Title: International Fixed Income
1International Fixed Income
2(From last time)B. Peso Crisis
- By the end of 1993, the MP traded at 3.1/ and
was overvalued by PPP measures (3.5-4.1).
Managed float. - Mexicos international reserves surged towards
30bn by year-end. - In March, these reserves dropped 10bn when
presidential candidate Colosio was assassinated.
Mexicos reserves were almost completely depleted
through November 1994. - December 1, the new president, Zadillo, took
office and shortly after devalued the peso,
letting it float freely.
3Mexicos International Reserves
4Mexican Peso
5Mexican Peso
6Cetes Currency
7C. Russian Default
- By June 1998, the stock market was at a two-year
low and the govt failed to collect enough funds
from T-bill auctions to repay outstanding debt. - August was a bad month
- 3-mth moratorium on debt payments
- 50 devaluation of ruble
- halting of FX trading
- debt rescheduling that would lead to
unprecedented losses - September
- Liberal reformers resigned
- Russian stock market dropped over 45
8Ruble
9Russia, -denominated 3, 2003
10Outline for LTCM lecture
- Chronology of events
- Review one way of creating leverage in fixed
income markets - Examples
- Off-the-run versus on-the-run Trreasuries
- swaps versus Treasuries
- International government bonds
- International credit spreads
- Summary
11Chronology
- After being forced to leave Salomon in 1991, in
wake of the Treasury auction rigging scandal,
John Meriwether founded Long Term Capital
Management in late 1993. - There was an exodus from Salomon during this
period, giving LTCM (sometimes called Salomon
North) a dream team of traders/researchers in
the fixed income area. - LTCMs original strategy was to take advantage
of spreads between liquid and illiquid
instruments in similar markets, and bank on a
convergence of these securities - a so-called
date with destiny. These strategies are highly
levered because they are viewed as relatively
riskless in the long run. - In their first (shortened) year (1994), LTCM
earned 20, with staggering returns of 43 and
41 (in 19951996). In 1997, their returns
dropped to 19, partly because they were getting
to big to get the same levered returns. With
amassed capital of 7 billion, they returned 2.7
billion to investors, leaving only the original
investors and themselves. The size of their
positions, however, were maintained.
12Chronology continued
- Their trade positions had also ventured out of
their usual convergence trades into other
areas, such as risk arbitrage, credit spread
bets, emerging market debt, corporate bond
spreads, etc - Also, in 1998, the partners bought an option from
UBS, which in essence was structured such that
UBS got some equity but mostly provided a loan
(which gave them temporary significant equity in
LTCM, which would get bought out by the partners
later). The motivation on LTCMs part was tax
driven. - In early summer,
- LTCM reported its first losses to investors,
primarily in the MBS area. - On July 17th, Salomon closed down its fixed
income arbitrage group (to get out of that type
of business) this induced a price pressure
effect which led to a further drop of around 10. - On August 17, Russia defaulted on its debt, with
an immediate flight to quality, i.e., to liquid
instruments, the opposite of LTCMs trades. - On August 21, swap spreads moved 20 basis points
(a normal move would be around 1-2bps). LTCM lost
550 million. - On Sept. 2, Merriwether sent a letter stating the
fund had lost 2.5 billion over the year (or 52
of its value), with August producing 1.8 billion
in losses. - Soon after that date, LTCM began to look for an
infusion of capital, including meetings with
Soros, Robertson, Buffet, Goldman Sachs, etc...
13Chronology continued.
- In the third week of September, Bear Stearns
(LTCMs clearing agent) asked for 500 mm in
collateral to continue clearing trades. On
Friday, September 18th, with market conditions
deteriorating, there was discussion about LTCMs
solvency. - On Sunday, Sept. 20th,the NY Fed looked at LTCMs
portfolio and found that LTCM had over 50
billion of long-short positions in securities,
notional amounts of futures contracts of 500
billion, notional swaps of 750 billion, and
options over 150 billion. It was clear that LTCM
failure would affect many counterparties. - On Monday, Sept. 21st, they lost another 500 mm,
half of it on short positions in long-term equity
options. LTCMs capital base was now only 600mm.
In the evening, a consortium of banks and
investment banks met to discuss what to do. - On Tuesday, Sept. 22nd, Warren Buffet offered to
buy the portfolio for 250mm, recapitalize it
with 3 billion, with no management role for
Meriwether. They had until 1230pm to decide
whether or not to do it. The offer was declined. - That evening, an alternative plan was devised,
which required 13 banks to put in about 250 mm
each, and then to oversee the management of the
portfolio. There would be no fire sale of assets.
The existing investors, including the LTCM
partners, would maintain a 10 ownership, or
roughly 400 mm.
14Chronology continued
- In the first two weeks after the bail-out, LTCM
continued to lose money. There were even rumors,
false as it turns out, that the consortium was in
trouble. By mid-November, markets had clamed down
(e.g., Brazil did not default, the Asian crisis
was diminishing, etc), and the trades began to
pay off. - By June, 1999, the fund was up 14.1, net of
fees, from the bailout date. Monies were
gradually being paid back to the original
investors and about 1 billion was returned to
the consortium. - By December 1999, the fund was officially
closed, with the consortium getting their money
back, and Meriwether announcing a new fund,
Relative Value, keeping just a few of the
original Salomon Partners. - Who really lost ex-post?
- The LTCM partners lost 1.3 billion, most of
their stake in the fund. - UBS lost 690 million, most of the value of their
equity and the loan they had put in to the fund. - Bank of Italy, Sumitomo Bank, and Dresdner Bank
lost around 100mm. - A number of investors lost money in the 25-50mm
range, including Merill Lynchs deferred
compensation plan.
15The Repo Market
- The repo market (along with bank debt) is the
primary way institutions borrow/lend in fixed
income markets. (we will discuss this market in
depth in a few weeks). - Simultaneously borrow X from the dealer to
purchase securities, and then lend the same
securities as collateral to the dealer. - Note that the haircut (i.e., margin) represents
the dealer's protection against the collateral
losing value. - Institution repays the dealer X plus interest in
return for the security. Institution bears market
risk (credit risk aside).
16Example 1 Off- versus On-the-Run Treasuries
- Consider the 6.125 11/15/2027 off-the-run
Treasury versus the 5.5 08/15/28 on-the-run
Treasury. - Characteristics of Bonds on 10/05/98
17The Strategy
- The basic idea of the strategy is to buy
off-the-runs and short the on-the-runs. - Since their cash flows should be pretty similar,
they should have similar yields (because they are
governed by the same discount rates). In fact,
since the yield curve is upward sloping, the
higher coupon bond (i.e., the off-the-run) should
have a slightly lower yield as it relatively
emphasizes earlier cash flows which are governed
by lower rates. - This was one of the strategies of Long Term
Capital Management, and, in fact, had been one
for many years. - The coupon effect aside, the figure on the next
page graphs the spread between the on-the-run and
the closest off-the-run long-term treasury bond.
18Off- versus On-the-Run Spreads
19Explanation
- Historically, a 5 basis point spread was not
unusual. The coupon effect aside, and assuming
that any duration is hedged out in a portfolio
context, this means that on every 1 mm invested,
Long Term Capital was earning 5,000 for a .5
annualized return. - Now assume Long term Capital took a 1 billion
dollar position on all the off-the-run/on-the-run
trades combined, but with only 10 mm of capital
(i.e., 1 haircut). - With 10mm capital, they expect to earn 5mm for
a 50 annualized return. - What actually happened?
- The spreads widened 12-14 basis points, perhaps a
great long-term trade, but giving a short-term
mark-to-market loss of about 1 (after some
calculations) of the 1 billion --- in other
words, the entire 10mm capital invested.
20What happened after the bailout?
21Example 2 swap spreads
- A plain vanilla interest rate swap is one in
which you exchange fixed cash flows for
floating-rate cash flows (often benchmarked
against LIBOR (London Interbank Offer Rate,
appropriate for A-rated London banks on their
dollar deposits). - As we will learn about swaps later in the course,
just realize for now that a swap has very little
credit risk so the fixed rate from a swap will
reflect the par rate on Treasuries plus the curve
of the LIBOR spread above Treasuries. - The figure graphs the swap spreads over the
period.
22Swap Spreads
23The Strategy
- One of Long-Term Capital's strategies was to be
long swaps and short treasuries --- the thinking
being that swaps spreads were going to tighten. - Over the weekend of August 21st-23rd, Russia
essentially defaulted on its debt. The swap
spread widened about 20 basis points during this
period, which saddled Long Term Capital with
substantial losses (as their positions were
highly levered).
24What happened after the bailout?
25Example 3 European convergence trade
- With approach of European Monetary Union, one
popular trade was to expect foreign gov't bonds
to trade at similar yields, as their discount
rates would eventually converge. - One popular one was to long Italian governments
and short German government bonds, as Italian
gov'ts were offering higher yields.
26Italian vs. German govt bonds
27The Strategy
- Rather than converging, the government bonds
actually diverged in yields, leaving the highly
levered Long Term Capital saddled with losses. In
essence, their invested capital on these trades
has disappeared.
28What happened after the bailout?
29Example 4 European credit spreads
- As youll see later in the course, swap spreads
represent the spread between future LIBOR (bank
offer rates) and future T-bills. During the
1996-1997 period, UK swap spreads began to rise
relative to German swap spreads. In other words,
UK swaps (relative to their treasuries) were
cheap compared to German swaps (relative to their
treasuries). - LTCM went long UK swap spreads and short German
swap spreads, betting they would eventually
converge.
30Swap Spreads UK Germany
31Swap Spreads UK Germany
32Summary
- In fact, we could have described relative trades
in the Commercial Mortgage-Backed Securities
market, the straight MBS market, the spread
between corporate bonds and governments in
various markets, Danish MBSs, risk arbitrage
trades in the equity market, volatility trades
(especially in the French stock market), etc...
Nearly every one of the trades moved against Long
Term Capital in the summer of 1998, with extreme
moves in late August September. As we have
seen, leverage, while usually increasing the
returns, can wipe out the capital quickly.