Why One Trader Is Putting On The Same Trade That Sank Bill Gross

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Although younger readers might not believe it, there was a time when Janus Henderson’s Bill Gross was the biggest bond trader in the world. In fact, there was even a book which proclaimed him the original “Bond King”.

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During his tenure at PIMCO, Bill spent four decades building the West Coast money management firm into a behemoth that managed over $2 trillion. However, in a surprising move in September 2014, Bill left PIMCO for the firm of Janus Henderson. This was viewed as quite the coup for the smaller money manager. There Bill set out to recreate what he had accomplished at PIMCO.

Unfortunately, it appears that “Bill-alone” wasn’t the entire secret sauce for PIMCO’s success over the decades, and after some mediocre returns at Janus, last week Bill announced he was hanging up his skates and retiring.

During an exit interview at Bloomberg, Bill fessed up to what he believed to be the main reason for the poor performance of his fund, but before we get into the meat of the post, a quick aside about another potential reason. It has long been known that money managers who are experiencing a divorce or other personal negative events underperform their peers. Heck, I recall reading about one of David Einhorn’s biggest supporters who made an exception in his case because he believed the rule didn’t apply to David. He concluded by saying there should be no exceptions.

Well, it’s difficult to argue that Bill’s divorce has not been on his mind.

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It’s tough to post good returns when you are taking time out of the trading day for those kind of stunts.

But according to Bill, the biggest problem with his fund’s performance is not his divorce, but rather the confounding US/German 10-year yield spread. Here is Bill coming clean with Tom Keene on Bloomberg TV:

“for the past three or four years, the negative trade… has been Germany versus the United States. In terms of the spread, 10-years German bunds started out in my portfolio at 190 basis points over [US Treasuries] and they are now 250 basis points over. It’s been the big decider and probably one that I shouldn’t have put as many chips on the table. The old Ed Thorpe term – the gambler’s ruin concept said that you only bet 2% of your total capital and certainly I had positions… that were significantly more than that, especially the German-US Treasury note trade and that was probably too much. It was an unconstrained portfolio and investors were expecting hedge-fund-like returns…”

Now before we go any further, let me tell you that I have been 100% in Bill’s camp regarding the US-German 10-year yield spread. I have pounded the table at various times about the opportunities being short-bunds-long-US-treasuries, so I am by no means faulting Bill for his trade.

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In fact, I commiserate with Bill as this spread has been one of the most exciting yet disappointing opportunities in macro land over the past few years.

Yet in hindsight, it easy to recognize that this has been Japanese JGBs all over again. Remember the line that you can’t call yourself a true macro trader until you have lost money shorting JGBs? Well, this has just been the next iteration with Europe making all the same mistakes as Japan did a decade earlier (with a new bunch of macro traders foolishly fading the German bund rally just as they did with JGBs).

Europe continues to administer a policy of balancing budgets with fiscal austerity all the while providing extraordinarily easy monetary policy. The result is exactly the same as Japan – a stop-and-go economy that never manages to reach escape velocity. And in the meantime, interest rates refuse to get off the mat.

I am not telling you anything new. Here is the chart of the total return of the German bund future over the past nine years:

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There is no sense rehashing all the reasons why bunds continue to defy gravity. Our job is to figure out if this will ever change.

I don’t know if German bund yields will head back higher anytime soon. The European economy is quite a mess and there seems to be little to cheer about.

But I know that allowing German 10-year bund yields to fall below zero again will do no one any good.

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Negative yields are a toxic abomination that cause an undue amount of stress to pension funds and the banking system. My guess is that zero will be a line in the sand for the European governments. I know entire parts of the German yield curve are below zero, but I think there is a limit to the amount Europe will allow bunds to appreciate. My spidey-sense says that a zero 10-year bund yield is about the spot when things get serious.

I don’t have any data to back this view, but I feel that as we get closer to zero, the risk reward proposition for a bund short greatly ameliorates.

Yet my biggest signal for wanting to take this trade is none other than Gross himself. There have been a whole host of famous investors who have tapped out at the most inopportune moment. The most famous being Julian Robertson’s closing of his value-stock-oriented hedge fund in the dying days of the DotCom madness. The fact that Gross is quitting the money management business and basically blaming the German bund Treasury note spread makes me want to put this spread trade on in size. It’s nothing personal Bill. If I had being lugging around a losing position for two years and finally decided to cut the cord, I would encourage all my pals to put it on as the coast would now be clear.

If we examine the spread, Bill is not leaving at all-time wides, but rather after blowing out to 280 basis points in the final days of October, the spread has sunk back down into the 259-240 bps range.

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I’m no technician, but it certainly looks like you can lean short against that 260 bps resistance.

Here is the bund treasury note future hedging ratio screen:

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It’s approximately 2 TY futures for every 1 RX (2.24 to be exact).

I’m not sure if the bund is headed lower or US notes are headed higher, but I like this spread trade.

Late last year we ticked at levels that were last seen in 1989 while we are now 275 basis points higher from the 2011 lows.

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Will German inflation really be this much lower than US inflation over the next 10 years? I somehow doubt it.

Just don’t pull a Gross and bet too much on this trade coming in quickly. Size it appropriately and I think you will look back and be happy to have taken it off of Gross’ hands…


 

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6 thoughts on “Why One Trader Is Putting On The Same Trade That Sank Bill Gross

  1. Some details about the ECB and the PSPP.

    The ECB has to buy a fixed percentage for each sovereign, determined by the so called “capital key”. The German capital key is 23.8%. For every 100€ purchased, almost 24€ had to be German bonds. As you can see the amount purchased depends on something not related to the absolute debt of the country. The ECB is bound to hold 23.8% of the whole bond amount in German bonds.
    I provide a counterexample: ECB has to hold 17% of its portfolio in Italian bonds. But that 17% held by the ECB represents 15.8% of Italian debt. In the case of Germany the 23.8% held represents 25.1% of German debt.
    Add that Germany is reducing debt (budget surplus) and is below 60% with the ratio gdp/debt. What we have is an ECB that by rule must hold 23.8% of its portfolio in bonds where the pool is shrinking.
    Extreme examples are Luxembourg, Latvia, Malta. The ECB holds 0.1% of its portfolio in bonds issued by those countries, but that 0.1% is 20.8% of Luxemboug debt, 19.5% for Latvia, and 21% for Malta.
    Excess reserves are penalized, they pay the ECB instead of receiving an interest (-0.4%). For banks is still convenient to buy bunds at 0.1% instead of paying -0.4%

    Bill focused on macro.
    Sometimes details matter.

    1. yeah, but Bill surely knew all of that. there’s no way he put that trade on and kept it on without knowing how the capital key breaks down. i’m sure he’s talked about it at some point if you go back and check.

      1. additionally, that setup argues for a bund tantrum at some point given that it impairs market functioning. in fact, we’ve already seen that, most notably in 2015. Bill correctly called the 2015 bund tantrum, but amusingly, he didn’t listen to himself, so he wasn’t all-in on it

  2. I don’t understand why anyone would make a market prop bet on an asset class that is explicitly political and in any event warped by purchases by official government entities. It is akin to betting the over/under on Soviet tractor production.

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