Eight months ago Bill Gross, manager of the world�s biggest bond fund, said Treasuries �may need to be exorcised� and cleaned them out of his $245 billion Total Return Fund. The company then used derivatives to bet against the debt in March.Bill Gross Exorcised
Now the Pacific Investment Management Co. fund has 16 percent of its assets in U.S. government securities as the debt posted the highest quarterly returns in almost three years.
�We�ve rebalanced,� Mohamed A. El-Erian, chief executive officer and co-chief investment officer at Newport Beach, California-based Pimco said in a Sept. 27 radio interview on Bloomberg Surveillance with Tom Keene in New York. �The U.S. benefits the most from a flight to quality.�
This is what I said on March 10, 2011: Pimco Dumps All Remaining Treasuries in Total Return Fund; Six Reasons to Fade Bill Gross
Pimco's Bill Gross has been dumping US government debt in favor of other alternatives including emerging-market opportunities.Neutral on Treasuries
Six Reasons to Fade Pimco
I view this setup as favorable for US Government bonds. For starters there is no Pimco selling pressure, only potential buying pressure when Gross changes his mind.
Second, everyone seems to think the end of QE II will be the death of treasuries. While that could be the case, sentiment is so one-sided that I rather doubt it, especially if the global recovery stalls.
Third, the US dollar is towards the bottom of a broad range and any bounce could easily wipe out gains in higher yielding emerging-market debt.
Fourth, the global macro picture is weakening considerably with overheating in China, state government austerity measures in the US, and a renewed sovereign debt crisis in Europe on top of a supply shock in oil. Emerging markets are unlikely the place to be in such a setup.
Fifth, chasing yield means chasing risk, and that is on top of currency risk. Chasing risk is highly likely to fail again at some point, the only question is when.
Sixth, several interest rate hikes are priced in by the the ECB this year. Will all those hikes come? I rather doubt it, and if the ECB doesn't hike, look for the US dollar to rally, perhaps significantly.
Now that Pimco has "rebalanced", I am neutral on treasuries. The bulk of the treasury gains are in.
Yield Curve as of 2011-10-03
click on chart for sharper image
That is one hell of a rally (falling yields) for fixed-income treasury bears to miss out on, especially since the much ballyhooed "hard currencies" of commodity producers went the opposite direction taking into account currency moves.
Since March the Canadian dollar has fallen from 103 to 95 and the Australian dollar from 102 to 97 having hit a high over 110 in July. The Brazilian REAL plunged from a recent high near .65 to a low near .52.
Many hyperinflationists did far worse. They shorted the start of this treasury rally.
Mike "Mish" Shedlock
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com
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