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Silver Manipulation?

There is a rumor floating around that the margin requirements on silver were raised by the CME today in an attempt to control prices downward.  The logic is that a 30% increase in maintenance margin makes it difficult for speculators to make large bets that prices will rise quickly as quantitative easing destroys the value of the dollar.  I will not dismiss the idea as false, because the outcome for today was a sharp drop in the price of silver:

Sharp drop in silver today

On the flip side, there is some logic in the move.  With the recent run up in silver the volatility of the asset class has skyrocketed.  Margin requirements are generally adjusted to compensate for larger volatilities in the underlying prices.  If there is more volatility then there is a greater chance that your futures contract will require a very large posting of collateral if the underlying moves against you.  The CME does have an argument in this respect, because the 30 day historical volatility of silver has been 38% while gold has been a meager 20%:

A lot of action in the silver markets

Maybe the Hunt brothers are just playing around again…

Posted in Conspiracy, Derivatives, Markets.

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Yield Curve Conundrum

The 10 year 2 year treasury spread is often used to measure the steepness of the yield curve.  When the curve is very steep it either shows that expectations of growth and inflation are high in the future, that the Fed is keeping the front part of the curve artificially low, or some combination of the two.  What is truly interesting with this latest announcement of quantitative easing through an additional $600B of purchases is that the yield curve decreased on the front end and remained fairly stable at longer maturities.  In fact, the spread between the 10 year and 5 year treasury rates is hitting historic highs:

10 Year Rates are low, but not Compared to the 5 Year!

At first glance this is not a very exciting 1.5% spread because the 10 year is at 2.5% and the 5 year is basically at 1%. What does get interesting is when you look at the forward interest rate curve, or the future expectations of interest rates as predicted by the shape of the yield curve.   With the 5 year swap rate at 1.3% and the 10 year swap rate at 2.61%, the yield curve is saying that the 5 year swap rate in 5 years will be 4.12%!  At today’s rates, entering into a forward starting interest rate swap actually looks rather attractive.  If you are happy buying 5 year bonds today at 1.3%, then you should be pretty excited to lock in a 5 year rate in 5 years of 4.12%.  You might just say that buying a 10 year bond today would achieve the same exposure, but in that situation you are buying a compilation of the 1.3% rate and the 4.12% forward rate, so why not just buy twice the amount of the forward rate?

Would you lock in a 5 Year Swap for over 4%?!

Another way to look at this from a trading perspective is to strictly play the spread between the 10 year and 5 year.  Spreads generally revert to some sort of average, so I would be inclined to suggest that going long a ten year treasury futures contract and short two five year treasury futures contracts (nearly duration neutral) has a high probability of paying off.

Posted in Derivatives, Markets, Trading Ideas.

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Noteworthy News – November 8, 2010

Economy:

The economic soft spot is ending – The Economist

Job growth improves, but pace leaves full employment 20 years away – Economic Policy Institute

Barack Obama thinks that the rise of India will be good for American jobs. There is another side to the story – The Economist

Hoenig Says Fed Must Raise Rates to Create a ‘Stable Economy’ – Bloomberg

Markets:

Suddenly, Corn Costs More. Why Not Corn Flakes? – NPR

Stocks end at fresh 2-year highs – CNN Money

Treasury Yields Tumble to Records on Fed’s Plan to Purchase $600 Billion – Bloomberg

Politics:

Number of the Week: $10.2 Trillion in Global Borrowing – Wall Street Journal

The rest of the world goes West when America prints more money – Telegraph

The Fed: Dump the Dollar, Save the Economy – Wall Street Journal

Banks:

Fed May Allow Banks to Up Dividend Payments – Wall Street Journal

Banks Brace for Costly Fights Over Mortgage Mess – New York Times

Posted in Economics, Markets, Media, Politics.


What Vol and the Dollar Have in Common

Not everything in the financial markets makes a whole lot of sense, but if you spend enough time staring at numbers, some of the pieces start to fit together.  In the last two days, volatility has absolutely collapsed.  With the announcement that the Fed will buy another $600 billion of assets it was truly a signal of “risk-on”!

VIX and the Futures Curve Tumble

If you have been a reader, you would know that I have been shorting VIX futures in different forms.  At 35% I thought it was crazy expensive and now it is more fairly priced.  Pretty soon it will probably be extremely cheap.  Volatility is linked to stock prices and liquidity.  If asset managers are chasing yield, risky assets, or any returns greater than a zero percent overnight rate, then asset prices become inflated.

What I posited quite a long time ago was that liquidity was very intertwined with volatility.  When the yield curve is steep, volatility declines on a lagged basis.  Since 1990, this seems like an absolute truth with more Fed intervention flooding the system with dollars.  It seems like we have run our course, but in reality the 10 year 2 year treasury spread is still historically high:

Do you see cycles of Monetary Intervention?

What is missing in this circular relationship is the actual lifeblood of the economy: the currency.  In the last few days the dollar has declined as equities have risen and vol has dropped.  In fact, if you look at the Dow Jones over the last few days, despite the rally, the real return in gold terms is flat:

Are you really winning?

If I could relay just one piece of information out of the many articles that I have written it would be this:  If you are not gaining in real terms, then you are the loser and someone is laughing at your expense.  When currencies fall, savers are punished and debtors are rewarded.  Despite these ugly statements, I expect it to continue because that is exactly the mandate that our Federal Reserve has embraced.

Posted in Derivatives, Economics, Educational, Markets, Politics, Trading Ideas.

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Today’s Option Blogs November 3, 2010

  • Fading Into the Sunset
    If you have watched 10 minutes of NFL this year, odds are that the Vikings were on. You may have noticed The Ol’ Gunslinger is now The ‘Ol Garden Variety Bad QB How bad? Pretty, pretty bad says Advanced NFL Stats. ….Injuries and distractions appear to have taken their toll. Through week 7, Favre ranks […]
  • VXX Week Rolls On
    Are we a little too harsh on Mr. VXX? Steven Place makes this point. It seems as though the VXX has become the butt of all volatility jokes but you can feel the bitterness in their tone, as if traders were duped into believing that something different was going to happen when they bought a […]
  • Danica Bottom in VXX?
    Not saying you should go buy VXX. I would never actually say that, I really only look at it compared to other similiar-bet alternatives. So let’s just say its less bad than usual. And no that has nothing to do with the reverse split. VXX proxies a constant duration 30 day VIX future. That future […]
  • Mid Week Sonar
    Its getting a bit interesting here in VIX land. While we weren’t looking, premiums in the November VIX have gone almost flat. Gone is that perpetual anticipation for a VIX pop around the corner. Replaced by a near month future that is now moving pretty much in lockstep with the VIX itself. It makes perfect […]
  • The Discreet Charm of the VXX ETN

    This is the fourth post in the series Im writing to introduce the VIX Portfolio Hedging (VXH) Strategy. To review: the purpose of the VXH Strategy is to provide cost-effective protection against tail risks and market crashes. The strategy takes positions in short-term VIX-based products, and varies its allocation to those positions in response to changes in the market environment. In this post, I discuss the use of the iPath S&P 500 VIX Short-Term Futures ETN

  • Skip strike unbalanced butterfly spread in EXC
    Sorry for my absence lately.  Ive been consumed with starting two new small businesses.(Not trading related.) Today, Im back with an interesting trade I will call an unbalanced or ratio skip strike butterfly spread. The trade is in EXC. My trade logic is: EXC announced earnings that disappointed.  The stock went down and has continued […]

Posted in Markets.

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