The Malinvestment Boom In Coders

Submitted by Pater Tenebrarum of Acting Man blog,

Computer Science Enrollments Explode

Techcrunch had an interesting article about the explosion of freshmen deciding to study computer science. There can be no doubt that this type of knowledge is currently in great demand – however, we do believe that there are some signs that the boom is so to speak 'getting out of hand' and is beginning to reflect the effects of the technology echo bubble on Wall Street.

The give-away is the size of the demand for computer science studies relative to other fields of study. Even if computer technology and everything connected to it is steadily increasing in importance, this looks like 'bubble behavior' to us. Let us not forget,  vast increases in the money supply and the concomitant suppression of the natural interest rate are mainly reflected in the higher order stages of the economy's production structure, and investment in 'human capital' is definitely a very 'high order' stage (meaning: it takes a very long time before the investment actually bears fruit and produces an income).

freshmen

New enrollments in computer science vs. other studies – click to enlarge.

People may be inclined to instinctively judge that it can only be good if so many young people decide to study something 'useful' as opposed to, say, art history or literature. However, as Mish has recently pointed out, the widespread yammering about a 'skills shortage' is actually misguided (he provides a few additional links to recent press reports on the topic that are well worth checking out as well). There is in reality no shortage of workers skilled in science and engineering.

We happen to believe that jumping on a popular bandwagon is almost always a mistake. By the time these freshmen finish with their studies, they may well find out that a shortage has developed in an entirely different field and that their chosen profession is suddenly crowded with job seekers.

Bubble or Not?

One needs to keep in mind here that the last time enrollment in computer science peaked was in the year 2000 – concurrently with the technology mania. This is obviously no coincidence. What is slightly disconcerting is that the current peak in enrollments towers vastly above that previous bubble peak. This can be gleaned from the data published by individual colleges. Here is e.g. Carnegie-Mellon University as a pertinent example:

carnegie mellon

Carnegie-Mellon University's computer sciences enrollments. The current peak dwarfs  the year 2000 peak – click to enlarge.

The researchers quoted by Techcrunch assert that it is 'not a bubble this time' based on what we believe is spurious reasoning:

    “Now, when the word “bubble” gets thrown around, many tech industry leaders like to point out that public market activity is nowhere near  the irrational exuberance seen during the first tech boom. But in academia, enthusiasm for learning to code is at all time highs, with CS enrollment at some schools far surpassing the numbers that were seen during the late 1990s.”

Our reply to this is that not every bubble is accompanied by the kind of public frenzy seen in 1929 or 2000. After suffering through two major bear markets and a real estate collapse, the still overleveraged public is no longer as enthused about the stock market's get rich quick promise as it once was, that is certainly true. However, that only means that the bubble is driven by 'professionals' nowadays – with the main difference that they are probably even more reckless, as they play with other people's money. In other words, they get all the reward, while incurring very little risk. In fact, the biggest career risk investment professionals as a rule face is being out of the market while it goes up. If they get caught fully invested in a bear market, they have little to fear because they will have plenty of company and even more excuses (of the 'no-one could have seen it coming' type).

Hence it could well be argued that the current echo bubble is in some ways even more worrisome than the frenzy seen in the late 1990s. It has definitely invited a great deal more leverage already:

 

NYSE-investor-credit-SPX-since-1980

Investor margin debt balances have ballooned to a far greater extent than at the year 2000 peak – never before have negative credit balances been at such an extreme level – click to enlarge.

 

Lastly, in order to determine whether or not one is in a bubble era, opinions and observations about the mass-psychological backdrop are one thing, but the data are more important. The most important datum of them all is money supply growth, and with regard to that, the current period definitely stands out. Since 2008, the broad US money supply TMS-2 has increased by about 93% (from $5.3 trn. to $10.2 trn.). Since 2000, the increase in the broad US true money supply amounts to an even more staggering 245%. So there is now almost twice as much money in the economy than in 2008, and nearly three and half times as much as in 2000. This is the datum most relevant to determining if we are in a bubble era or not, and it clearly tells us that we are. It matters little if it 'feels' like we are in a bubble to 'tech industry leaders' (one of whom let us not forget has just spent $19 billion for an 'app', buying profitless 'eyeballs'). What matters in this case is the evidence.

 

TMS-2-LT-ann

US money supply TMS-2 (without memorandum items) since the 1990s – click to enlarge.

As to the effect of this monetary expansion on asset prices, below is a chart of the Nasdaq Internet Power Shares ETF documenting it quite nicely. As an aside to all this, we are not saying anything regarding the timing of the bubble's eventual demise. The question is only 'is it a bubble?' We say it is one, and it can be shown that this is the case.

The huge increase in computer science enrollment is therefore most likely an example of malinvestment in human capital. Students would do well to take the time to carefully ponder their choices in this respect.

 

PNQI

PNQI – one of the market sectors displaying the exponential growth typical of bubbles – click to enlarge.

 

Lastly, here is a slightly dated chart we have shown before, namely the percentage of money-losing IPOs, which has recently reached the year 2000 peak again:

 

money-losing IPOs

Share of IPOs with negative earnings – most of them are in the technology sector – click to enlarge.

 

Conclusion:

Res ipsa loquitur.




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WaPo Critic Blames Seth Rogen Movies for Isla Vista Killings

Judd Apatow and Leslie Mann

Given that the University of California—Santa Barbara killer
cited his inability to get laid in college as a motivation for his
massacre, should Seth Rogen, Judd Apatow and Zac Efron apologize
for making movies that glorify the sex and excess inherent to
college life?

Washington Post film critic Ann Hornaday thinks so. In
a recent article about the horrific weekend attack that left seven
dead in Isla Vista, California, she
implicitly blamed
Neighbors, a new film that casts
Rogen and Efron as residents of a fictional fraternity row:

How many students watch outsized frat-boy fantasies like
“Neighbors” and feel, as Rodger did, unjustly shut out of
college life that should be full of “sex and fun and pleasure”? How
many men, raised on a steady diet of Judd Apatow comedies in which
the shlubby arrested adolescent always gets the girl, find that
those happy endings constantly elude them and conclude, “It’s not
fair”?

The killer, Elliot Rodger, was a wealthy social outcast with a
father in the film business. According to his 141-page manifesto,
Rodger was rejected by fellow students at the UCSB campus and came
to hate all women for refusing to have sex with
him. Clearly, the version of campus hookup culture
glorified in movies like Neighbors did indeed spurn
Rodger.

But is that what made him a murderer? Hornaday
roped in male privilege and violence in media to
complete her argument:

If our cinematic grammar is one of violence, sexual conquest and
macho swagger — thanks to male studio executives who green-light
projects according to their own pathetic predilections — no one
should be surprised when those impulses take luridly literal form
in the culture at large.

Part of what makes cinema so potent is the way even its
most outlandish characters and narratives burrow into and fuse with
our own stories and identities. When the dominant medium of our age
— both as art form and industrial practice — is in the hands of one
gender, what may start out as harmless escapist fantasies can,
through repetition and amplification, become distortions and
dangerous lies.

Rogen took to Twitter to dispute Hornaday, branding
her “horribly insulting and misinformed,”
according to The Huffington Post.

“How dare you imply that me getting girls in movies caused a
lunatic to go on a rampage,” wrote Rogen in a Tweet.

Apatow had nothing to do with Neighbors, but has worked
on similar bro-friendly comedies with Rogen. He did not take kindly
to Hornaday’s insinuation, either. He tweeted that it
was absurd to blame movies rather than mental illness.

The angry reactions from Rogen and Apatow garnered significant
media attention, and eventually
drew a video response
from Hornaday.

“In singling out Neighbors and Judd Apatow I by no means meant
to cast blame on those movies or Judd Apatow’s work for this
heinous action, obviously not,” she said in the video.

But she did defend her view that certain movies—those made by
white males, in praise of wish fulfillment and vigilantism—are
unhealthy for the culture.

In times of tragedy, violent entertainment often plays the role
of convenient scapegoat. Nevertheless, there is good reason to be
skeptical of such claims,
especially in the immediate aftermath
.

Expect to hear more media figures blaming movies, video games,
mental health care deficiencies and lack
of gun control
in the coming days.

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Goldman Blames Fed For Creating “Abnormal” Trading Enviornment

First it was JPM, then it was, surprisingly, none other than NY Fed chief Bill Dudley – the head of the trading desk that proudly boasts trader extraordinaire Kevin Henry, then it was Citi yesterday, and now joining the chorus of banks and Fed presidents blaming all that is wrong in the banking system on near record low volatility resulting in a collapse in trading is none other than Goldman Sachs, whose president Gary Cohn spoke at a Sanford Bernstein conference earlier today, said that fixed income volumes – the bread and butter of Goldman’s juggernaut FICC division – are under significant pressure, and blamed low interest rates and, drumroll, the Fed’s QE on the drop in volatility, summarizing the current trading environment as “Abnormal.” It appears increasingly more are voicing their displeasure with the New Centrally-Planned Abnormal… but only after their balance sheets are full to the brim with some $2.8 trillion in fungible reserves.

Some other soundbites from Cohn:

  • Cohn says economic factors are biggest driver of slow trading; economic fundamentals bigger driver than regulation

Translated: the bond market has realized what is happening to the economy, which means stocks not so much.

  • Cohn says market is perhaps overly influenced by ‘recency’

Translated: the last crash was caused by the Fed; therefore everyone knows who will be the reason for the next crash.

  • Cohn: We believe strongly trading volume will return to normal

Translated: at some point QE will end and all hell will break loose (yes, the Lehman deflationary collapse “recenecy” is still there, and everyone remembers who the biggest winners were from the Lehman and AIG collapse). We will be sure to profit again.

  • Cohn says Goldman Sachs is taking market share in trading; says market share gains may not translate to revenue yet

Translated: it worked for Amazon for 5 years, why shouldn’t it work for us too?

  • Cohn: ‘environment for all of the firms is quite difficult’

Translated: It’s not just who are getting tired of the Fed’s endless manipulation of every asset class.

 

  • Cohn says M&A pickup may be followed by trading pickup

Translated: he may be right, he may be wrong. One thing is certain: M&A pickup with be followed by a pinkslip, pardon synergy, pickup.

And the main slides from Cohn’s presentation. Note the absolute collapse in FX volumes as regulators have finally clamped down on  foreign exchange market manipulators and all that’s left are the robots.

Source: Goldman




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Winter Olympics Sports Socialism Goes Out of Fashion in the Free World

The days when countries vied with each other for the national
(dis)honor of spending themselves into the poorhouse in Putin.Olympicsorder to host the Olympics — or at least the
Winter Olympics — might be fast disappearing. Why any sane city
would ever want to
host
the Olympics is a mystery given that these games
never paid
for themselves — although they did give politicians
lots of opportunities for waste, fraud and abuse. (Actually,
scratch that, the answer is clear: Most cities are not sane.) But
after Russia’s recent Sochi debacle bumped the price tag of this
sports socialism to a jaw-dropping $51 billion, the outer bounds of
insanity might have been reached. It is no longer possible to
pretend that the promises
of spillover effects and Keynesian multipliers are anything other
than total nonsense.

The deadline for awarding the 2022 Winter Olympics is barely a
year away and potential bidders are dropping out like Indian
athletes in a luge contest.


Reports
Deadspin:

Yesterday, Krakow, Poland, officially withdrew its bid for the
games
, a day after a citywide referendum where 70 percent of
voters came out against hosting the Olympics. “Krakow is closing
its efforts to be the host of the 2022 Winter Games due to the low
support for the idea among the residents,” said mayor Jacek
Majchrowski.

In January, another of the six original finalists pulled out,
when Stockholm, Sweden’s ruling political party declined to fund
the games. They cited the pointlessness of paying hundreds of
millions for facilities that would be used for two weeks and then
rarely again, a story common to almost all
Olympic hosts.
“Arranging a Winter Olympics would mean a big
investment in new sports facilities, for example for the bobsleigh
and luge,”
the Moderate party said in a statement.
“There isn’t any need
for that type of that kind of facility after an Olympics.”

In November, voters in Munich, Germany,
rejected a proposed Olympic bid
. “The vote is not a signal
against the sport,” said one lawmaker, “but against the
non-transparency and the greed for profit of the IOC.”

Last March, a joint bid from Davos/St. Moritz, Switzerland, fell
apart after
being rejected by a public referendum.

Of the four remaining finalists, two are in rough shape. The
Oslo, Norway, bid is falling apart. It was supported by a
razor-thin margin in a September referendum, but public opposition
has only grown since then. And on Sunday, the junior member of the
government coalition
voted against funding any Olympics
. For them to go on, it would
require an unprecedented alliance between the ruling Conservatives
and the opposition Labour party.

The Lviv, Ukraine, bid seems dead in the water with the turmoil
and war in the country. “Currently our dream is on hold,” said the
bid’s chief.

Who’s still standing? Almaty, Kazakhstan, and Beijing, China.
The first is an oppressive oil state and the second just an
oppressive state.

It has taken nearly a century for these white elephants to go
out of fashion in the free world. Can the unfree worldKim Jong Un be far behind? (The answer is “yes.” And
for proof, observe the 1980s mushroom cut that North Korean
strongman Kim Jong-un still apparently regards as high
fashion.)

My piece about the obscenity of poor countries like India
hosting the Commomwealth Games is 
here
.

H/T: Prateik

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Putin Says Russia and China Must “Secure Gold” and FX Reserves

Today’s AM fix was USD 1,265.25, EUR 928.83 and GBP 754.52 per ounce.

Yesterday’s AM fix was USD 1,283.00, EUR 940.48 and GBP 762.87 per ounce.      


Gold fell 2% yesterday to $1,264.76/oz. Silver fell 1.8% to $19.06/oz.

 


Gold in U.S. Dollars, Daily, 1 Year – (Thomson Reuters)

Gold broke below support at $1,284/oz yesterday and quickly fell to nearly $1,265/oz. Overnight, gold in Singapore fell to nearly $1,260/oz prior to a slight bounce back to $1,266/oz.

Better than expected U.S. economic data and slightly lower official Chinese demand were cited as reasons for the move lower but it appeared more computer and technical driven as the price falls came before the U.S. economic data and Chinese demand figures were released.

Technically, gold is vulnerable to a further fall to the double bottom between $1,180/oz and $1,200/oz.

The 14-day relative-strength index fell to 32.9 yesterday, the lowest since December, and near the level of 30 that suggests a potential rebound to technical analysts. Gold has rebounded 5.2% this year even after yesterday’s 2% price fall and remains one of the best performing assets so far in 2014.

Gold premiums in China remain under pressure overnight at just $2 over London spot. The lacklustre trade and slowing demand in recent weeks has led to falling premiums on popular bullion coins and bars globally. We and many bullion dealers internationally have responded by reducing gold bullion premiums on a number of the most popular coins and bars. One kilo bars have been reduced to a 1.6% premium from a 3.5% premium.

The price weakness came despite continuing bullish developments for the gold market. Yesterday came news of China launching a new physical Global Gold Exchange and President Putin of Russia again affirmed how Russia values its gold reserves.



Chinese President Jinping Raises Toast (In Vodka?) With Russian President Putin

Russia and China need to ensure their gold and currency reserves are secure, Russia’s President Vladimir Putin told journalists at the St Petersburg International Economic Forum according to Reuters.


“For us (Russia and China) it is important to deposit those (gold and currency reserves) in a rational and secure way,” Putin said. “And we together need to think of how to do that keeping in mind the uneasy situation in the global economy.”

Putin also said China and Russia will consider further steps in order to use national currencies in bilateral transactions.

For more information about falling premiums and current premiums on bullion coins and bars, please click here

 




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7Y Treasury Yield Drops Below 2%

The plunge in yields continues and even unflappable stocks are starting to crack a little… 7Y Treasuriy yields just cracked below 2% for the first time since Nov 2013. What is perhaps most worrying for the exuberant equity market is the dramatic flattening in 2s30s today (2Y +2.5bps, 30Y -9bps on the week).  Wondering why bonds keep rallying… see below…

 

Yields are tumbling across the complex (except the short-end)

 

Leaving the 7Y back under 2%

 

With 2s30s at one year lows…

 

And this is why… Treasury shorts actually added into the rally of the last few weeks…

 

Charts: Bloomberg




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A. Barton Hinkle on Sabra’s Campaign to Get Government to Regulate Hummus

how would you know what this is without government?Sabra Dipping,
whose Chesterfield, Virginia, plant produces millions of tons
of hummus each month, is lobbying the Food and Drug Administration
to write new rules governing who can claim to make the stuff. In a
“citizen petition,” Sabra has asked Washington to declare
that only certain dipping sauces qualify as hummus, and only they
may be labeled as such. Specifically, Sabra
wants Washington to forbid the use of the word “hummus”
unless the dipping sauce is made out of chickpeas and contains at
least 5 percent tahini, or ground sesame seeds. To help federal
bureaucrats further understand the profound gravity of the issue,
Sabra draws their attention to a variety of imposters, such as a
certain “red pepper lentil hummus” (made with lentils) and a
certain “fat-free original hummus” (made — gasp! — without tahini).
But none of that, writes A. Barton Hinkle, is enough to disguise
the fact that the company is simply trying to cement its position
as the leading market incumbent by using the government to squash
the smaller competition.

View this article.

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President Obama Defends His Foreign Policy In West Point Speech – Live Webcast

The West Point Military Academy Commencement address short hand: “Enjoy it now… and don’t retire or get injured…” As NYTimes notes, President Obama plans to use a speech at the West Point military academy on Wednesday to lay out a foreign policy vision for his final two-and-a-half years in office, defending his approach against a wave of criticism that he has been too passive on the world stage. 

 

 

 

 

As NYTimes concludes,

The West Point speech comes just days before Mr. Obama heads overseas again, this time to Europe where his international leadership will be tested as he tries to pressure Russia to stop disrupting a new pro-European government in neighboring Ukraine. He will leave Washington on Monday night headed for Warsaw, where he will reassure Poles and other Eastern Europeans that the United States will stand by its NATO allies against any potential Russian aggression.

From there, he will head to Brussels to meet with other leaders of the major industrial powers known as the Group of 7 for its first annual summit meeting since suspending Russia, which was to have host the gathering. Mr. Obama has strained to coordinate the American response to Moscow’s intervention in Ukraine with European allies who have been more reluctant to take action that could jeopardize their economic ties with Russia.

Mr. Obama will end his trip in Normandy, France, to mark the 70th anniversary of the D-Day invasion, which turned the tide in World War II. That may be the most awkward stop because among the leaders planning to attend is President Vladimir V. Putin of Russia.




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France Hikes Taxes, “Wildly Inaccurate Projections” Hilarity Ensues

Having suffered a dismal confidence-sapping defeat in last weekend’s elections, Francois Hollande’s French government is at the center of another embarrassing faux pas this morning. Somewhat famously, Hollande has raised income tax, VAT and corporation tax since he was elected two years ago… and government forecast EUR30bn of extra tax income. As The BBC reports, the actual amount gained… EUR16bn (leaving a EUR14bn black hole) and forcing The Court of Auditors to proclaim that “forecasts of tax revenue in 2013 were so wildly inaccurate that they cast doubt on its forecasts for this year.” Mon Dieu… they lied?

 

As The BBC reports, the French government faces a 14bn-euro black hole in its public finances after overestimating tax income for the last financial year.

French President Francois Hollande has raised income tax, VAT and corporation tax since he was elected two years ago.

 

The Court of Auditors said receipts from all three taxes amounted to an extra 16bn euros in 2013.

 

That was a little more than half the government’s forecast of 30bn euros of extra tax income.

 

The Court of Auditors, which oversees the government’s accounts, said the Elysee Palace’s forecasts of tax revenue in 2013 were so wildly inaccurate that they cast doubt on its forecasts for this year.

Of course, the French are not the only egregious liars projecting and forecasting any old crap to justify their bloated expenses… just look at what the IMF propjects for Ukraine’s V-shaped recovery…(more on that later)




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The Bond Market Explained For CNBC

By EconMatters

 

Questions – Low Yields

 

We occasionally turn the volume up on the TV`s just to hear what others are thinking in mainstream business media with the Sales & Name Game that is business television these days and CNBC asked the following question: “Why if everybody is talking about inflation is the bond market not moving?”

 

Frankly, there is so much market illiteracy even among the professionals in the financial market as witnessed by the conversation revolving around high frequency trading, even by the so-called experts who commented publicly on the issue it should be expected that many market participants fail to understand the bond market dynamics regarding why yields are so low relative to expectations at the beginning of the year. 

 

Answers Provided

 

So here goes: 

  1. Bond yields rallied to the close of 2013, and they were at very elevated levels.
  2. Equities were also at all-time highs. 
  3. The first quarter was tough for two reasons weather, and an exceptionally front loaded 3rd and 4th quarters that left slack in the inventory and spending cycle. 
  4. Lots of low interest money available from many fronts, see Japan, China, US and Europe. 
  5. Makes sense given the cheap money available, yields at relative trend range highs, equities range bound, and economic data suffering because of an extremely debilitating winter and Growth Pull from Robust 3rd & 4th quarters, to put on massive yield chasing conservative carry trades. These were conservative given the aforementioned unique set of points coming together just right.

The High Yield Carry Trade Explained

 

Here is the trade borrow at rates from 10 to 25 basis points, and I mean borrow in exceptionally large terms (leverage), then depending upon the currency one borrowed in (there may be currency machinations involved in getting into the currency where wanting to invest this cheap loan, i.e., sell Yen and buy Dollars), then pick a ‘perceived’ low volatility asset that pays some form of Yield, i.e., 10-Year at 3%, Utility Stocks with High Yields, etc. buy this yielding asset and sit back and rake in the delta each day, week and month!

It is important to remember these key points regarding this trade 1) Low volatility instruments 2) Exceptionally Low Short-term Borrowing Rates 3) Leverage, Leverage, and more Leverage. This is why Gold has been out of favor the last couple of years because it pays no Yield! When in doubt follow the money trail, and there has been a huge amount of money made by utilizing this trade setup. 

 

Another requirement has to do with the market going in the direction that these investors put their vast leverage to work (or at least stays within a defined range that investors are comfortable with before losing more principal than they earn in interest carry, i.e., utility stocks going higher or bond prices going higher with yields lower).  Also depending upon the currency borrowed in a Positive Carry enhances the trade and an extremely negative carry negates this trade altogether in many cases. Google this if interested but not the scope of this piece.

 


Big Banks Love Leverage Yield Plays

 

Many investors have put this trade on and off over the last five years of QE, and recently the Big Banks have been buying up a bunch of the treasuries that the Fed is no longer buying from the start of 2014 going forward. 

 

I imagine this is a way to offset other areas like mortgage refinancing where they were struggling with rising rates, and everybody already effectively refinanced. The Big banks are always looking to make money and this trade sure has helped their bottom line the first two quarters of 2014.

 

I might also add that bonds are seasonal in nature, and many hide in bonds during the sell in May Summer doldrums. But make no mistake the reason yields are so low right now is because there is money to be made from such a market dynamic. 

 

Carry trades are very popular in the history of modern finance and Big Banking, and the use of massive leverage is their go to strategy where they lack creative talent who can confer a competitive market advantage – Big Banks have no talent! This is an oversimplification but anybody who is really talented can make so much more money working in other places, compensation is off the charts in some cases. 

 

Summation

 

Thus to sum up the Carry Yield Trade is the main driver of why Bond Yields are so low and utility and other high yielding stocks are so high. This trade works until it doesn’t, and it is my guess that many Big Banks figure they have the entire second quarter before they need to start unwinding this trade.

 

I think they have much less time, and are pushing this trade trying to pick up pennies in front of a massive steamroller of inflation coming down the road. I think the writing on the wall may be as soon as 6 more trading days and the ADP Employment Report, I sure wouldn`t want to own a bunch of treasuries going into next Friday`s Employment Report or the Fed Meeting in a couple of weeks!

 

Exit Strategy

 

But at any rate, once the Fed starts to raise rates and usually they are forced to by rising inflation (they never do it until their hand is forced) all the sudden the cheap money dries up, but long before that happens investors all start to unwind the trade, other investors pile on in the direction of the unwind, and this is where the steamroller analogy comes into play.

 

As massive unwinds the size required to make this kind of trading strategy work are really hairy, and oftentimes cause more losses than the money made in the prior two quarters making money on this trade by the Big Banks. However everything is quarterly results oriented and being on bonus track on a daily basis at some firms so long range foresight is often lacking in trade configurations. Did I mention a lack of creative talent at the Big Banks who often substitute brut size and scale to make money in the markets as their best investment strategy?

 

Economy is Picking up Pace

 

So the High Yield Carry Trade is why Bond yields are where they currently reside, and is this saying anything structural regarding the economy? No! Will these low yields persist through year end? Again No! And remember when in doubt follow the money, and high yield chasing earns a lot of pennies until it gets steamrolled!

 

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