From Doug Nolan at Credit Bubble Bulletin
Global de-risking/deleveraging has taken a threatening turn. It’s no
exaggeration to write that the UK pension system was this week at the
brink of spectacular collapse, with confidence in policy and market
function hanging in the balance.
September 28 – Reuters (David
Milliken, Carolyn Cohn, Sachin Ravikumar and Dhara Ranasinghe): “The
Bank of England stepped into Britain's bond market to stem a market
rout, pledging to buy around 65 billion pounds ($69bn) of long-dated
gilts after the new government's tax cut plans triggered the biggest
sell-off in decades. Citing potential risks to the stability of the
financial system, the BoE also delayed… the start of a programme to sell
down its 838 billion pounds ($891bn) of government bond holdings, which
had been due to begin next week. ‘Were dysfunction in this market to
continue or worsen, there would be a material risk to UK financial
stability,’ the BoE said. ‘This would lead to an unwarranted tightening
of financing conditions and a reduction of the flow of credit to the
real economy.’”
While not mentioned specifically in the Bank
of England (BOE) statement, various reports pointed to massive pension
system margin calls and a resulting disorderly UK government bond
(“gilts”) market. From the FT: “‘At some point this morning I was
worried this was the beginning of the end,’ said a senior London-based
banker, adding that at one point on Wednesday morning there were no
buyers of long-dated UK gilts. ‘It was not quite a Lehman moment. But it
got close.’”
At the heart of these market dislocations and panic are the widespread use of “liability-driven investment strategies” – or
LDI: “A strategy used by pension funds to manage their assets to ensure
they can meet future liabilities. The Wall Street Journal explains:
” Pension funds adopted the so-called liability-driven investment strategy, or LDI, to address regulatory changes and help to close the gap between assets and liabilities. But the strategy faltered as interest rates surged and bond prices fell, forcing more selling and driving prices still lower. ‘A vicious cycle kicks in and pension funds are selling and selling,’ said Calum Mackenzie, an investment partner at pension-fund adviser Aon PLC. ‘What you start to see is a death spiral’… Some of the more than $1.8 trillion worth of corporate pension plans in the U.S. are also facing margin calls."
And over recent years, an already challenging endeavor was made almost unworkable. Years of zero rates forced pension fund managers to reach for yield, derivatives, and leverage to generate sufficient returns to match future obligations.
[Doug here: zero or negative interest rates have ALREADY killed EU pension funds forcing them to take additional risk to boost returns in the hope or prayer of being able to meet future obligations. ZIRP/NIRP have essentially killed EU Banks, the EU banking sector and EU Pension funds. Also see my posts: European Banks and the Euro Will Destroy the World, Rising Risk of Financial & Economic Chaos, Part 2 and Extremes in Unsound Money and Finance Will (Eventually) Lead to Catastrophe]
Of
course, an always enterprising “Wall Street” was there with a bevy of
sophisticated strategies and derivative products to seemingly solve any
problem. And, sure enough, everything worked splendidly - so long as
rates and market yields remained ultra-low. Popularity ensured the
entire strategy became one big – and now unruly - Crowded Trade.
As
the BOE began to raise rates and market yields surged higher, trouble
quickly materialized. Some levered pension funds sold gilts, pushing
yields higher still. The pension system had become a major player in
the derivatives interest-rate “swaps” marketplace over the years. And
as yields surged higher, losses on swap positions required additional
collateral to meet margin calls. A shortage of collateral ensued, with
many fund strategies left without interest-rate hedges.
The new
UK government’s tax cuts and subsidies announcement hit an acutely
vulnerable marketplace, with gilt yields immediately spiking higher in a
dislocated market. The highly levered pension funds were at risk of
disorderly liquidations, while interest-rate derivatives markets faced
catastrophic margin calls in an illiquid and collapsing marketplace.
The
Bank of England aggressively intervened, in what is essentially a
short-term QE program. Many in the UK are on tenterhooks, fearing a
return of instability come the scheduled conclusion of this program on
Wednesday, October 14th. Understandably, others are uncomfortable with
additional QE in such a high inflation backdrop.
Market
Structure has been an overarching CBB theme. The UK pension scheme
blowup provides an early example of an untenable strategy that seemingly
functioned well in the previous cycle’s backdrop (zero rates, liquidity
abundance and reliable central bank market backstops).
Now, an
unsettled new cycle unfolds. Leverage has become toxic, a development
with far-reaching ramifications. Moreover, derivatives strategies that
have assumed liquid and continuous markets now face an illiquid and
discontinuous world. There are scores of festering untenable strategies
out there – at home and abroad.Trillions upon Trillions. Dominos.
Contagion looks like a sure bet.
The UK is only the first pension
system facing the harsh reality of a steep devaluation of assets and
the prospect of widespread insolvencies (liabilities greatly exceeding
assets).
FT headline: “The Week That Wrecked Our Personal
Finances in the UK.” It’s important to appreciate that UK “personal
finances” were not wrecked this week. And you’re not going to wreck the
UK pension system in a week’s time. The wrecking (ball) has been
ongoing for years and even decades. For too long, misguided policy
focus has been on inflating the value of bonds, stocks and other
financial assets. A momentous gap developed between the perceived value
of financial assets and the true economic value of real assets
underpinning UK (and global) pensions and personal finances. This week
was about a disorderly adjustment in grossly inflated UK bond values and
associated panic. These types of adjustments are brutally
destabilizing.
Many analysts were convinced the so-called “great
financial crisis” would have been avoided had the Federal Reserve only
moved early to bail out Lehman Brothers. But that misses the crucial
analysis of Trillions of mispriced securities and derivatives
(especially in the mortgage universe). The chasm between
market/perceived values of financial assets and real economic
wealth/wealth-creating capacity has ballooned tremendously over the past
13 years. Bubbles eventually burst, with a highly disruptive
adjustment process becoming unavoidable.
We can simplistically
break the unfolding Market Structure predicament down into three general
issues: 1) Financial asset overvaluation not well supported by
underlying economic wealth. 2) Over-leverage. 3) Risk engineering,
transfer and management.
There is today gross financial asset
overvaluation virtually across the board. Bond and fixed-income markets
have not yet fully revalued in response to inflation dynamics,
over-indebtedness, and new central bank policy regimes. Corporate debt
has barely begun to price in a historic cyclical downturn and associated
systemic Credit impairment. Equities are early in adjusting to an
extremely high-risk world of Credit market instability, economic
vulnerability, geopolitical peril, policy impotence, climate change, and
likely an earnings collapse.
As for leverage, I believe the
global system is only in the earliest deleveraging phase. The world is
being forced to adjust to an unfolding cycle with myriad extraordinary
uncertainties. Previous cycle typical leverage metrics are today (and
for the foreseeable future) untenable. Pension funds are only one
segment of highly levered market, financial and economic systems.
It
is the “risk engineering, transfer and management” facet of the
analysis that these days is somewhat the big unknown. I worry about
derivatives and structured finance more generally. Recall the
collapsing values of “AAA” mortgage securities during the bursting of
the mortgage finance Bubble. Investors and regulators were quick to
blame the ratings agencies, when it should have been obvious to anyone
doing real analysis that transforming Trillions of risky late-cycle
mortgage Credit into mostly top-rated securities was fanciful financial
alchemy. And it is the sudden loss of confidence in perceived safe and
liquid instruments that sparks panics and runs.
Throughout the
protracted post-2008 boom cycle, there was a proliferation of
instruments and strategies that mask underlying risks. Myriad risks
(i.e. rates, Credit, currency, market, etc.) are shifted, transformed
and often obfuscated. In the case of the UK pension funds, many “LDI”
strategies incorporated derivatives hedges that were to protect against
higher market yields. But when yields spiked higher, it became too
expensive (required too much additional collateral) to maintain the
hedges. This should be viewed as an early warning that many hedges will
not operate as expected in the unfolding highly unstable market
environment.
Importantly, too many hedges rely on
dynamic/“delta” trading strategies that are forced to sell instruments
into rapidly declining and liquidity-challenged markets. I’ll assume
this is a major facet of the UK pension bond debacle.
UK 10-year
yields traded to 4.59% in early Wednesday trading, up an astounding 146
bps in seven sessions, before reversing sharply lower (BOE intervention)
to close the session at 4.01%. Ten-year Treasury yields rose to 4.01%
Wednesday (up 52bps in seven sessions), only to end the day at 3.73%.
Why,
one might ask, was the UK pension issue causing such a ruckus in U.S.
and global markets? First, liquidity is fungible globally, with
de-risking/deleveraging dynamics sparking a rush for liquidity
throughout international markets. Moreover, Market Structure issues are
a global phenomenon. The same financial engineering used by UK
pensions has been adopted in the U.S. and worldwide.
The hundreds of
Trillions interest-rate swaps derivatives markets are global and tightly
interconnected. If a strategy falters in one market, kindred
strategies are then in the crosshairs globally. A problem structure in
any country quickly becomes a concern for all markets. And when blowups
and panics spark illiquidity and discontinuity in one market,
immediately all markets are on guard for similar blowups. When it comes
to Market Structure, it is one monstrous global speculative Bubble.
Global
“risk off” deleveraging attained powerful momentum this week. It
appeared decisive. And that the BOE intervention rally had such a short
(one session) half-life was ominous. Such highly synchronized global
markets are ominous. And that Treasuries can’t catch even an itty bitty
safe haven bid in the face of such acute global stress is further
evidence of ominous new cycle dynamics.
The rundown. Chinese
“big four” bank CDS spiked further to multi-year highs. China
sovereign CDS gained 10 this week to 112 bps, with a notable two-week
37 bps spike - to the high since January 2017. Number one builder
Country Garden bond yields surged almost nine percentage points to 46%.
The yield for China’s high-yield dollar bond index jumped over 200 bps
this week to 25.25%, as Asian high-yield bond yields jumped 133 bps to
17.54% (almost back to the July spike high). Asian currencies performed
poorly, with the South Korean won down 1.5%, the Malaysian ringgit
1.3%, the Indonesia rupiah 1.3%, and the Japanese yen 1.0%. Heightened
concerns for debt and leverage bode poorly for China and greater Asia.
Emerging
Market CDS jumped 14 bps this week to a two-month high 331 bps (began
the year at 187bps). The Russian ruble declined 3.8%, the Colombian
peso 3.5%, the Hungarian forint 3.0%, the Brazilian real 2.8% and the
Peruvian sol 1.8%. Ten-year yields spiked 73 bps in Poland, 62 bps in
Croatia, 52 bps in Hungary, 43 bps in Czech Republic, 41 bps in Peru, 35
bps in Lithuania, and 33 bps in Romania. Dollar-denominated EM bond
yields continue to spike higher. Yields were up 29 bps in Panama, 23
bps in Indonesia, 21 bps in Saudi Arabia and 13 bps in the Philippines.
CDS spiked 32 bps in Brazil and 31 bps in Colombia.
It was
another alarming week for global bank CDS [Doug here: Credit Default Swaps]. Credit Suisse CDS surged 32
bps to a record 254 bps. It’s worth noting that Credit Suisse CDS
remained below 200 bps throughout the 2008 crisis, later spiking to 150
bps during the March 2020 panic. UK banks NatWest (plus 16), Lloyds
(12), and Barclays (11) all posted double-digit CDS gains. Citigroup
CDS jumped 10 to 134 bps - the high since March 2020. JPMorgan CDS rose
five (to 111bps), Bank of America nine (116bps), Morgan Stanley eight
(131bps) and Goldman Sachs five (135 bps) – all highs since the pandemic
panic.
U.S. high-yield CDS surged 42 to 610 bps, trading this
week to the high since May 2020. Investment-grade CDS added two to 108
bps, also the high since the pandemic crisis period. The VIX traded to
35, the high since the June spike. The bond volatility MOVE index
surged to almost 160, just below the March 2020 spike high.
September
30 - Bloomberg (Olivia Raimonde and Carmen Arroyo): “Credit markets are
starting to buckle under pressure from soaring yields and fund
outflows, leaving strategists fearing a rupture as the economy slows.
Banks this week had to pull a $4 billion leveraged buyout financing,
while investors pushed back on a risky bankruptcy exit deal and buyers
of repacked loans went on strike. But the pain was not confined to junk
-- investment-grade debt funds saw one of the biggest cash withdrawals
ever and spreads flared to the widest since 2020, following the worst
third quarter returns since 2008. ‘The market is dislocated and
financial stability is at risk,’ said Tracy Chen, portfolio manager at
Brandywine Global Investment. ‘Investors are going to test central bank
resolve,’ she said…”
Some this week questioned whether the UK
had become an “emerging market.” The nation’s deficits, debt level and
Current Account Deficit are, after all, symptomatic of typical EM crisis
fragility. But it has been how EM countries were forced to respond to
crisis dynamics that set them apart from their “developed” neighbors.
EM countries invariably are forced to aggressively hike interest rates
to stabilize collapsing currencies and debt markets. Developed
countries, on the other hand, have for years enjoyed the luxury of
collapsing interest rates and even massive “money” printing operations
during crisis environments to bolster asset markets and economies.
The
UK is a HUGE Test Case right now. High inflation and acute currency
fragility seem to preclude the normal pivot to aggressive rate cuts and
yet another round of “easy money.” We’ve already witnessed the usual
shift to fiscal stimulus get shot down in flames. The jury is out on
the BOE’s emergency bond support operations. Indeed, the UK is now one
yield spike and/or currency drop away from a debilitating crisis of
confidence. The United Kingdom is not unique.
If markets block
the UK’s use of monetary stimulus to thwart crisis dynamics, it’s a
whole new ballgame. Unleashed Market Structure issues (certainly
including illiquidity, market dislocation, and derivatives counter-party
risks) would be difficult to contain, with crisis of confidence
dynamics likely demonstrating powerful global contagion.
And if phenomenal global financial market risks weren’t enough, disturbing geopolitical risks are also intensifying. [Doug here: We are probably on the cusp of a global financial crisis; a replay of the Great Financial crisis of 2008/09 and I'm not sure Central Banks are in a position to start QE again with inflation still out of control. They might try but it may backfire just as it did in the UK.]
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