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Tag: bubbles

The oil bubble?

The oil bubble?

There are perhaps, two hallmarks of an asset price bubble. Both happen after the fact, or as the bubble is bursting. Actually, one could easily argue that bubbles only ever materialize after they burst; only then is the bubble that inflated under everyone’s eyes transformed into something other than a really “good bull run.”

Back to the hallmarks. The first is that the majority must agree it was a bubble. The second is public outrage and regulatory actions that arise as unsound business practices built on flimsy assumptions begin to unravel (think, for instance, of the collapse of Bernie Madoff’s ponzi scheme in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis).

Neither of those has materialized just yet when it comes to the energy sector, but it feels like they are getting closer.

To wit, the subtle change in the narrative regarding oil prices – not from how much further they will fall but to why did they get so darn high in the first place?

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The year in credit

The year in credit

Credit markets, I wrote a lot about them this year. One day some other asset class will grab my attention but for the time being it’s this. Sorry.

Here’s what I wrote about the market in 2015 – or at least, since starting the new gig over at Bloomberg in April. I may have missed a few here and there (and included some fixed income posts that I think are related to over-arching credit themes), but I think this is pretty much covers it.

Happy holidays, and may 2016 be filled with just the right amount of yield.

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Yieldcos and MLPs and Glencore, oh my!

Yieldcos and MLPs and Glencore, oh my!

Here’s a thing that I wrote back in 2011, while parsing an Oliver Wyman report contending that the next hypothetical banking crisis would stem from over investment in commodities: “… as soon as investors start to doubt what constitutes ‘real’ demand for commodities and what’s pure speculation, they’ll head for the exits en masse, which will lead to a collapse in commodity prices, abandoned development projects and bank losses.” Though major losses haven’t occurred at the banks yet (just the famously non-bank Jefferies), we have seen the effects of the collapsing commodities super cycle elsewhere. Yieldcos, MLPs and commodities traders like Glencore and Trafigura — once the darlings of the financial world — are facing increasingly tough questions about their business models and, consequently their access to capital markets.

So here’s my latest post on an ongoing theme, this time about SunEdison and its yieldco, TerraForm Power:

The website of SunEdison, the renewable energy company, is a virtual smorgasbord of sunshine and light. “Solar perfected,” reads one slogan splashed across the page. “Welcome to the dawn of a new era in solar energy,” reads another banner over a pink-hued sunset.

While SunEdison’s marketing materials are firmly in the clouds, its share price has sunk to earth. The company is one of a batch of energy firms that have spun off their completed projects to public equity investors through vehicles known as “yieldcos,” only to see the share prices of those vehicles subsequently tank.

Now SunEdison and one of its two yieldcos, TerraForm Power, face additional questions about the health of their collective funding arrangements. Those concerns are emblematic of a wider problem for energy and commodities companies that have relied on eager capital markets to help finance their staggering growth in recent years.

Lured by the higher yields on offer from funding such projects, investors have stepped up to finance a host of energy-related products in recent years, contributing to a glut in supply that has spurred a dramatic collapse in commodities prices. That’s helping to fuel additional market scrutiny of commodities’ players—from giants such as Glencore to U.S. shale explorers and solar panel operators.

The concern now is that funding structures built on that fragile dynamic are apt to collapse should investors come to believe that the financing of latent commodity demand has far outpaced actual growth.

Investors are asking tough questions about ‘yieldcos’

One last (FT) look at the corporate bond market

One last (FT) look at the corporate bond market

This is my last big story for the Financial Times, as I’m heading off to a brand new gig at Bloomberg. The piece seeks to bring together a lot of what I’ve written about bond market liquidity, the rampant search for yield and the growing power of big buyside investors into a single narrative. Do read the full thing if you can.

Dan McCrum at FT Alphaville also has an excellent summary.

I’ve left some key excerpts below:

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Bursting bubbles

Bursting bubbles

I interviewed Jacob Frenkel, chairman and CEO of the G30 and former Bank of Israel governor, for Markit Magazine.

The full interview is available for free here, but I thought his thoughts on the limits of macroprudential tools in the face of low interest rates are worth noting.

“Let’s not kid ourselves,” [Dr Frenkel] says bluntly. “Interest rates are the most efficient instrument of monetary policy, period. If the use of the interest rate instrument is limited due to the zero bound constraint, can you still operate with macroprudential  policies? The answer is probably ‘yes’ but it will be less efficient. In order to be effective you will need to use macroprudential measures in a draconian way.”

Bursting Bubbles, Markit Magazine

The slow drip liquidity story – updated

The slow drip liquidity story – updated

Updated: October 17, 2014 given recent market events and sudden interest in all things liquidity-related. To be clear, the lack of liquidity just exacerbates market moves. The underlying problem is that complacent investors have been in the same (long) positions for the past five years, selling volatility and levering up to boost returns.

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A by-no-means-extensive list of my work on the changing structure of the bond market.

Goldman eyes electronic bond trading (March, 2012)

Finance: Grinding to a halt (June, 2012)

Dealer and investor talks over liquidity fears (June, 2012)

Goldman launches bond trading platform (June, 2012)

Bond trading model shows signs of stress (October, 2012)

Banks tout idea of sharing bond data (November, 2012)

Slow-drip bond sell-off masks a problem (November, 2012)

Markets on edge as investors seek exit (June, 2013)

ETFs under scrutiny in markets turbulence (June, 2013)

Markets: the debt penalty (September, 2013)

Digging into dealer inventories (September, 2013)

Verizon’s $49bn bond sale whets appetite for larger issues (September, 2013)

ETFs: Tipped as liquidity source (November, 2013)

Global liquidity: Buyers struggle to find a safe landing (November, 2013)

Big US banks back new bond trade venue (November, 2013)

Investors turn to ‘shadow’ bond market (January, 2014)

Banks are a proxy for credit bubble fears (March, 2014)

Taper tremors fail to deter ETF investors (May, 2014)

Checking out of the ETF hotel could be costly (May, 2014)

‘Patient capital’ ready to exploit bond market sell-off (June, 2014)

Fed looks at exit fees on bond funds (June, 2014)

Bonfire of the bond funds (June 2014)

BlackRock’s Aladdin: Genie not included (July 2014)

Investors in junk bonds face a Matrix moment (August 2014)

Finance: The FICC and the dead (August 2014)

Investors dine on fresh menu of credit derivatives (August 2014)

Yield-hungry markets overlook credit risk (September 2014)

US corporate bond traders go electronic (September 2014)

Gross exit from Pimco tests bond market (September 2014)

Wall St sheds light on Bill Gross reign after Pimco departure (September 2014)

At the risk of sounding like a broken record, expect more on this.