Thursday, February 12, 2009

How does Gross do that?

From Alphaville:

"
US Treasuries, not treasured by Fed, or Gross

(Sorry)

Having raised the possibility of buying longer-term Treasuries in November, and mentioning the prospect in his past two policy statements, the idea was markedly absent from Fed chairman Ben Bernanke’s Tuesday testimony.

The Wall Street Journal’s Real Time Economics blog speculates:

Fed officials could be preoccupied by a new program aimed at jumpstarting consumer loan markets, an effort being coordinated with the Treasury Department. That program represents an enormous commitment by the Fed. The Term Asset-backed Securities Loan Facility, which will help finance asset backed securities tied to consumer loans, could result in as much as $1 trillion in new Fed loans, a huge expansion in its balance sheet… Officials don’t want to take any options off the table. But given those potential long-term encumbrances, a dive into purchases of long-term Treasury bonds looks less likely in the near-term.

Just as a reminder - yields on the benchmark 10-year Treasury have been creeping inexorably up in recent months — despite the best efforts of the US to keep them down. Low yields (high bond prices) are important to the US’s financial recovery plan — not only do they help fund the raft of measures being implemented, they stimulate the economy, appearing in tandem with lower mortage rates, etc.

The higher yields (lower bond prices) of recent weeks stem mostly from supply issues — Marc Ostwald at Monument Securities, for instance, points us to the stat that there are only seven working days this year when the US will not be selling some form of debt.

Yahoo Finance - 3-month 10-yr treasury yield

You can see from the chart of the 10-year yield above, that it’s come down a bit since Tuesday — when Treasury Secretary Tim Geithneer’s much-reviled financial stability plan sparked a rally in US debt.

Bill Gross, manager of Pimco, the world’s biggest bond fund, said on Monday he expected the Fed would step in to buy Treasuries if the yield on the 10-year went above 3 per cent this week. It’s at about 2.75 right now.

So did Gross get burned?

Of course not. Via Bloomberg, the fund manager shorted US debt last month in favour of mortgage-backed securities (MBS):
Gross sold government debt, sending the fund’s holdings to minus two percent, after adding to his holdings in December for the first time in a year. The fund held negative positions in Treasuries and debt issued by government-backed agencies such as Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Home Loan Bank system.

Geithner also said Tuesday the TALF may be expanded to include commercial MBS.

How does Gross do that?

Related links:
Rescuing banks, then Treasuries - FT Alphaville
Preparing for QE failure - FT Alphaville

Me:

Don the libertarian Democrat Feb 12 16:23
It's interesting that he got burned last year in not seeing the flight to quality coming, a huge bond move which a bond guru missed. I say that Gross missed it because he never dreamed the government would do something so stupid as let Lehman or any other major financial concern fail. Since almost everyone agrees that letting Lehman fail was a monstrously stupid decision, there is a simple lesson to be learned:

Do what William Gross expects you to do, otherwise, a financial panic ensues. If he goes down, he's taking us with him.

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