XM n’offre pas ses services aux résidents des États-Unis d’Amérique.

Carry trade chaos charts outlines of next selloff



<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><head><title>RPT-BREAKINGVIEWS-Carry trade chaos charts outlines of next selloff</title></head><body>

The author is a Reuters Breakingviews columnist. The opinions expressed are his own.

By Liam Proud

LONDON, Aug 28 (Reuters Breakingviews) -The sharpest recent market routs came from a dizzying array of sources: pandemic, war, UK pension funds, and most recently the combination of a poor U.S. jobs report and the unwinding of a popular Japanese-yen focused investment strategy. Underlying all of them, however, was a common trend of highly levered market players like hedge funds struggling to meet margin calls. There’s every reason to think it will keep happening.

Researchers at the Bank for International Settlements have repeatedly drawn attention to the worrying frequency of what they call “procyclical deleveraging”. On Tuesday, they released a first account of the Aug. 5 flash crash. The triggers, they note, were seemingly minor: a U.S. labour report on Aug. 2 that was bad but not disastrous, and the wider context of a well-flagged hawkish turn by the Bank of Japan. Somehow, that turned into a global selloff that sent the Japanese Topix Index down by more than a tenth and wiped $1 trillion off the valuation of previously popular artificial intelligence and technology stocks.

The backdrop explains the moves. For starters, hedge funds were highly leveraged: one indicator of U.S. hedge funds’ indebtedness had soared to its pre-pandemic heights. Meanwhile, investors increased their use of a strategy known as the carry trade, which involves borrowing in a currency with low rates like the yen to invest in assets denominated in high-rate ones like the Mexican peso. The BIS researchers make several stabs at trying to quantify this trade, landing on a “rough middle ballpark” estimate of $250 billion before the selloff. They think this itself is probably a lowball.

Hedge funds and other investors often execute this strategy through derivatives. When the positions lose money, or when market volatility rises, dealers and clearinghouses will typically ask the investors for higher margin levels, reducing risk. The hedge funds and other market players thus tend to need cash in the middle of a panic, forcing them to sell unrelated positions just to meet margin calls on the losing bets. That explains how a currency-linked trade and U.S. stocks became entangled. A little volatility led to margin calls, which led to broader asset sales and further volatility. In March 2020 and September 2022, a similar self-reinforcing cycle affected U.S. and UK government borrowing markets, forcing central banks to limit the price collapse by buying assets.

Regulators are alert to the recurring problem, which relates to a post-2008 effort to move risk away from banks and into markets. A triumvirate of the Basel Committee on Banking Supervision, Committee on Payments and Market Infrastructures and Board of the International Organization of Securities Commissions in January recommended various measures to make clearinghouses’ margin calls more predictable. Transparency is helpful, but it’s hard to see how it would change the fundamental dynamic. Margin calls keep blowing up markets, and there’s no end in sight.

Follow @Breakingviews on X


CONTEXT NEWS

Yen-denominated loans to financial-market players other than banks hit $250 billion in March, researchers at the Bank for International Settlements said in a bulletin published on Aug. 27. The figure is a rough proxy for the size of the popular yen carry trade, which involves borrowing in the low-yielding currency to invest in a high-yielding one.

A collapse in the trade contributed to market chaos on Aug. 5, when Japanese and worldwide stock markets slid.

The BIS researchers concluded that cascading margin calls helped to propagate the problem, as investors sold whatever they could to meet the new higher margin requirements.


Graphic: Early August market chaos quickly spread worldwide https://reut.rs/3ZlmyAP


Editing by George Hay and Oliver Taslic

</body></html>

Avertissement : Les entités de XM Group proposent à notre plateforme de trading en ligne un service d'exécution uniquement, autorisant une personne à consulter et/ou à utiliser le contenu disponible sur ou via le site internet, qui n'a pas pour but de modifier ou d'élargir cette situation. De tels accès et utilisation sont toujours soumis aux : (i) Conditions générales ; (ii) Avertissements sur les risques et (iii) Avertissement complet. Un tel contenu n'est par conséquent fourni que pour information générale. En particulier, sachez que les contenus de notre plateforme de trading en ligne ne sont ni une sollicitation ni une offre de participation à toute transaction sur les marchés financiers. Le trading sur les marchés financiers implique un niveau significatif de risques pour votre capital.

Tout le matériel publié dans notre Centre de trading en ligne est destiné à des fins de formation / d'information uniquement et ne contient pas – et ne doit pas être considéré comme contenant – des conseils et recommandations en matière de finance, de fiscalité des investissements ou de trading, ou un enregistrement de nos prix de trading ou une offre, une sollicitation, une transaction à propos de tout instrument financier ou bien des promotions financières non sollicitées à votre égard.

Tout contenu tiers, de même que le contenu préparé par XM, tels que les opinions, actualités, études, analyses, prix, autres informations ou liens vers des sites tiers contenus sur ce site internet sont fournis "tels quels", comme commentaires généraux sur le marché et ne constituent pas des conseils en investissement. Dans la mesure où tout contenu est considéré comme de la recherche en investissement, vous devez noter et accepter que le contenu n'a pas été conçu ni préparé conformément aux exigences légales visant à promouvoir l'indépendance de la recherche en investissement et, en tant que tel, il serait considéré comme une communication marketing selon les lois et réglementations applicables. Veuillez vous assurer que vous avez lu et compris notre Avis sur la recherche en investissement non indépendante et notre avertissement sur les risques concernant les informations susdites, qui peuvent consultés ici.

Avertissement sur les risques : votre capital est à risque. Les produits à effet de levier ne sont pas recommandés pour tous. Veuillez consulter notre Divulgation des risques