David Fuller and Eoin Treacy's Comment of the Day
Category - Fixed Income

    Email of the day on investing in bitcoin

    Good morning, Eoin I hope you and yours are well. I am considering baby steps into Bitcoin ownership. I would welcome any guidance you may have. Particularly, where best to purchase and how to hold/protect. Many thanks for the excellent ongoing guidance.

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    This Is Not QE; Focus on the Fundamentals

    Thanks to a subscriber for this report from Morgan Stanley which may be of interest. Here is a section:

    Contagion Risk Spreads as CDS Market Puts Focus on Deutsche Bank

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest. Here is a section:

    DB’s CDS has widened by virtually the same as UBS’s over the last month, even though it has not had to digest a rival with $575 billion in assets over a weekend.

    Deutsche Bank’s revenues have fallen over most of the last decade, and the bank has faced questions around its governance, with BaFin, the German bank regulator, censuring it over its money-laundering controls. However, over the last two years the investment bank has spearheaded a recovery, with revenues and profitability improving.

    Nonetheless, DB lagged the rebound seen in European bank shares that began last summer, while its price-to-book ratio remains subterranean.

    Contagion risk is much lower than it was in 2008, but it is not zero. And contagion is not always fully logical: Credit Suisse’s tier 1 capital ratio was higher than DB’s.

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    Email of the day on who takes the hit

    I would be grateful if Mr Treacy could provide comment on which casualty will government and central banks choose

    The way I see the situation now is:

    Printing money to save banks = increasing inflation + sinking small people
    Raising interest rates = reducing inflation + sinking banks + sinking small people with adjustable/variable mortgages
    EQUALS
    government and central banks caught in vicious circle of their own making

    Which casualty will in Mr Treacy's opinion governments + central banks choose going forward?

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    Credit Suisse Default Swaps Widen, Bonds Sink as Optimism Fades

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Support from the Swiss National Bank, which offered as much as 50 billion francs ($54 billion) from its liquidity facility, had brought some temporary relief to Credit Suisse and risk gauges for the broader European banking sector. That fizzled amid comments from the European Central Bank that some of the region’s lenders could be vulnerable to monetary policy tightening, followed by its decision to proceed with a planned half-point increase in interest rates.

    The continued selloff signals more action may be needed to arrest a collapse in confidence that’s prompted clients to step back from the Swiss lender and banks to shield their finances from the potential fallout. While the panic surrounding Credit Suisse has so far shown little sign of infecting the broader financial system, any further turmoil would pose a significant risk for markets already on edge amid soaring interest rates and rampant inflation.

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    ECB Feared That Ditching Half-Point Hike Might Panic Investors

    This article may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Fears that anything but a half-point hike would trigger panic among investors helped settle the European Central Bank’s interest-rate decision on Thursday, according to people familiar with the talks.

    As officials met over the past two days, traders were scouring financial markets for signs that other lenders might suffer the same strains that had hammered Credit Suisse Group AG and Silicon Valley Bank. ECB Vice President Luis de Guindos already warned European finance ministers earlier in the week that banks could be vulnerable to rising borrowing costs.

    While the ECB dropped language in their Thursday statement on the future path for rates, there remains a live discussion on the need for more increases to bring inflation under control once market turmoil subsides, said the people who declined to be identified because such deliberations are confidential.

    Several hawkish officials still see the terminal rate well above the current 3%, the people said, pointing to President Christine Lagarde’s remark that the ECB “would have more ground to cover” if its baseline outlook for the economy were to be confirmed. Yet, some are questioning whether the peak in borrowing costs might now be lower than previously thought. 

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    Budget key points: All you need to know about Jeremy Hunt's spring statement

    This article from the Independent may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Defence budget and levelling up
    Mr Hunt confirmed the government will add £11 billion to the defence budget over the next five years and another £30 million is being allocated for veterans.

    There will be 12 new investment zones, and they will potentially be in the West Midlands, Greater Manchester, the North East, South Yorkshire, West Yorkshire, East Midlands, Teesside and Liverpool. There will also be at least one in each of Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.

    Mr Hunt also announced a series of levelling-up and local transport-related funding pots.

    Taxes
    The chancellor confirmed the planned increase in corporation tax to 25 per cent will be going ahead, but announced a new policy of “full capital expensing” over the next three years, which will mean every pound invested in IT equipment, plant, or machinery can be deducted immediately from profits.

    Mr Hunt said he will introduce a new tax credit for small and medium-sized firms that spend 40 per cent of their expenditure on research and development. Tax reliefs for film, TV and video gaming will also be extended, he said.

    Up to £20 billion will be allocated for the early development of carbon capture and storage.

    Mr Hunt said that, subject to consultation, nuclear power will qualify for the same investment incentives as renewable energy and alongside that “will come more public investment”.

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    Schwab Tumbles Most Ever as Firm Seeks to Calm Investors

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    Charles Schwab Corp. tumbled the most ever on an intraday-basis as the online brokerage sought to reassure investors that it has sufficient liquidity to handle any volatility following the collapse of Silicon Valley Bank.

    Shares of Westlake, Texas-based Schwab dropped as much as 23% to $45 after trading was halted for volatility. The stock later pared its decline and was down 17% to $48.93 at 10:09 a.m.
    in New York.

    The firm has a broad base of customers and capital in excess of regulatory requirements, founder and Co-Chairman Charles Schwab and Chief Executive Officer Walt Bettinger said in a statement on its website Monday.

    “Schwab’s long-standing reputation as a safe port in a storm remains intact, driven by record-setting business performance, a conservative balance sheet, a strong liquidity position, and a diversified base of 34 million-plus account-holders who invest with Schwab every day,” the executives wrote.

    The company, with roughly $7.4 trillion of client assets, said it has access to about $100 billion of cash flow, more than $300 billion of incremental capacity with the Federal Home Loan Bank and other short-term facilities, and that more than 80% of deposits at its bank are insured by the Federal Deposit
    Insurance Corp.
     

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    JPMorgan Is in Direct Lending for the 'Long Run'

    This interview of Kevin Foley, Global Head of Debt Capital Markets at JPMorgan. Here is a section. 

    80% of the leveraged finance market does not have a maturity until 2026 or beyond, so they have a lot of runway, a lot of liquidity, you got a well telegraphed recession as you talked about, they are cutting expenses and conserving cash. They are well set up to buy themselves time to see how this market unfolds…you just don’t have that crunch. We are coming off the greatest financing wave in history and so maturity has been pushed out and this plays out in that 80% stat I referenced. 

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    Pimco-Owned Office Landlord Defaults on $1.7 Billion Mortgage

    This article from Bloomberg may be of interest to subscribers. Here is a section: 

    An office landlord controlled by Pacific Investment Management Co. has defaulted on about $1.7 billion of mortgage notes on seven buildings, a sign of widening pain for the industry as property values fall and rising interest rates squeeze borrowers.

    The buildings — in San Francisco, New York, Boston and Jersey City, New Jersey — are owned by Columbia Property Trust, which was acquired in 2021 for $3.9 billion by funds managed by Pimco. The mortgages have floating-rate debt, which led to rising monthly payments as interest rates soared last year.

    “We, like most office owners, are addressing the unique and unprecedented challenges currently facing our asset class and customer base,” Justina Lombardo, a spokesperson for Columbia Property Trust, said in an emailed statement. “We have engaged with our lenders on a restructuring of our loan on seven properties within our larger national portfolio.  We look forward to a collaborative process yielding thoughtful solutions that reflect current market conditions and best serve the interests of all stakeholders.”

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