US bond repricing marks brief setback for hedge funds' basis trade
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[April 16, 2024] By
Carolina Mandl and Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Hedge funds have reduced bearish bets in U.S.
Treasuries after a change in market expectations for interest rate cuts
this year, but the sheer growth of the government debt market is
expected to spur more trading in the future.
Some hedge funds short Treasury futures as part of the so-called basis
trade, a bet that exploits the price difference between a Treasury
security and its derivative in the futures market. The strategy, where
returns are juiced by leverage, has gained popularity thanks to high
demand for Treasury futures by asset managers. Hedge funds take the
other side of that trade, selling futures contracts.
Now, as investors re-calibrate their bond bets on expectations that
interest rates will remain higher for longer, asset managers' demand for
futures has declined, reducing the profitability of the trade, market
participants have said.
Three hedge funds told Reuters that the once eye-popping returns on the
basis trade have declined, making it a less interesting trade, although
still profitable. The portfolio managers spoke on condition of anonymity
because their trades are not public.
Currently gains are roughly 10% lower than they were six months ago, the
chief investment officer of one of the funds said.
Traders also said that the strategy had recently become too crowded as
high returns have lured more participants. As a consequence, the higher
supply of Treasury futures shorts by hedge funds together with a lower
demand from asset managers for the derivative has shrunk the price
differential portfolio managers have been exploiting.
Asset managers' long positions for 10-year Treasury futures rose sharply
over the past couple of years until a record peak in August last year.
In recent months, however, 10-year futures long positions have dropped
sharply, according to Commodity Futures Trading Commission data.
Somewhat similarly, leveraged funds' short bets on the benchmark futures
contract have been rising steeply since mid-2022, but have dropped
sharply this year.
A basis trade investor, speaking on condition of anonymity, said reduced
demand for Treasury futures in recent months was also likely the result
of asset managers investing more heavily in corporate debt as they seek
higher yields.
SOURCE OF DEMAND
Regulators have focused on the basis trade in recent years because a
fast unraveling of these positions is seen as a potential source of
volatility, as seen in March 2020 when the Treasury market seized up for
lack of liquidity.
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March 9, 2020. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri/File Photo
In particular, there is concern among regulators that the trade
could be a source of financial stability risk because hedge funds
must provide more collateral to back their positions when volatility
rises. This can hurt their balance sheets and the banks that
provided the funding.
At the same time, the basis trade is seen as a vital source of
demand for Treasuries at times of supply and demand imbalances.
In a March 2024 paper, Fed researchers noted how peaks in basis
trade activity - between 2018 and 2020 and then from the second half
of 2022 until now - coincided with periods of large Treasury debt
sales and with the Fed reducing the size of its bond holdings.
These dynamics cause Treasury prices to fall compared to futures,
where demand from asset managers is high because of better liquidity
than in the cash market.
Because of expectations of large Treasury issuance for the
foreseeable future, the recent setback for basis trades is likely to
be only temporary, market participants said.
More supply is expected to make cash Treasuries, or bonds traded in
the secondary market, cheaper relative to futures contracts,
widening the gap between the two positions and therefore attracting
more relative value traders, the chief investment officer of a hedge
fund said.
On the supply side, government debt issuance could reach $3.9
trillion in 2024 alone, the Securities Industry and Financial
Markets Association estimated earlier this month. Meanwhile,
traditional market makers such as bank dealers continue to struggle
to keep up with the ballooning Treasury market because of capital
rules introduced after the 2008 financial crisis.
"The growth of these trades is just natural to me because we're in
this market where traditional intermediation in the Treasury market
is not as it used to be," said Jay Barry, co-head of US Rates
Strategy at JPMorgan.
"Over time, the basis position is going to be bigger than it was in
2019-2020 as the Treasury market continues to grow," he said.
(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia and Carolina Mandl in New York;
Editing by Anna Driver)
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