As D-Day Looms, The Maturity Of ECB’s Bund Purchases Drops Again

With every passing month, the ECB gets closer to its (QE)D-Day: the day when it runs out of bonds to buy, which according to recent calculations could take place in just a few months unless the ECB taper its bond purchases soon.

In its latest monthly purchase, the ECB revealed that, according to Bloomberg calculations, the estimated weighted average maturity of purchases of German bonds under the ECB’s PSPP in July declined once again to around 5.18 years vs 5.33 years in June, although it was modestly higher compared to the record lows of 3.99 years in May and 4.7 years in April and March.

Curiously, as the average maturity of Bund purchases dipped, all other nations saw a modest increase, while France soared to the highest on record:

  • France avg. maturity at 14.8y vs 8.8y prior
  • Spain avg. maturity at 10.8y vs 8.3y prior
  • Italy avg. maturity was the longest seen under PSPP program at 11.5y vs 9.2y prior

As Bloomberg notes, the latest estimates may have been influenced by the reinvestment of matured bonds by the Eurosystem, as the specifics of this are not released. It adds that in July, there were €19BN in German sovereign redemptions, €20BN from Spain and €36BN from France. The ECB have specified that reinvestments can take place in the month they fall due “or in the following months if needed.”

So how much time does the ECB have left before it runs out of bonds to buy? For the answer we go back to a DB analysis we highlighted two weeks ago, whose highlights we repost below:

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When Will The ECB Run Out Of German Bunds To Buy: Here Is The Math

Apart from the macro economic rationale for tapering the most important, if not only limiting factor which will result in a moderate tapering of the QE programme starting in the coming months is the lack of eligible government bonds, Bunds in particular, for central bank purchases.

As a reminder, the current eligibility criteria (which admittedly can be changed) for government bonds is that they should be euro denominated, have a remaining maturity of 1Y to 31Y and an issue and issuer limit of 33% applies. The issuer limit is different from the issue limit as it takes into account central banks’ holdings of government bonds outside of the asset purchase program as well.

Using ECB data, one can estimate the remaining eligible universe taking into account the reinvestment needs and the impact of gross issuance on the eligible universe. This is what Deutsche Bank has done recently, assuming that 70% of German PSPP purchases are in central govt. bonds with the remaining 30% in regional government bonds and local agencies. The bank then estimates that the remaining eligible universe of bonds is €114bn. Further assuming gross issuance for the remainder of 2017 and 2018 to be € 69bn and € 150bn respectively, I.e. a total of EUR 220bn, the eligible universe increases by 33% of this amount which is €73bn. This takes the total eligible universe by the end of 2018 to approximately €185bn.

At the current pace, Bund purchases until the end of the year should amount to €50bn. Should the ECB continue monetizing debt at the current pace it will not have enough eligible bonds by the end of 2018.

This is where the taper comes in: at an aggregate QE pace of €40bn per month from Jan-18 onward, a €20bn reduction of the current monetization pace, total QE purchases of German govt bonds would amount to €67bn. Additionally, estimating that reinvestment needs until the end of 2018 would amount to €40bn, this takes total QE purchases to €157bn which is comfortably below the available eligible universe of €185bn, however virtually no eligible bonds remain going into 2019.

Summarizing DB’s calculations, if the ECB were to reduce the pace of QE to €40bn per month starting from Jan-18, the ECB should not run out of German government bonds to purchase until early 2019. On the other hand, if it keeps the current pace of QE, it will run out of paper by late 2018, and even with a downward revised €40bn monthly total, the ECB will have almost no German bonds left to buy in early 2019. Furthermore, even tapering to €20Bn in late 2018 or 2019 will only extend total QE by just a few more months at best.

There is a last resort: either by then Germany starts running a huge budget deficit – obviously a very touchy political issue – which the ECB will be delighted to fund, or Greece will finally be eligible for QE and will be delighted to step in to Germany’s shoes, allowing the ECB to monetize Greek bonds, although it will take some very imaginative Goldman financial engineering to allow the ECB to monetize the (defaulted) Greek bonds that it already owns…

via http://ift.tt/2vHPxBH Tyler Durden

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