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Saturday, May 30, 2009

Global Macro Investing and Yield Curve Strategies

By Brevan GLG

The Treasury yield curve is one of the best and most applicable tools that a global macro investor can have in his or her toolbox. Most of the time used for bond trading there are several applications for it in the stocks and currency market as well. The truth is by using the yield curve correctly you can better trade just about everything.

So what is the Treasury yield curve? It is the curve you get when you plot out the yields on different maturities of Treasury securities. For instance if you take the ninety day Treasury bill, the two year Treasury bill, five year Treasury note, ten year Treasury bond, and the thirty year Treasury bond you will get a curve. Usually sloping upwards from the bottom left to the upper right of the plot area, it can also take several other shapes. It can be very inverted with the far right down at the bottom and the far left at the top, it can have seemingly random lumps, and it can shift anywhere on the plot area. Each of these shapes and slopes of the yield curve tell the global macro investor something differently about the economy and the different trading instruments available to you.

This is great but how do you use it to make money? Well the global macro investor knows that if the curve is sloped from the lower left to the upper right that things are looking good for the economy. If on the other hand it is sloping downwards the Fed has tightened and the economy is or will be slowing.

So how does this help your trading? Well if the curve is steep then there is little chance that bonds will be able to stage a very robust rally. At the same time it might be a great time to go long stocks. If the curve is sloping down then it is a harbinger of things to come and the economy is ready to contract and therefore it is kind of a sell signal for stocks. At the same time if the curve is inverted then it is a great time to look at going long bonds as the Fed will likely begin a interest rate easing cycle and therefore driving up bond prices.

On the other hand if we have an inverted yield curve, where it slopes from the upper left to the lower bottom then banks will not lend as they are borrowing money at more expensive prices then they can loan it out for. This obviously curtails the credit markets and slams a break down on the economy. When this happens the Fed inevitably has to come in and lower rates to bring things back in line and help the economy grow again.

Think of bonds and interest rates as a teeter totter where yields are on one side and bonds are on the other. If bonds go down, rates go up. If rates go down, bonds are going up. In a regular inflationary environment this is always the case unless there is a severe credit quality issue.

If this is the case then anytime you can forecast the yield curve to show when the Fed will be lowering rates you can jump on it and go long bonds, typically with little risk. At the same time whenever you see rates being lowered you can wait a while and then go long stocks.

Nothing is perfect and nothing works all the time. Any good global macro investor knows that to have long term success without blowing up you will need to use proper risk control gauges as well as other tools in your analysis. The yield curve is smart but it is not all knowing. - 23159

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