Tag Archives: corporate bond etfs

Leveraged ETF, ETP and Risk-Parity Schemes: Caveat Emptor

In the wake of recent weeks’ volatility and pricing dislocations across the exchanged-traded product space, news media and Mutual Fund marketers are having a field day putting the feet to the fire–and those toes being torched are connected to the universe of juiced-up and levered ETF and ETN products, as well as hedge funds that specialise in so-called “risk-parity funds” that employ lots of leverage. Is it fair to bash these ‘alternative’ strategies, or should the SEC require that the prospectuses (or is it “prospecti”?) for these protein-enhanced products have a coverage page that displays Caveat Emptor in caps? For those not fluent in Latin, the phrase means: Buyer Beware.

NYT Dealbook columnist Landon Thomas Jr. poses that issue in his a.m. piece: “Investment Strategies Meant as Buffers to Volatility May Have Deepened It”–and before pointing MarketsMuse readers to that article, MarketsMuse editors remind our readers that ETF red flags are nothing new. Levered products, often in the form of ETNs (exchange-traded notes) that seek to either mitigate risk or enhance returns via the use of futures products are notorious for being fit for trading market professionals only; not retail investors and not even for so-called sophisticated institutional investment managers.

Corporate bond ETFs have also been put on ‘watch lists’ in recent months, even though they are all the rage for many of the right reasons, including offering exposure and ‘greater liquidity’ for those needing to allocate investment  funds to corporate debt issues across various industry sectors and ratings categories. That said, Apocalypse Watchers warn that when interest rates spike, corporate bond investors will all run for the exits together (to avoid mark-downs in their holdings) and the market-makers who specialize in ETF products connected to this asset class will be overwhelmed with nowhere to go–and no [reasonable] bid to offer to those sellers–simply because the glass-is-half-empty crowd contends those market-makers will be unable to find buyers for the underlying constituents as a means to hedge their purchase of the cash ETF product. That particular thesis has not yet been fully tested, but it does offer an agenda for spirited debate.

The Dealbook column does put context into the discussion with the following:

Defenders of risk-parity investing say that these investment styles are not set in stone and that portfolios can be recalibrated on fairly short notice to make them less vulnerable.

As for E.T.F.s, practitioners say that the funds to date have held their own despite some concerns over how portfolios were being valued during the very sharp market sell-off late last month.

Some of the more exotic E.T.F.s that rely on leverage to juice investment returns could in some instances be the “tail that wags the dog,” said Steven Schoenfeld, an early pioneer in E.T.F. investing and founder of BlueStar Global Investors.

“But the fundamental advantage of E.T.F.s — transparency, liquidity and variety — that remains,” he said.

What remains unclear, however, is how an investing community that has become accustomed to churning out safe and steady returns in a low interest rate, low volatility environment adapts to the new reality of wild market swings.

Such sharp ups and downs in the market are expected to become more frequent as the time approaches for the Federal Reserve to push interest rates higher.

People might as well get used to them, says Nicolas Just, a portfolio manager at Natixis Asset Management, a French fund company that oversees $904 billion in assets.

“These types of sudden market swings will become more and more frequent,” he said. “So you have to be prepared for them at any time.”

For the full story from the NY Times, click here

 

Investors Use of Corporate Bond ETFs On The Rise

MarketsMuse.com blog update courtesy of press release from Tabb Group and profiles new research report focused on institutional investors’ growing use of corporate bond ETFs.

NEW YORK & LONDON–(BUSINESS WIRE)–In new research examining accelerating growth in the corporate bond exchange-traded fund (ETF) market, which has seen assets under management (AuM) rise more than $90 billion from 2009 to 2014, a nine-fold increase in aggregate and an annual 42% compound growth rate, TABB Group says bond ETFs can help institutional investors manage investment flows, enhance returns and limit transaction costs in the current liquidity environment.

“This is a way to achieve market beta while the single-name search process carries on.”

Regulatory burdens of the Volcker Rule, Basel III and the Liquidity Coverage Ratio (LCR) have handicapped large banks and altered their secondary market-making businesses, forcing them to change the manner in which they provide liquidity to investors, wreaking havoc on the process of building and expanding portfolios. Institutional investors navigating this new landscape need to leverage every tool available, say Anthony Perrotta, a TABB principal, head of fixed income research and research analyst Colby Jenkins, co-authors of “Bond Market Entropy: Bringing Order to the Cash Bond Crisis,” which is why they have been embracing the corporate bond market.

“Bid/ask spreads for large bond ETFs are substantially more stable than their underlying cash bonds,” says Perrotta. They’re also being used as a means of exchanging credit risk during times of stress in the underlying market.”

According to Jenkins, “A 5-10% liquidity sleeve in corporate bond ETFs that tracks to a diversified portfolio of bonds is becoming a popular tool among asset managers to efficiently manage their investment flows.” In the past two years, he says, large single-name portfolio managers have begun utilizing ETFs as a means to smooth out their exposure during redemption periods. Alternatively, they are using ETFs to gain interim exposure to the market when receiving an investment inflow from a client such as a pension fund, insurance company or other long-term oriented investor. Instead of waiting some elongated period of time to find the appropriate cash bonds, they turn to ETF shares that correspond to their core portfolio. “This is a way to achieve market beta while the single-name search process carries on.”

Although 60% of the corporate bond notional trading activity in the second half of 2014 took place in just 8% of the CUSIPs traded, there are more than 260 bond ETFs available to investors today, up from 62 in 2008, a 326% increase. And despite regulatory approval and entrenched pre-ETF investment mandates being the two greatest barriers currently to institutional corporate bond ETF adoption, “a larger pool of National Association of Insurance Commissioners (NAIC) credit-rated bond ETFs that have unique economic advantages over non-rated bond ETFs, such as more lenient risk-based capital requirements, will be a key stepping stone to the next threshold of institutional adoption,” Perrotta says.

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Corporate Bond ETFs and Liquidity: A Looming Black Swan or Extended Contango?

MarketsMuse update inspired by yesterday’s column by Tom Lydon/ETFtrends.com and smacks at the heart of what certain “bomb throwers” believe could be a Black Swan event, albeit an event that may not be driven by a global crisis or surprise economic event. The event in question will, in theory, take place when interest rates start ticking up (and underlying corporate bond prices tick down) and institutional bond fund managers find themselves trying to figure out whether to simply suffer from mark-downs (and performance) or to continue collecting coupons until the issues they hold mature.

MM Editor Note: Since most folks know that bond managers are akin to lemmings (no disrespect intended!) and typically follow each other like blind mice, given the massive size of the corporate market place, a potential avalanche could take place when everyone runs for the exit if rates tick up and simultaneously, the economy starts to slow. Wall Street dealers are certainly not going to be available to catch those falling knives, simply because new regulations have put a crimp in the capital they can commit to warehousing positions. Worse still, its easy to envision one very long contango event, where the cash ETF trades at a discount to the value of the underlying bonds, simply because one won’t be able to sell those underlying bonds in any type of material size.

Here’s an opening extract from Tom Lydon’s piece “Liquidity Concerns In Corporate Bond ETFs”: Continue reading

Corporate Bond ETFs: Trading Underlying Issues Is Not So Easy For Many Pros

Greenwich Associates study reveals difficulty in executing corporate bond trades; Transparency and Liquidity are Lacking

MarketsMuse update courtesy of extract from Jan 23 Wall Street Letter, followed by our own comments (thanks to our Exec Editor’s providing more than average knowledge of corporate bond trading and the assortment of electronic exchange initiatives intended to increase transparency and liquidity in the corporate bond marketplace, one that is notorious for being a less-than-transparent over-the-counter market place)

wall-street-letter-logoBuy-side firms are experiencing difficulties executing corporate bond trades of more than $15m, a study by Greenwich Associates has revealed.

According to the findings, 80% of the institutional investors report troubles when executing larger trades, which reflect a decline in market liquidity caused in large part by the pullback of fixed-income dealers in the wake of new and more stringent capital reserve requirements.

With dealer inventories shrinking, investors’ search for new liquidity providers is proving a boon to the fast-developing ranks of electronic trading platforms.

All-to-all trading, previously unheard of in corporate bond markets, accounted for an estimated 6% of electronically executed US trades in 2014 as a sign that market dynamics are evolving, the report said.

The report entitled US Corporate Bond Trading: A Multitude of Platforms Give Investors Options, identified 18 emerging electronic platforms competing for the corporate bond trading in the US. Continue reading

Turm- Oil: Black Gold Turns to More than 50 Shades of Gray for High Yield Bond ETFs

MarketsMuse update on the downtick in oil prices and impact on high yield bond ETFs, including energy-sectory junk bonds includes extract from Institutional Investor Jan 7 coverage by Andrew Barber.

MarketsMuse editor note: The recent implosion of crude oil prices has triggered a conundrum for almost every investment analyst who prides themself on pontificating the domino effect impact on the broad universe of market sectors and asset classes. Much has been said about the how, when and where the trickle-down effect of the lower oil prices will effect corporate balance sheets, and in particular, those with a boatload of outstanding debt.  For high-grade corporate debt issuers, some believe lower energy costs bode will. For high yield bond issuers (companies that typically include energy industry players), the jury remains out for the most part. Experts that MarketsMuse has spoken with believe that if US drillers and frakers cut back on operations and reduce overhead quickly, it will help stem the burn that inevitably results from manufacturing a product that costs almost as much (if not more) to make as it what customers pay for it. Then again, as the supply begins to wane consequent to production cutbacks, market forces will, in theory, cause prices to rise..and those companies will be back in the black before having to sweat too much about interest payments on outstanding debt.

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II’s coverage on the topic is framed nicely via this extract:

mcormond jan15 The impact of rising yield for energy producers on high yield markets has also spilled over into the exchange-traded funds and closed-end funds. “ETFs create a simple wrapper for investors to modify easily their exposure to high yield fixed income markets” says Andy McOrmond, managing director at WallachBeth Capital, a New York-based institutional brokerage that focuses on ETF and portfolio trading. Mohit Bajaj, director of ETF trading solutions, also at WallachBeth, notes that despite the volatility injected into the market for high-yield exchanged-traded products during the recent oil sell-off, short interest has remained relatively stable and borrows have been easily obtainable. Bajaj attritubes this stability to a maturing institutional appreciation of exchange-traded fund products.

 

For the full article from II, please click here

 

Do Bond ETFs Pose A Systematic Risk? Regulators Confused, Investors Confounded

Index fund managers are finding it challenging to ensure the bonds they need in the prices they want, driving them to make trade-offs that leave supervisors vulnerable in a market downturn and may hurt investors.

Bond liquidity has all but dried up for corporate problems after new regulations and capital requirements compelled Wall Street banks to slash their stocks of fixed income products following the fiscal disaster. That’s especially challenging for index fund supervisors who must get certain bonds to be able to monitor specific standards.

The lack of liquidity additionally means funds could have trouble selling bonds in the event interest rates rise and also the investors who have sunk about $1.2-trillion (U.S.) in net deposits into long-term bond funds since the end of 2004 head for the exits. The Financial Stability Board (FSB) is analyzing whether exchange-traded funds pose a hazard to the global financial system for exactly that reason, in accordance with the Bank of Canada’s representative to the committee. Continue reading