Significant Article about treasury repo market from bloomberg.
Treasury Traders Paid to Borrow as Fed Examines
Repos (Update1)
Nov. 24 (Bloomberg) -- Owners of Treasuries may
soon get paid to borrow as the U.S. tries to break
a logjam in the $7 trillion-a-day repurchase market.
Treasuries are in such high demand that investors
are lending cash for next to nothing to obtain the
securities as collateral through so-called repos,
which dealers use to finance their holdings. The
problem is many parties involved in repos arent
delivering the bonds because there is no penalty
for not doing so, causing fails to exceed $5
trillion, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of
New York.
Now, an industry group is trying to fix the mess,
which New York Fed Executive Vice President William
Dudley said could cause the U.S. borrowing rates to
rise if not rectified. The Treasury Market
Practices Group wants to impose a penalty on
failed trades, a move that may result in borrowers
who put their Treasuries up as collateral for loans
effectively receiving 2 percent interest.
This is an extraordinary thing to perceive for a
market of the size and significance of the U.S.
repo market, said Lena Komileva, an economist in
London at Tullett Prebon Plc, the worlds
second-largest interdealer broker.
Failures to deliver or receive securities climbed
to a record $5.311 trillion in the week ended Oct.
22. While the amount fell to $1.26 trillion by Nov.
12, thats still above the average of $165 billion
before the credit markets seized up in August of
last year, based on Fed data that goes back to 1990.
Negative Consequences
The disruption in the repo market comes as the
Treasury steps up debt sales to finance a record
budget deficit and the bailout of the nations
banks. Gross issuance of Treasury coupon securities
will rise to about $1.15 trillion in fiscal 2009
from $724 billion last year, according to New
York-based Credit Suisse Securities USA LLC, one of
the 17 primary dealers that are obligated to bid at
the governments auctions.
The more chronic fails disrupt the Treasury
market, the more it reduces its liquidity and
efficiency, Dudley said in a Nov. 12 interview.
Over time, this could have some negative
consequences for the ability of the U.S. Treasury
to raise money at the lowest cost possible. Reduced
liquidity also affects other markets as the
Treasury market is used to hedge positions in other
security classes.
Karthik Ramanathan, Treasurys acting assistant
secretary for financial markets, strongly urged
dealers, traders and investors on Nov. 5 to find a
way to reduce the number of failed trades.
Otherwise, he said, regulators would step in.
Financing Holdings
In a repurchase agreement, one party provides cash
to another in exchange for a security, and vice
versa. Repos are typically used to finance
holdings, meaning movements in the rates affect the
cost of holding the securities in inventory. As of
the end of June, the primary dealers reported
financing $4.22 trillion of fixed-income securities
with repo agreements, according to the Fed.
Since the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings
Inc. in mid-September traders, investors and
dealers have been willing to lend cash to obtain
Treasuries at almost zero interest. The lowest
overnight repo rate on Nov. 21 was 0.05 percent for
the five-year note maturing in October 2013,
according to London- based ICAP Plc, the worlds
largest inter-dealer broker.
Repo trades go uncompleted when its difficult to
obtain the securities or the cost to get them
becomes too expensive. Fails arent usually
considered a breach of contract and the parties
involved typically keep re-scheduling delivery.
Treasury Review
A day after Ramanathans warning, the Treasury said
it was reviewing the trading of two- and five-year
notes after a scarcity in the securities led to
rising fails. The Treasury has conducted at least
nine such reviews, known as large position
reports, to monitor and guard against market
manipulation since 1997.
A week later the Treasury Market Practices Group
recommended imposing a penalty rate that equals
either 3 percent minus the Feds target rate for
overnight loans between banks, or zero, whichever
is greater. The central banks target is 1 percent.
The TMPG said it plans to discuss by Jan. 5 a
potential plan to implement the measures.
A negative rate repo is somewhat counterintuitive
as basically, a lender is not only lending money,
but paying a borrower to take that money, said
Robert Toomey, managing director of the Securities
Industry and Financial Markets Association, a New
York-based trade group. The borrower has
something, in this case a particular security, that
the lender really wants. Its essentially paying a
premium to get a particular security.
Japan Precedent
Negative repo rates have happened before. The Bank
of Japans decision to adopt a zero interest-rate
during the Lost Decade of the 1990s because of
deflation and a protracted banking crisis triggered
the phenomenon for Japanese government debt. Rates
less than zero surfaced in the U.S. in 2003, when
the Feds target fell to 1 percent and traders
sought to cover bets against 10-year Treasuries
after their yields jumped more than a percentage
point in about a month.
Demand for short-term Treasuries may increase if
repo rates turn negative as investors would receive
interest, as opposed to typically paying it, for
money they borrow to finance their holdings.
Credit Suisse expects the two-year Treasury notes
yield to fall to 0.5 percent by the end of the
first quarter from about 1 percent last week.
Significant Kick
For certain sectors of the Treasury curve, such as
the short-end, the implementation of negative repo
rates would provide a significant kick to the
market, said Ira Jersey, an interest-rate
strategist at Credit Suisse in New York. Yields
have room to fall further, with the front end
outperforming the long end.
Treasury yields tumbled to record lows last week,
with two- year notes dropping below 1 percent for
the first time, as deepening recessions in Asia,
Europe and the U.S. and signs of deflation drove
investors to the safest assets.
The yield on the 1.5 percent note due October 2010
slid 9 basis points to 1.11 percent, according to
BGCantor Market Data. The price, which moves
inversely to the yield, rose 5/32, or $1.56 per
$1,000 face amount, to 100 24/32. Five-year note
yields dropped as low as 1.87 percent, the least
since the Fed first started keeping records in
1954. Treasuries were little changed today as of
11:50 a.m. in Singapore.
Like in Japan in the 1990s, traders have increased
bets that the Fed will cut the target federal funds
rate as the economy sinks deeper into recession,
further increasing the chances of negative repo
rates. JPMorgan Chase & Co. economists forecast a
reduction to zero percent.
Fed policy makers predict the U.S. economy will
contract until the middle of next year, according
to minutes of their Oct. 28-29 meeting released
Nov. 19. Government figures showed that consumer
prices excluding food and fuel costs fell for the
first time since 1982 last month.