top of page
Search

Physical Gold Has Become More Reliable Than Treasury Bills

Ocean Rock Ltd

PUBLISHED BY LAURENT MAUREL | SEP 21, 2023


In an article published this week, Bloomberg looks back at the historic underperformance of long-term US bonds:

30-year Treasury bonds have fallen by more than 50%. Losses are starting to mount again, and this is worrying many observers.

Although the US is not exposed to the risk of default, this decline reflects the effects of tighter monetary policy.

These losses are only effective when the organization holding them has to sell them. Theoretically, most buyers of these securities do not use them as short-term liquid products. Such products were logically purchased to be held to maturity.

Nevertheless. In the event of a credit incident, we will see the sale of Treasury bills. And liquidating these assets at a loss would lead to an even sharper fall in their value.

In these conditions, it is easy to understand the importance of avoiding the liquidation of these products at all costs. The historical loss on US Treasuries must absolutely remain "unrealized" and not materialize, in order to avoid undermining the institutions that use these products as the foundation of complex financial instruments.

Unrealized losses also concern other products purchased by these institutions when interest rates were kept artificially low by the overly accommodative policies of central banks. The FDIC now estimates these losses at nearly $600 billion:

These figures indicate that a credit incident would have devastating consequences for many financial institutions: with such a high level of unrealized losses, the risk of contagion is probably underestimated.

To make matters worse, US banks are seeing deposit withdrawals reach an all-time high:

This makes sense: the rate of return on bank deposits is much lower than the returns offered by money market funds. Americans continue to withdraw their money from banks to invest in safer, higher-yielding products. The bank run triggered by the regional bank crisis last spring has never stopped. The Fed has managed to calm the hemorrhage, but the erosion of deposits continues.

A series of defaults would further weaken the banking sector, which is one of the hardest hit by this sudden change in monetary policy.

The bad news is that a new cycle of defaults began this summer. But so far, nothing like the figures for 2008...

That said, the potential for credit risk is even greater than in 2008, with the number of "zombie" companies even higher than in the last financial crisis:

Around 30% of companies listed on the Russell 3000 are either earning no money or are unable to repay their loans.

Although not yet visible, the potential for defaults linked to sharply rising rates is undoubtedly greater than it seems.

We've changed cycles. Everything that existed during the Fed's accommodative period, when rates were artificially zero, is up for review.

The recent loss on Treasuries breaks a forty-year cycle in which rates were locked in a descending channel:


The TLT index, which measures the performance of 20-year bonds, is falling: the higher yields rise, the lower the index falls. TLT was in an ascending channel from which it abruptly exited, unable to regain it. Graphically, TLT even recently broke a bearish flag, attracting even more bearish speculators to the bond compartment:

TLT is a perfect illustration of the sector's recent decline.

The sharp fall in this index has attracted many speculative shorts to bond assets. In recent months, hedge funds have accumulated record short positions in US Treasuries, which logically increases the risk of a short squeeze should bonds rebound in the short term.

The Fed's decision not to raise rates further could lead to a period of instability in these products.

In this case, bonds would be considered oversold by some participants, sniffing out an opportunity to "squeeze" hedge funds with too much exposure to selling.

The risk of volatility on these products increases significantly, even though these bonds were intended for managers looking for some form of stability in their portfolios.

Treasury bonds may no longer be seen as the stable, reliable asset they have been for forty years. This radical change in perception of US government bonds coincides perfectly with the decorrelation observed between gold and Treasuries (which we discuss regularly in these bulletins).








1 view0 comments

Recent Posts

See All

Central Banks' Gold Rush Intensifies

Gold is attracting growing interest in an international environment marked by multiple challenges and a climate of permanent...

Comments


Post: Blog2_Post

Ocean Rock Ltd

12th Floor, 3 Lockhart Road, Wanchai, HongKong

  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn

©2020 by Ocean Rock Ltd. Proudly created with Wix.com

bottom of page