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To: quartersawyer who wrote (66076)2/5/2000 10:07:00 AM
From: Jon Koplik  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
To all - NYT piece on recent bond market fireworks.

February 5, 2000

U.S. Bond Market Strewn With Landmines

Filed at 7:55 a.m. ET

By Reuters

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The U.S. Treasury market may hold nasty surprises
for weeks to come as market players wrestle with the implications of an
unprecedented squeeze in the supply of debt by a government fat with budget
surpluses.

Massive movements in bond prices in recent days will require bond investors
and dealers to embark on a perilous round of position adjustment in a bond
landscape that few, if any, have ever witnessed.

``There is no mental exercise you can go through to say whether the
shake-up is done or not without knowing everybody's positions,' said Patrick
Dimick, fixed-income strategist at Warburg Dillon Read LLC.

``There is no historical precedent for a (Treasury) paydown scheme and the
elimination of issuance such as the one we're about to go through,' he said.

For the last week bond markets have been stung by extreme volatility. By
many accounts, major financial institutions suffered painful losses as the
market churned and dealers digested the U.S. Treasury Department's plan to
buy back some $30 billion in government debt this year and reduce issuance
of longer-dated paper.

``The market right now is like a wounded animal. You don't know if it is
going to come after you or run away,' said Ward McCarthy, managing
director at Stone and McCarthy Research Associates.

T-BOND: FROM BENCHMARK TO COLLECTORS' ITEM

The Treasury's plan, announced earlier last month and detailed this week,
roiled a market that had been shorting bonds -- betting prices would fall and
interest rates rise -- as breakneck economic growth eventually generated
inflation.

McCarthy said that as of January 5, dealers were short an aggregate $32.9
billion in U.S. Treasuries -- the shortest the market had been in two years.

At the same time, major institutional bond funds were underweight
Treasuries, betting that the difference between yields on government bonds
and higher-yielding debt such as corporate and agency paper would narrow
over time, he said.

But many of those bets went sour on an astonishing scale as the Treasury's
buyback plan gave long bonds a scarcity value overnight. ``They're like a
depletable commodity,' McCarthy said.

Long-term bonds rocketed higher, sending long-term interest rates dropping
below those of short-term notes in an inversion of the Treasury yield curve.
Longer debt usually yields more to pay investors for long-term inflation risks.

The run-up in prices triggered waves of short-covering that shaved half a
percentage point off the T-bond's yield in two weeks. At one point Thursday,
the 30-year bond soared a mind-boggling three points higher to yield 6.14
percent versus 6.75 percent on January 18.

``It is probable that some pretty big players had their tonsils ripped out,'
McCarthy said.

Though rumors have been rife of big bond losses, major firms with sizable
bond businesses, such as Goldman Sachs Group Inc (GS.N) and Lehman
Bros Holdings Inc., (LEH.N) declined comment. Others dismissed such talk.

``It's hard to imagine that any firm lost more than $20 million or $25 million
on a 25-basis-point move in the bond,' said Charles Parkhurst, managing
director of government trading at Salomon Smith Barney.

SHORTS TO SQUEEZE?

A measure of normalcy returned to the Treasury market on Friday, when
prices fell after a stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report reawakened
inflation concerns.

But few strategists are willing to wager the market has shaken out all its
shorts.

Warburg's Dimick said it was fair to assume there were more shorts still in
the market, given the relative ease with which investors on futures markets
could place leveraged bets, or use borrowed securities to boost the size of
their wagers.

Holly Liss, vice president at Fuji Futures Inc. in Chicago, said Friday's
pullback -- the long bond dropped as much as two full points in the morning
-- had some traders believing Thursday's gains marked a peak before prices
fell again.

``People are not only still short, they are comfortable at shorts and putting
more on,' Liss said.

She, however, believed the market was merely consolidating before moving
higher -- which could spark more volatility.

``If we have people getting short again and we start heading up a few ticks,
people will start bailing out and that accelerates the upmove,' Liss said.

WHEN IN DOUBT, KEEP OUT

Dimick said while uncertainty would reign for some time to come, modern
risk management techniques meant investors would likely adjust their
positions within a matter of weeks.

``The way profit and loss accounts are marked to market these days, my
instinct tells me the adjustment process has to be done within a couple of
weeks,' Dimick said.

Meanwhile, he suggested the following strategy: ``Don't trade.'

Copyright 2000 The New York Times Company