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In the financial markets, the term "Carry Trade" refers to the way that most
financial intermediaries (money center banks, Wall Street investment banks,
and hedge funds) make their really large profits. Indeed, the engine driving
financial profits is quite simple: borrow at low short-term interest rates,
and lend at higher longer-term interest rates. In the Carry Trade, to enhance
returns and make them exciting, leverage is used. For liquid assets like Treasuries
and Agency Securities, leverage of over 25 to 1 is possible!
When the Federal Reserve was fighting the collapse of the NASDAQ stock market
bubble and cut short-term interest rates to 1 percent, the financial markets
were a "Carry Trader's delight". The interest rate yield curve was steep, and
credit spreads were wide and narrowing. To make money, financial institutions
simply needed to close their eyes, buy longer dated paper and lower rated credits,
and then sit back and enjoy the Fed's interest rate subsidy. There was a lot
of easy money to be made and even corporations got into making money through
finance. Currently, 40 percent of corporate profits in S&P companies
are made from financing activities. Indeed, a firm like GM doesn't make money
from manufacturing and selling cars anymore; it makes money by financing cars
and houses.
So, wither the Carry Trade? The Federal Reserve has raised interest rates
eight times with no end in sight and the yield curve is starting to go flat.
Notice that the Fed funds rate is increasing to at least 3.5 percent, while
the yield on the 10-year Treasury note has been brought down to under 4.0 percent
by foreign central banks and long dollar speculators. Now that the yield curve
has "lost its curve", this profit engine has run out of gas.
The only way to make money in the Carry Trade game is to take on more credit
risk and increase leverage, but the problem with that is credit spreads are
already at levels that have become so narrow that spread-lending offers little
reward, and massive risk. The downgrade of GM and Ford to junk has come at
a time when the credit cycle has started to turn from improving credits and
narrowing credit spreads, to negative credit surprises and widening spreads. A
widening credit spread can push down a bond price faster than rising interest
rates.
Recently, there has been another rally in the Treasury market which has pushed
yields down, and prices up, for Treasury notes and Agency Securities. Now seems
to be the perfect time for Carry Traders to cash in their chips and leave the
financial market casino with their winnings. Money managers who continue to
borrow short to lend long have little to gain and much to lose!
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Richard Benson
Benson's Economic & Market Trends
Specialty Finance Group, LLC
Prior to founding the Specialty Finance Group in 1989,
Mr. Benson acted as a trading desk economist for Chase Manhattan Bank in the
early 1980's and started in the securitization business in 1983 at Bear Stearns,
and helped build the early securitization businesses at Citibank and E.F. Hutton.
Mr. Benson graduated from the University of Wisconsin in
1970 in the Honors Program in Math, and did his doctoral work in Economics
at Harvard University. Mr. Benson is a member of the Harvard Club of New York
and Palm Beach.
The Specialty Finance Group, LLC is a Florida Limited Liability
Company and is registered with the NASD/SIPC as a Broker/Dealer.
Copyright © 2004-2009 Richard Benson
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