Ever since bond
market liquidity became the topic du jour across Wall Street (just a few short
years after it was first raised in these pages), analysts, pundits, and
reporters alike have begun to question what might happen should investors who
have piled into mutual funds and ETFs (especially fixed income products)
suddenly decide to sell into illiquid secondary markets.
Some have
suggested, for instance, that if corporate bond fund managers were suddenly
inundated with a cascade of redemptions, the absence of dealer liquidity in the
secondary market could create the conditions for a firesale.
The problem, as
we’ve been keen to point out, is that
when fund flows are one-way (i.e. everyone is selling), fund managers must
either i) meet redemptions with cash, or ii) trade the underlying
securities. Note that the latter option is so undesirable in illiquid
markets (indeed, trading large blocks into illiquid markets poses a systemic
risk), that some fund managers are now lining up emergency
liquidity lines with banks so that they can at least meet an initial wave of
selling with cash and avoid, for a time at least, sparring with
illiquidity.
In his latest
Investment Outlook, Bill Gross addresses the above, describes what events might
trigger a retail exodus (thus tipping the first domino), and says investors
should hold enough cash to ride out the storm without participating in a
firesale caused by rising rates or some manner of exogenous shock.
* * *
Mutual funds, hedge
funds, and ETFs, are part of the “shadow banking system” where these modern
“banks” are not required to maintain reserves or even emergency levels of
cash. Since they in effect now are the market, a rush for liquidity on the
part of the investing public, whether they be individuals in 401Ks or
institutional pension funds and insurance companies, would find the “market”
selling to itself with the Federal Reserve severely limited in its ability to
provide assistance.
While Dodd Frank
legislation has made actual banks less risky, their risks have really just been
transferred to somewhere else in the system. With trading turnover having
declined by 35% in the investment grade bond market as shown in Exhibit 1, and
55% in the High Yield market since 2005, financial regulators have ample cause
to wonder if the phrase “run on the bank” could apply to modern day investment
structures that are lightly regulated and less liquid than traditional banks.
Thus, current discussions involving “SIFI” designation – “Strategically
Important Financial Institutions” are being hotly contested by those that may
be just that. Not “too big to fail” but “too important to neglect” could be the
market’s future mantra.
Aside from the
obvious drop in trading volumes shown above, the obvious risk – perhaps better
labeled the “liquidity illusion” – is that all investors cannot fit through a
narrow exit at the same time. But shadow banking structures – unlike cash
securities – require counterparty relationships that require more and more
margin if prices should decline. That is why PIMCO’s safe haven claim of their
use of derivatives is so counterintuitive. While private equity and hedge funds
have built-in “gates” to prevent an overnight exit, mutual funds and ETFs do
not.
That an ETF can satisfy redemption with underlying bonds or shares, only
raises the nightmare possibility of a disillusioned and uninformed public
throwing in the towel once again after they receive thousands of individual odd
lot pieces under such circumstances. But even in milder “left tail
scenarios” it is price that makes the difference to mutual fund and ETF holders
alike, and when liquidity is scarce, prices usually go downnot up, given a
Minsky moment. Long used to the inevitability of capital gains, investors and
markets have not been tested during a stretch of time when prices go down and
policymakers’ hands are tied to perform their historical function of buyer of
last resort. It’s then that liquidity will be tested.
And what might
precipitate such a “run on the shadow banks”?
- A central bank mistake leading to lower bond
prices and a stronger dollar.
- Greece, and if so, the inevitable aftermath of
default/restructuring leading to additional concerns for Eurozone peripherals.
- China - “a riddle wrapped in a mystery, inside an
enigma”. It is the “mystery meat” of economic sandwiches - you never know
what’s in there. Credit has expanded more rapidly in recent years than any
major economy in history, a sure warning sign.
- Emerging market crisis - dollar denominated
debt/overinvestment/commodity orientation - take your pick of potential
culprits.
- Geopolitical risks - too numerous to mention and
too sensitive to print.
- A butterfly’s wing - chaos theory suggests that a
small change in “non-linear systems” could result in large changes
elsewhere. Call this kooky, but in a levered financial system, small
changes can upset the status quo. Keep that butterfly net handy.
Should that moment
occur, a cold rather than a hot shower may be an investor’s reward and the view
will be something less that “gorgeous”. So what to do? Hold an
appropriate amount of cash so that panic selling for you is off the table.
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