Showing posts with label PCY. Show all posts
Showing posts with label PCY. Show all posts

Friday, July 30, 2010

Nobody is Talking About the One Actual Bond Bubble

Developing nation bonds rallied 4.3 percent in July, reducing the average yield to 5.89 percent, the lowest since Bloomberg began compiling data from JPMorgan Chase & Co.’s EMBI+ Index in 1998.

Tuesday, May 25, 2010

Mostly in Cash

Still have all my PCY puts though!

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Update on PowerShares Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt Portfolio (PCY) Trade

The PowerShares Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt Portfolio (PCY) September 2010 puts that I bought didn't fair especially well during the April 2010 (1930?) blow-off top rally, but that's OK.

I bought them as cheap insurance and there is still time left until expiration. Even though the managers seem to turn over the portfolio frequently, it is still loaded with some sketchy emerging markets paper! Republic of Indonesia 2035s! Mexican 2031s! Hoo boy!

I am developing an extremely bearish market thesis that I will share later, but I think people will demand a much higher yield than 6.29% to own this emerging markets sovereign debt.

This is one of the most asymmetric risk/reward trades on a big crash that I have.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

A Cheap Option: Emerging Markets Debt Has Low Implied Volatility

The PowerShares Emerging Markets Sovereign Debt Portfolio (PCY) is an ETF that invests in U.S. dollar-denominated government bonds of "emerging markets" countries.

The largest holding is the Ukrainian 7.65s of 2013, which are 7.29% of the fund. Ukranian debt yields 11 percent.

Some of the holdings seem respectable, like Russia and Brazil. Others, like long-term Mexican (due 2031!), Turkish (due 2036!), or Pakistani debt, not so much.

In the heady days of fall 2007, shortly after it was introduced, PCY hit its all time high of 26.28, when it was yielding (current yields) roughly 6.4%. Interestingly, it bottomed in October 2008 - months before U.S. equities bottomed - at 14.24, when it yielded 11%. It now trades at 25 to yield, once again, 6.5%.


The debt owned by PCY is pretty long term - effective duration 7.31 years. This means that an increase in yields on emerging markets debt would smash the value of PCY.

In fact, the likely reactions of PCY to any this year's possible events are fascinating, and generally bearish:

  • Dollar denominated foreign yields are priced off of Treasuries. In a Treasuries collapse or hyperinflation scenario, consequently, it will do poorly.
  • There is also the possibility of a flight to Treasuries scenario, during a resumed U.S. or global equities selloff, or during a European or other sovereign debt crisis. In that case, PCY will probably not rally alongside Treasuries - since it consists of emerging market debt.
  • PCY is dollar denominated. In a dollar selloff, despite being foreign debt, it will do poorly.
The only upside for PCY if is emerging market yields drop further. But the spread above Treasuries is not that big. Do you think it will tighten more? Otherwise, do you think Treasuries yields will fall? How would that happen outside of a flight to quality scenario, which would not benefit emerging market rates?

Given that PCY will probably do poorly under three different scenarios that occupy a large expanse of the probability distribution, you would think that this is priced into the options market.

But, the implied volatility of PCY is low - below 10% - matching the low historical volatility it has enjoyed for most of the past year.

So, for those option premiums (the Sept 2010 22.5 puts trade at $0.35), are the option writers being compensated for all of the dark storm-clouds that my three bullet points above constitute?

Not hardly. Therefore, the trade is to snag some of that cheap insurance while Mr. Market is offering it.

Were PCY to yield 10% again, you could expect a 25% haircut, which would give the Sept 2010 22.5 put an intrinsic value of close to $4: 10x current levels. And the extrinsic value, assuming some time until expiration, would probably be quite large as well.