government and are expected to pay at par at maturity." The U.S. Treasury denied speculation today that the government will guarantee mortgage- backed bonds issued by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae, which are the two largest sources of American home financing.
The Carlyle fund eliminated its dividend and waived an incentive fee on Feb. 28 when it reported quarterly financial results, seeking to build liquidity as mortgage defaults in the U.S. rise.
There never is just one. And when Carlyle eliminated its dividend and incentive fee (the latter normally 20% of profits), it is clearly sending out an SOS. Don't answer it. There are likely more cockroaches hiding.
Any fund so arrogant as to leverage illiquid investments like mortgages 32:1 deserves neither sympathy or cash.
Furthermore, Carlyle knows full well there is not a government guarantee on Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. The statement is either a blatant lie or complete ignorance by Carlyle. Fed governor William Poole has stressed that point twice now. Please see Poole, Paulson, Bernanke on Bailouts and Bank Failures for proof.
Besides, what kind of manager leverages 32:1 on implicit, let alone explicit guarantees? Ambac (ABK) and MBIA (MBI) prove that even explicit guarantees may be worthless.
Does Stability Breed Instability?
Eventually it does. Stability Breeds Herding, Complacency, Leverage, and Risk Taking.
Seeking ever higher returns, companies like Carlyle leverage at 32:1. Funds like SWYSX resort to buying riskier and riskier bonds to maintain yield. Excessive risk taking leads to excessive complacency and ever compressing risk premiums.
Eventually it snaps. And a snap at 32:1 leverage can wreak a lot of havoc.
That is the process in which stability, given enough time, lays the groundwork for its own demise. We saw it first in housing, then corporate real estate, and now hedge funds. Leverage is going to continue to unwind and until that process completes, now is not the time to be taking excessive risks.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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