Capitalize On Rising Uncertainty: Buy Volatility

 | Oct 07, 2015 07:58PM ET

A Multi-Asset Approach to Capitalize on Rising Uncertainty: Buy Volatility

Today's markets have become divorced from economic reality, thanks largely central bankers too scared to address growth challenges. Instead, they implement programs under which synthetically low interest rates and an endless credit convalescence is the new norm. This only leads to artificially inflated credit and equity markets, capex atrophy and an institutionalized misallocation of capital.

In the U.S., Washington is unable to make critical structural changes, as it stands gridlocked while our nation’s biggest economic competitors – China, Russia, and the oil-producing nations of the Middle East – are doing everything possible to end U.S. monetary hegemony. Risks has surpassed levels ever seen in history, yet markets have hardly made any real adjustment.

While the global marketplace confronts a minefield of risks, one of the most threatening is that of over-leverage.

Over-leverage and insolvency issues do not create themselves. Over the last decade, and more so in the recent 6-7 years, the free money era has prevailed among global central banks. It first began with the Fed’s implementation of massive quantitative easing, allowing newly created dollars to roll off the Greenspan/Bernanke printing press for years on end.

As the dollar became increasingly cheap, emerging market governments (and companies) took advantage of the opportunity to borrow on the cheap (in cheap USD), but forces are now moving in the opposite direction. As the Fed looks to reverse its hyper-accommodative monetary policy, the dollar is strengthening while many emerging market currencies are being devalued.

To make matters worse, these countries often produce largely commoditized products heavily reliant on demand from China, which is growing much more slowly than anticipated. As the impacts of both weak currency values (and thus a weak relative value of sales and earnings against debt service requirements) and declining demand for their product pressure these emerging markets from all angles, they’re approaching default on dollar-denominated debt obligations (if they haven’t gone into default already). Further strengthening in the dollar could be the straw that breaks the camel’s back, ultimately leading to the unraveling of domestic and international credit markets, which would inevitably leave wreckage in the equity markets as well.

A similar dynamic, that of overleverage, has taken place in the domestic consumer and small-to-medium-sized business (SMBs) lending markets, as institutional investors with masses of cash fight for qualified borrowers after the Fed flooded the market with liquidity. We’ve seen the student loan debt market implode after expanding beyond $1 trillion in outstanding loans, many of which graduates simply cannot afford to repay due to sluggish wages.

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Hedge funds and other institutional investors that previously occupied the publicly traded credit arena have moved down the lending spectrum, looking to SMBs and consumer lending as an outlet to generate returns as the domestic Corporate and High-Yield (HY) debt markets are increasingly over-valued, with HY debt trading far above historic norms relative to the associated risk. As a result, competition for borrowers in the private lending arena has skyrocketed. With greater competition comes lenders willing to accept lower interest rates, reduce underwriting standards (with little to no covenants), and chase borrowers who might otherwise be denied due to moderate-to-poor credit ratings (at best). We’re now seeing a similar occurrence in the auto-lending market, which just surpassed $1 trillion in outstanding loans (akin to the student-debt dilemma) to a basket of borrowers whose credit ratings are far from stellar.

After the implementation of Dodd Frank following the 2008/09 financial crisis, regulations limiting commercial bank exposures to “assets” that are essentially bad debts helped remove some of the problems with major bank balance sheets, though derivatives exposures and counterparty risk is still pervasive and poses a serious threat to the system. As an example, global derivatives exposures on a gross basis (not to be confused with net exposure, a metric often misused to measure risk exposure) is greater than 9x global GDP. This clearly reflects a major distortion in the global financial system.

Insolvency issues are on the rise in Europe and Japan as well, and this isn’t the first time either country has seen problems created by major overleverage. Europe and Japan are each uniquely distorted markets, and together reflect the magnitude of the markets’ failure to properly allocate capital.

Let’s start with Europe. The ECB, prior to announcing a QE program to buy up ~$1.2 trillion+ of government and private debts, chose to experiment with negative rates. It was the first central bank to venture into this uncharted (and rightfully so) territory, bringing its deposit rate to negative 0.2% in September 2014. This effectively punished the conservative banks for holding decent levels of cash with the central bank instead of extending loans to businesses or to weaker borrowers. Sweden implemented a similar combination of negative rates and bond buying. Denmark pushed rates deeper into negative territory to protect its currency peg to the Euro, and Switzerland moved its deposit rate below zero for the first time since the 1970s. As central banks provide a benchmark for all borrowing costs, negative rates spill-over to a range of fixed income issues. By the end of March of this year, more than a quarter of debt issued by Eurozone governments carried negative yields, meaning investors who hold these positions to maturity will not get all their money back. With the actions of the ECB, many Eurozone banks elected to pass negative rates onto their customers.

Imagine a bank that pays negative interest. In other words, it gets paid to borrow money, and depositors are actually charged to keep their money in an account. Crazy as it sounds, several of Europe’s central banks have cut key interest rates below zero in a bid to reinvigorate an economy with all other options exhausted. No matter how you swing it, this is an unorthodox approach that has created distortions in the financial markets.

Negative interest rates are a sign of desperation, signaling that traditional policy options have proven ineffective, thus new limits must be explored. Despite the obvious artificial inflation that results from such policies, European markets continue to respond positively to these accommodative monetary developments – it’s the new conventional wisdom: When all else fails to trigger growth, create new money and buy bonds.

Did we forget about Basel I-III?
What was the point of the Basel regulations??? It was intended to bring banks across the Eurozone, primarily those in Spain, Portugal, Italy and France, to clean up their balance sheets and stay away from "toxic" corporate risk. As such, the laws limited the amounts of corporate debt these banks could hold on their balance sheets, resulting in banks' offloading these "high-risk" assets, often at fire sale prices (scooped up by private equity/debt players out of the U.S., the U.K. and Europe). Now, all of a sudden it's a positive indicator that European banks have retreated when it comes to standards for credit quality?? It seems logical that this is plan is certain to backfire.

Tumbling rates in Europe have put some banks in an inconceivable position: owing money on loans to borrowers. At least, one Spanish bank, Bankinter SA (OTC:BKNIY), has been paying some of its customers interest on mortgages by deducting that amount from the principal owed by its borrowers (WSJ). This is just one of many challenges caused by interest rates falling below zero (which makes no sense, to start). Throughout Europe, banks are now being compelled to rebuild computer programs, update legal documents and rebuild spreadsheets to account for negative rates. Interest rate have fallen sharply since the ECB introduced measures last year to reduce its deposit rate, and in March launched a new massive QE program targeted at buying public and private bonds to the tune of EUR 1.2 trillion, in EUR 60 billion monthly installments, driving down the yields on Eurozone debt with the intent to foster lending. See the image below depicting how this situation may occur (and is occurring at certain banks), due to Euribor falling into negative territory.