Monday, September 21, 2009

Market Update 9 21 09: The plan to drive MBS spreads lower has succeeded

The Fed and MBS Spreads

You all remember the Fed’s plans to buy over a trillion dollars worth of MBS and Agency bonds. I heard my MBS trader this morning quote that the Fed now owns around 34% of the all outstanding Fannie and Freddie pass through securities. I’ll give you a minute to let that one soak in…34% of all pass through MBS are now owned by the Fed.

A whirlwind review of how MBS spreads blew out so wide goes as follows: Hedge Funds begin to falter as sub-prime CDO’s start to fail, big creditors issue margin calls, funds sell good MBS to satisfy margin calls, prices on MBS drop as sustained selling occurs to fund an ever increasing amount of margin calls, fear enters the market and now people begin to balk at buying even high quality MBS as they know there is more forced selling coming down the pike and they don’t want to buy ahead of it. Why buy a bond today that you know will be cheaper tomorrow? Now there are fewer buyers and an increasing volume of sellers; the law of supply and demand tells us how this story will end. Huge volumes of MBS product are dumped on the market as big funds and big firms begin to fail, there are not enough buyers and prices plummet causing spreads on MBS to rise like a rocket. Current coupon 15 year MBS trade at a long term average of roughly 116 basis points over treasuries. This spread blew out to 311 basis points at the height of the crisis.

Through the entire episode we spoke of mean reversion and counseled buyers to take as much MBS product at these spreads as your position would allow. This strategy has paid off very, very well. Bonds that were purchased with spreads of 200 to 300 basis points of spread have delivered both high yields and large price gains as spreads have tightened in over time.

What was the Fed thinking?

I think it makes sense to occasionally go back and look at WHY the Fed started down this road. There is so much going on that sometimes the genesis of this program can get lost in the fray. The Feds plan was to keep borrowing rates for households and small businesses affordable and accessible. These two factors are very important parts of the lessons that Bernanke learned from the Great Depression (see the market update from Jan 8, 2009 to review Bernanke’s thoughts on the Great Depression…if you don’t have it just let me know and I can resend it). They’ve achieved their goal of keeping rates low. Every time a Fed governor gets in front of a microphone they tell us that they plan to keep rates low for a long time. OK so rates are low…but how accessible is credit?

Credit is not as accessible as Uncle Ben would like it to be. While he can control the short end of the curve very well he can’t control who banks lend to (I feel the need to add the qualifier “YET” to the end of this statement…scary times). The Feds view of how much credit should be accessible and a banks view of the same can be quite different.

In an era where individuals are highly leveraged AND they are losing their jobs it is obviously a good time for caution to be involved in the underwriting process. While the Fed sees the solution a little differently than banks do, deep down the Fed must understand that banks will begin making large volumes of loans when they get large volumes of qualified credits coming in the front door. This will take time…plain and simple. Consumers need time to clean up their personal balance sheets. It takes a while to pay off the credit cards and the car loans and to build up some cash savings in the bank. It will also take a while to get past the fear of losing one’s job or a spouse losing theirs. All of these factors act as constraints on consumer spending. Fear is a powerful thing.

Where are we today?

After all of the buying by the Fed where are we today? The Feds plan has certainly had its intended effect on the level of rates. Spreads on MBS product have been absolutely crushed. This morning the spread on current coupon 15 yr MBS sits at 125 basis points. OK…now what?

Now our attention must turn to how the Fed will exit this role as the provider of liquidity to the mortgage market. There is tremendous concern that if they just turn off the magic liquidity faucet at the deadline date then spreads will blow out in a big way. Nobody expects a reversal to the high water mark of 311 bps because the fundamentals aren’t in place to cause a run like that…the fear that drove those levels is gone. We are no longer seeing large firms and hedge funds going bust after waves of margin calls and forced liquidations. However it is widely expected that we will have some material amount of widening as the Fed tries to exit this role. The official stop date for the Feds MBS purchase program is in October. There has been a fair amount of talk that they may have to extend this deadline to early 2010 to avoid killing the housing recovery. This is a tricky piece of business. How long do you kick this can down the road? How much more will you have to spend? Is anyone comfortable with the Fed owning 50% of the mortgage market? 60%? Is supporting the recovery in housing a large enough issue to justify owning a larger chunk of the mortgage market? We all cautioned that it could prove to be a very difficult thing to disentangle yourself from so we are watching intently to see if it goes as smoothly as the Fed thought it would.

The flip side of this coin is that a lot of buyers are sitting on cash and when the fed backs out it will cause yields will pop up, which will in turn lure buyers back to this sector, who will in effect replace the Fed as the major liquidity provider, which by definition moves us toward a more normal market. That’s the best case scenario…the Fed steps out and the normal market participants step back in. We might have to start calling this “The Bernanke Two Step”.

The ultimate question here is “when will the buyers step in?” We all know when the Fed is going to quit buying at some point. We’re all going to be watching spreads too. As spreads rise there is a tendency to not get in the way…after all prices are falling and with the 800 pound gorilla no longer in the room they might fall a good ways before they stop. Who wants to try to catch a falling knife? The fact is that if people expect the market to go one way then they tend to wait until it gets there before doing anything.

In closing

Who knows which scenario we’ll get but the facts as we know them currently are that we are approaching the end-date for the MBS purchase program, the Fed owns 34% of the pass through market, and we appear to be a long way from seeing a recovery.

If you are considering selling MBS then this is a very good time to do so. Treasury yields are very low and spreads are very tight...this combination is your friend if you are selling bonds.

If you have any questions on this material just let me know.



Wednesday, September 16, 2009

Yield curve forecast _ September 2009


Each month Bloomberg surveys 60 to 70 economists to get their estimates of where Fed Funds, the 2-year Treasury, and the 10-year Treasury will be over the next several quarters. I take this data and interpolate for the points in between the survey data to create the attached report. This allows us to get a broad view of where various economists see interest rates going over the coming quarters.


Interestingly enough the forecasts are lower this month for almost every spot on the curve through 2011.



If you have any questions on this material just let me know.












Market Update 9 16 09 _ What is going on in the market

What’s up with the market?

When I look at recent bond market activity I can hear Jerry Seinfeld’s voice in my head asking “WHAT is the DEAL with THAT?” His signature line could be used almost daily in this market. Yesterday a good friend of my summed it up nicely by describing the markets behavior as “schizophrenic”. This morning is a perfect example. When I came in this morning the 30 year was up 21/32’s...a few minutes later it was back to flat…a few more minutes and it was DOWN 21/32’s…and finally a few short minutes after that it was back to flat.

There has been tremendous volatility in the bond market recently, much of which seems counterintuitive. There are days that we get economic data that should cause a huge selloff in Treasuries, yet the market rallies hard driving yields to new lows. It’s very difficult to make sense of the activity. In a way I think this confusion is itself a sign that we’re at the bottom of this cycle. It’s the first time in a long time that the market seems conflicted about what to make of the numbers. Prior to this recent period there was almost a universal agreement that every number we got showed that the recession was still getting worse.

We went through a brief period in May where the clinically optimistic made their bets that recovery was just around the corner. There will always be a rush among some big money managers to be the first one diving back in when the sentiment begins to swing. They need to get those few extra basis points to beat the index and beat the competition. As we moved from the “recession is getting worse every month” mode to the “we seem to be near the bottom” mode there were a lot of people that started placing bets on a “V” shaped recovery. We saw a good bit of this type of activity in May. My opinion on this has been that we’re not going to see a “V” shaped recovery. (The Market Update piece from May 7th, 2009 reviews the various recovery shapes along with a colorful example…if you can’t find that e-mail let me know and I can resend it).

I’ve been saying for quite some time that even if the bad news tapers off and we find a bottom, it’s not a great thing to stabilize at multi-decade lows of activity. The economy needs people spending money in order to grow. Consumers making purchases keep other people employed doing everything from importing the goods, shipping them, stocking shelves, ringing up the goods etc. There are millions former consumers that are playing a very defensive game right now. Now it’s about staying power. At this point in the business cycle I think the average consumer would rather have $3,000 more in the bank (or less on a credit card) than a 65 inch plasma TV in the living room. In times of uncertainty liquidity is your friend…the consumer gets that now. Many households have been hit directly by unemployment, most others know people that have lost jobs, still others have taken pay cuts to KEEP their jobs (FedEx is a prime example of this…reducing pay for everyone to minimize the number of firings that must be done). This is an episode that the consumer won’t soon forget…fear is a powerful thing.

Given a consumer that is more focused on rebuilding a cash cushion and paying down debt than continuing the spending spree, where will the growth come from? More one-time hits like cash-for-clunkers programs where we pull future consumption into the present using borrowed money? That is exactly the type of game that consumers played for the last several years. This just leads to more leverage, more risk, and slower growth in the future. Econ 101 tells us it’ll take time for this to get better. The consumer needs time to pay off car loans and credit cards and helocs, he needs time to build up a few months worth of cash, and he needs time to get past the concern of losing his job…and don’t get me started on the 401K.

Today’s numbers

Today’s economic data showed inflation in check with CPI numbers generally in line with the estimates. Industrial Production and Capacity Utilization for August were slightly better than expected. I wish I could tell you that the economic data had some effect on today’s activity but if it did it was impossible to discern amid the noise.

Tomorrow we see Housing Starts, Building Permits, Initial Jobless Claims, Continuing Claims, and the Philadelphia Fed Index. These are big numbers that could have a significant impact on Treasury yields. Below I’ve attached a review of today’s economic releases along with tomorrow’s scheduled releases.