(Bloomberg) - Hedge funds looking to profit from dislocations in the US Treasury market appear to be playing with the very fire that burned them so spectacularly in the depths of the pandemic turmoil.
Here are some charts that illustrate the concerns:
The current environment favors buying the cash bonds and selling futures against them, thanks to strong asset-manager demand for the derivatives and an increased public supply of Treasury securities as the Federal Reserve sheds its holdings.
This kind of basis trading can distort how speculators respond to economic data, making it harder for other investors to read signals from the bond market as a guide to the US outlook.
Adding to concern is the fact that general trading conditions are poorer now than back in March 2020.
A Bloomberg gauge of Treasury-market illiquidity has been hovering near levels last seen at the peak of the pandemic for the better part of the past year.
The one thing that is clear is that wagers on Treasury futures are near the highest they’ve ever been — indeed open interest in the pivotal five-year futures is at a record.
Despite the haven appeal of Treasuries, the recent tumult in the US banking system showed just how painful getting caught wrong-footed on rates can be.
By Garfield Reynolds
With assistance from Edward Bolingbroke