Analysis-Sharp US bond selloff revives flashbacks of COVID-era 'dash-for-cash'


By Davide Barbuscia and Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss

NEW YORK (Reuters) – A violent U.S. Treasury selloff, evoking the COVID-era “dash for cash,” has reignited fears of fragility in the world’s biggest bond market.

The $29-trillion Treasury market had surged in recent weeks as investors dumped stocks for the safety of government bonds in a tariff-fueled risk-off shift. But on Monday, even as equities stayed under pressure, Treasuries were hit by a wave of selling that sent benchmark yields soaring by 17 basis points on the day, while trading within a yield range of about 35 basis points, one of the wildest trading swings for 10-year yields in two decades.

The selloff picked up pace on Tuesday and into Wednesday, pushing benchmark 10-year yields above 4.425%, 16 basis points higher on the day.

Some market participants said they believed based on the dramatic Treasury market moves and sharp tightening of swap spreads that investors including hedge funds have been selling liquid assets such as U.S. government bonds to meet margin calls due to portfolio losses across asset classes. Some hedge funds have offloaded stocks as the market plunge forces them to curtail trading using borrowed cash.

“The big moves in the market across asset classes triggered the unwind,” said Jan Nevruzi, U.S. rates strategist at TD Securities in New York.

Investors and analysts said the move was reminiscent of the dash-for-cash at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in March 2020, when the market seized up as fears about the coronavirus grew, prompting the U.S. central bank to buy $1.6 trillion of government bonds.

Similar to that episode, at play on Monday was also a reduction of the so-called basis trade, a popular hedge fund arbitrage trading strategy between cash and futures Treasury positions whose unwinding likely exacerbated the 2020 crash, investors and analysts said.

“When you have big moves like that and you’re relying on some arbitrage relationship, spreads tightening for whatever reason, you might have to trim your positions,” Nevruzi said.

The basis trade has been closely watched by regulators over the past few years because it could be a source of instability for markets if highly leveraged hedge fund positions are unwound rapidly. That scenario could reduce banks’ ability to provide liquidity, or intermediation, in the Treasury market, the building block of global finance.

Torsten Slok, chief economist at Apollo Global Management, estimated in a note on Tuesday the basis trade is currently worth around $800 billion.



Source link

Scroll to Top