Monday, March 30, 2009

Stapley said he’s been selling Treasuries and buying agency debt and new corporate bonds less sensitive to consumer spending.

TO BE NOTED: From Bloomberg:

"Bernanke Treasury Plan Drives Pimco to Mortgage Bonds (Update4)

By Daniel Kruger

March 30 (Bloomberg) -- Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S. Bernanke’s plan to buy $300 billion of Treasuries is driving the world’s biggest bond investors away from government debt and may already be helping him lower consumer borrowing rates.

Mortgage and corporate securities are outperforming Treasuries this quarter for the first time since the period ended in June, before the collapse of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. drove investors to the safest debt and froze credit markets, Merrill Lynch & Co. index data show. A March 23 Ried, Thunberg & Co. survey said fund managers overseeing $1.19 trillion cut their government securities holdings to the least this year while they increased mortgage assets.

“We don’t think Treasuries are very thrilling,” said Barr Segal, a managing director at Los Angeles-based TCW Group Inc., which holds $90 billion in fixed-income assets. Bernanke wants to keep Treasury rates low so “investors do what we’re doing, that is, jump in and drive all the spreads down,” he said of the gap between yields of riskier assets and government debt.

By moving money out of Treasuries, TCW, along with Pacific Investment Management Co. and Fifth Third Asset Management, may be helping Bernanke, who said in a March 20 speech in Phoenix that “credit market dysfunction” is countering efforts to fix the economy. The Fed’s March 18 plan to buy Treasuries and $750 billion of mortgage-backed securities from Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae is “intended to improve conditions in private credit markets,” he said.

Wal-Mart Bonds

Bonds of industrial companies, a category that includes Bentonville, Arkansas-based Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Oak Brook, Illinois-based McDonalds Corp. and Pfizer Inc. in New York, yield 4.68 percentage points more than Treasuries, down from 5.57 percentage points at the start of the year, Merrill Lynch data show.

Yields on Washington-based Fannie Mae’s current-coupon 30- year fixed-rate mortgage bonds declined to 3.85 percent on March 19, the lowest in two months. The difference between the rates and those on 10-year Treasuries shrank to 1.18 percentage points last week, the narrowest since July 2007 and down from 2.32 percentage points in November.

Central bank policy makers are determined to lower consumer rates relative to interest paid by banks so Americans can increase spending and end the deepest recession since 1982. Gross domestic product shrank 6.3 percent in the fourth quarter, the most since 1982, and the Commerce Department in Washington said March 27 that consumer spending growth slowed to 0.2 percent in February from 1 percent the prior month.

Consumer Rates

Even with the Fed’s target rate for overnight loans between banks at zero to 0.25 percent, 30-year mortgages are 2.17 percentage points higher than the yield on 10-year Treasuries, or 0.63 point more than the past decade’s average, according to data compiled by Bankrate.com and Bloomberg. Car loans are 7.71 percentage points above the one-month London interbank offered rate that banks charge each other for loans, compared with the 1.92-point average, Fed data shows.

Attempts by the Fed may be showing some signs of success after the central bank and Treasury poured more than $13 trillion into the U.S. financial system in a 16-month-long effort to revive the economy. Shrinking the supply of mortgage bonds and reducing their yields would allow banks to cut rates on new mortgages and sell securities tied to the debt at a gain.

The average rate on a 30-year fixed mortgage fell to 4.85 percent last week, according to Freddie Mac, the lowest since the McLean, Virginia-based mortgage finance company began keeping records in 1971. The rate is down from last year’s high of 6.63 percent in July.

Home Sales

Lower borrowing costs and falling prices helped spur new home sales in February. The Commerce Department said March 25 that sales of new house jumped 4.7 percent to an annual rate of 337,000 from a record low pace in January.

Merrill Lynch’s U.S. Treasury Master Index lost 1.92 percent this quarter, while its main mortgage index rose 2.12 percent and the index of non-financial corporate debt gained 2.16 percent.

Investors reduced their holdings of Treasuries and agency securities to 26 percent from 37 percent the week before, according to Jersey City, New Jersey-based Ried Thunberg. Mortgages rose to 35 percent from 23 percent.

“There are much cheaper assets than Treasuries,” said Stuart Spodek, co-head of U.S. bonds in New York at BlackRock Inc., which manages $483 billion in fixed-income. BlackRock is selling Treasuries to buy AAA-rated commercial mortgage bonds, residential mortgages and investment-grade company debt.

Clipping Coupons

Investors in 10-year Treasuries would earn no more than the 2.75 percent coupon rate if yields hold steady through year-end, Bloomberg data show, compared with returns of 14 percent last year, including prices gains and reinvested income, according to Merrill Lynch’s indexes.

Investors got burned last year when they dumped Treasuries and said credit markets were recovering from the seizure that began with the meltdown of subprime mortgages in August 2007. Treasuries lost 2.07 percent in the second quarter of 2008 as futures on the Chicago Board of Trade showed traders saw a 67 percent chance the Fed would increase rates by the end of the year. Instead, Lehman went bankrupt in September and Treasuries gained 14 percent for the year.

Bill Gross, manager of the world’s biggest bond fund, said in May that government debt was “overvalued.” Seven months later, the co-chief investment officer at Newport Beach, California-based Pacific Investment Management, or Pimco, said he regretted not buying them.

Treasury Yields

Gross, who manages the $138 billion Total Return Fund at Pimco, said March 19 that 10-year Treasury yields “probably” won’t fall much lower. Since then, the yield on the benchmark 2.75 percent note due in February 2019 has risen from 2.54 percent.

The yield on the 10-year note rose 13 basis points, or 0.13 percentage point, to 2.76 percent last week, the most since increasing 23 basis points to 3.02 percent in the period ending Feb. 27. The price of the note fell 1 4/32, or $11.25 per $1,000 face amount, to 99 29/32, according to BGCantor Market Data.

The yield fell six basis points to 2.70 percent as of 5:55 a.m. in New York.

Pimco may buy mortgage loans and manage funds that acquire mortgage bonds as part of a plan announced by Treasury Secretary Timothy Geithner last week to fund purchases of soured assets from banks using $75 billion to $100 billion from the $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, Gross said in a March 23 interview with Bloomberg Television.

Rates Capped

Many investors still favor Treasuries because they expect Bernanke will add to purchases of government debt. Strategists at JPMorgan Chase & Co. said in a March 20 report that 10-year Treasury yields will likely fall. Srini Ramaswamy wrote that Treasuries will gain because of the imminent growth in the Fed’s balance sheet and continuing weakness in the economy.

“The Fed views anything over 3 percent on the 10-year as an area where they’d need to intervene,” said Mitchell Stapley, who oversees $22 billion as chief fixed-income officer for Grand Rapids, Michigan-based Fifth Third.

Stapley said he’s been selling Treasuries and buying agency debt and new corporate bonds less sensitive to consumer spending.

Regulatory filings show that Fifth Third bought 4.375 percent bonds issued by Minneapolis-based Medtronic Inc., the world’s second-biggest maker of medical devices, maturing September 2010 and 5.82 percent mortgage bonds sold by Wells Fargo & Co., maturing October 2036, in the three months ended Jan. 31.

Narrowing Spreads

The $149 million TCW Core Fixed Income Fund bought Freddie Mac 5.25 percent notes due in July 2011 in the three months ended Feb. 28, regulatory filings show. It also purchased part of Wal-Mart’s $1.25 billion of 5.8 percent bonds maturing in February 2018 and 6 percent Credit Suisse Mortgage Capital Certificates that were cut to BB from AAA by Fitch Ratings on Dec. 16.

The extra yield investors demand to own the Wal-Mart bonds instead of Treasuries has shrunk to 176 basis points from 187 basis points in January, according to Trace, the bond-price reporting system of the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority.

“The cumulative effect of many of the programs announced by the Treasury and the Fed is going to be supportive for asset prices,” said BlackRock’s Spodek. “There certainly is opportunity in a number of them to capitalize on some pretty attractive returns.”

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