This is exclusively rates only piece. Others may follow soon.
Trade Idea #1: Buy EUR 10y30y 2% payer vs 10y5y 4% payer (Macro)
Trade Idea #1: Buy EUR 10y30y 2% payer vs 10y5y 4% payer (Macro)
Rational: The Euro long end is ridiculously low. Lower than even Japan. Even
the long-dated real rates are trading negative. This is a great trade to
position for any correction whenever that happens. The extreme bottom right of
the vol surface has developed fantastic vol carry vs. other points on the
surface. The forwards are near-about the same (and historically they have been
same). The spread has moved in negative correlation to 10y swap rates in
post-Lehman era. Now it is near historical average. Given current level of
rates, we will see a break-down of this correlation in a rally (i.e. the spread
does not move much, the trade benefits from carry). In a sell-off the trade
benefits from delta. The trade also benefits in a steepening scenario if Euro
area moves further close to Japan. The adverse scenario is a bull flattening.
Given the current levels, a large move in that direction is unlikely except a)
another euro crisis b) strong yield chasing flows in to the longer part pushing
10s30s down. The trade will be net long gamma in any case. So a strong convex
pay-out which costs nothing to carry.
Trade Idea #2: GBP 5s10s steepeners against USD 5s10s (Cross
market)
Rational: The convergence and the relative rally of GBP rates compared to
USD last year was mostly a correction of the over-optimistic inflation pricing
in GBP. However the underlying growth numbers for the UK has remain quite solid
in terms of private consumption and capital formation, apart from a few misses
in PMIs. This year, notwithstanding the election, this should continue or even
pick up in speed. However, given the influence of the Euro area economies
(largest trade partner for UK) , the pressure on inflation will remain on the
lower side. Also the sensitivity of UK inflation to oil prices are
comparatively low. This will keep front end rate hike pricings in check and may
lead to a steepening in 5s10s on the back of solid economic growth. On the
other leg, the US is more closer to a hike and the Fed may indeed go ahead with
policy rate hike mid this year. This will lead a solid performance of this
trade.
Trade Idea #3: 20y1y vs 4y1y steepener in swaps (Carry)
Rational: Unless we have something really surprising, Europe is potentially
in the area of low-for-long for a while. That makes having a carry trade in the
portfolio an absolute necessity. This combination is one of the sweetest spot,
in terms of the carry generated per unit of risk taken. This spread in
particular has also seen a sharp flattening from around 150+ bps to 85 bps
area. This brings it back to about the same levels of the pre-crisis average.
This presents an opportune timing to enter this trade.
Trade Idea #4: EUR Long-end ASW (Macro)
Rational: The long end ASW in Euro (swaps vs. Germany) has recently shown
excellent correlation to vols, not only in rates, with equity and FX vols as
well. Given the massive QE from ECB compared to Germany supply, and given the
positioning in the market, the long end ASW should widen from here. In a rally,
Germany long bonds have still room for yield compression and flows should work
for the trade. In a sell-off, given the strong long positioning in rates, the
hedging pressure will force ASW widening across maturities. Therefore the
long-end offers a convex bet. Plus the correlation to vol, if continues, gives
excellent way to position for long vol, as the trade will carry positive.
Trade Idea #5: Pay EUR in 10s30s (steepeners)
vs USD (Cross-market)
Rational: The EUR 5s10s30s fly is too cheap, primarily driven by the too
flat 10s30s leg. With the Japanification of Europe, the front-end of EUR and
JPY swap curves have settled in to similar patterns. The anomaly lies in the
long end. Any normalization from here will support this steepener on the EUR
leg. On the USD leg, a possible re-pricing of rates (terminal rate) will keep
the flattening pressure. Over the latter half of the past year, the major
changes in the rate hikes pricing has been a front-loaded timing along with a
lowered terminal rate. Any surprise in wage will impact the terminal rate
upwards and will help the trade. On top, any long end carry related flows in to
treasuries, buoyed by liquidity from ECB, BOJ and other central banks, will add
to further flattening pressure even in a rally. The package can be done either
through payer swaptions or through swaps. The swaps version carries better. A
more efficient version will be expressing the views through the 5s10s30s fly
(instead of 10s30s), which is almost flat to carry. However, the better carry
comes at an increased risk of a 5y led sell-off in the US.
Trade Idea #6: Buy USD 2y1y 2%/ 2.5% payer spread (Macro)
Rational: The current ATMF is 50 bps cheaper than the minimum policy rate
from the FOMC committee projection for 2017 as of Dec 14 (last available
projection). This trade attempts to capture the good chance that the market is
behind the curve from the FOMC. The structure takes advantage of the high payer
skews to make a 4:1 pay-out ratio (max) if the view realizes. The carry is
negative but tolerable.
Trade Idea #7: Buy 6m30y straddle in EUR vs 6m5y5y midcurve (Tactical)
Rational: The recent uptick in vols in most asset classes can extend its
scope and bring back the missing vols in rates. Given the rates level, most of
the action will be in the long end, in either direction. This trade presents an
efficient structure to get long gamma on the long end while selling the
expensive midcurve vol on 5y5y. The ratio of 10y to 5y vol is near historic
high, making the midcurve attractive to sell. A premium neutral trade will be
net flat vega, carries flat initially, and long gamma on the slope (and
significantly long gamma on rates levels on the rally side). In recent time the
10s30s slope has been dominated by 30y (than 10y) and this presents an
effective long gamma trade with little cost to carry. The downside is of course
flipping correlation and 10y whipping around instead of 30y. The main scenario
under which this can happen is an exogenous (led by the US perhaps) general
sell-off in rates.
Trade Idea #8: Global Commodity Slump trade - Buy AUD receivers Vs USD
(Macro)
Rational: The global commodity slump will stay here for a while. This is not
helped by a Chinese slow-down, which may grow even lower than 7% depending on
how the policy makers steer ahead with liquidity. The result is a global glut
of liquidity and rally pressure on all commodity currency economies. The ones
affected most will be ones with starting higher level of rates and large and
relatively free economies. Australia is in the preferred choice. The sweetest
spot in terms of carry should be in intermediate left. However even 10y or
belly receivers should work. Outright, or against the USD rates (or GBP rates,
i.e. economies in general poised to gain from lower commodity prices and higher
liquidity).
Trade Idea #9: Currency Peg Trade - Buy DKK belly receivers against EUR
(Macro)
Rational: The massive QE will put pressure on all currencies pegged to EUR.
Unlike SNB, the Danish central bank has been maintaining peg since the Deutsche
mark era. So it is indeed a tail event to remove the peg. However, the more
plausible way to fight pressure from Euro is even more depressed rates. We have
not yet seen the pressure on DKK in scale, evident in the FX reserve change in
Nationalbank balance sheet vs SNB. When that does build up we will see further
rate cuts, possibly into deep negative territory.
Trade Idea #10: Sell forward Euro HICP floor spread, strike 0% and -1%
(Tactical)
Rational: The recent deflation fear made the Euro HICP 0% floor to blow out
with a large spike in inflation vol. Given the ECB action and the still positive
core inflation (and the downward price + wage rigidity), this is an opportunity
to cash in on the panic dislocation. The risk is that we get stuck in policy
inaction in case of further deterioration of the situation. The spread makes
positive PnL till about -0.5% (note: ball-park pricing here). Even for Japan
the average inflation prints between 2000 till before the 2008 financial crisis
was -0.5% (and much better post crisis). The upside also includes a sharp
correction in energy prices. Alternatively, the trade can be structured as a
real rate trade, by buying matching floors on the Euribors.
No comments:
Post a Comment