Investors are beginning to get seriously interested in the idea that the BOJ and the ECB will change the composition of their bond purchases to steepen the yield curve. In effect, this would be the opposite of the Fed’s Operation Twist, which saw QE purchases concentrated on the long-end, chiefly to lower the yield on mortgage-backed securities. I think this story, at least partly, is to blame for the recent nudge higher in global bond yields. But we will know soon enough. This week's BOJ meeting should give us a hint of whether this narrative has any legs.
Read MoreNormally put options serve as protection for large, mainly long only, asset managers. Picture an investor committee meeting at a large pension fund in the wake of a equity market drawdown. The core portfolio is down, but the astute and prudent portfolio manager dodged the bullet by buying put options on the market or the funds individual stock holdings. This is the way it would normally work, but there is nothing normal about the current market.
A WSJ piece by Ben Eisen and Aaron Kuriloff this week alerts us to the topsy-turvy world of financial markets in an environment where the "reach for yield" is the only game in town. In short, in a desperate search for regular income and "yield" some pension funds in the U.S. are turning to the nuclear option of selling put options. I will let Eisen and Kuriloff describe the madness;
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