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When money ceases to be the tool by which men deal with one another, then men become the tools of men. Blood, whips and guns – or dollars. take your choice – there is no other – and your time is running out.
-Francisco d'Anconia
Risk assets fall as carry trade unwinds
4 02 2010The QE sugar daddy is gone and with it seems to be departing the never-ending barrage of USD-carried yield chasing that characterized post-March 2009.
The Dollar Index traded up 0.75% to 80.15 today, breaking the 79.70 resistance level. We expect the USD to continue marching higher as demand from real economy deleveraging outstrips excess USD supply (both QE liquidity and the Fed’s dollar liquidity swaps are all but gone). The pervasiveness of the dollar carry trade will amplify the USD spike, as shorts get squeezed, forcing a positive-feedback demand loop. Dollar-funded carry trades across various forex pairs were sharply unwound today.
Meanwhile, sovereign debt fears continue to heighten. Greece and Portugal CDS spreads are not the only ones widening, either, as contagion risk spreads across the eurozone, tanking the euro. German 5yr CDS traded up to 55/60 today, as Greek and Portuguese default risk becomes increasingly priced into bailout-gifting bunds. United States 5yr CDS shot up to 55/60, as well today. From an earlier post:
Credit markets showed risk aversion en masse today, as IG witnessed a 61:1 widener-tightener ratio today, en route to its close at 99.75bps (though it touched triple digits earlier today). We expect continued deterioration in credit (as well as equity) and are watching for non-sovereign spread widening to complement the sovereign widening that’s been occurring for about 3-4 months now.
We aren’t the only ones bearish on credit going forward, either, as BlueMountain Capital announced a liquidation of their debt fund incepted at the depths of the credit crisis last March:
To put it simply:
Indeed it is, and Moody’s issued concern over the sustainability of America’s AAA rating today.
But the USA isn’t the only AAA-rated borrower facing deterioration in perceived credit risk. Berkshire Hathaway (BRK.A/BRK.B) was downgraded by Fitch to AA+ on potential derivatives losses.
Crude was down $3.84/bbl (5%) today, as the contango trade unwinds. From an earlier post:
The rising wedge mentioned above is now breaking down, signaling the unwind is at hand. Expect falling oil prices.
Meanwhile, even gold found selling today, exemplifying just how pervasive the dollar carry trade really is, as it broke below its descending triangle support line that we’ve been highlighting. Additionally, silver broke down below an important technical level, as well. We expect the gold:silver ratio to start rising once again on liquidity risks.
In a recent post about Amazon (AMZN), we noted:
We continue trading this thesis, as the positive-feedback demand becomes supply. And in regards to Amazon, it appears ready to break down below its 116 support level. We expect the October 2009 earnings gap to be filled and for this stock to trade back in double digits.
This seems to be the beginning of the reversal, and our portfolios are positioned for it. We expect vol expansion from here, as well as for high beta names to underperform. We also expect reactionary policy from the FRB, and a second iteration of QE and another round of liquidity swap extensions will bring back the short-USD (re/in)flation trade. Until then, we will stay long USD and short risk assets.
Some equity index charting: