Financial Times Europe - 02.11.2019 - 03.11.2019

(Grace) #1

2 November/3 November 2019 ★ FTWeekend 13


there was now a lack of clarity about the
rate at which the central bank is provid-
ing lira funding because the mecha-
nisms the central bank uses have
“dispersed”.
The central bank came under fire ear-
lier this year after the T reportedF that
dollars borrowed by the central bank
through its own swaps facility were
helpingtodisguiseadropinnetreserves
— a fall that many investors believe was
caused by supplying dollars to state
banks that in turn sold them to prop up
thelira.
Since August, use of that facility had
all but evaporated. Now, though, it is
clear that the use of swaps has persisted
throughtheBorsaIstanbul.
The limited data publicly available
about the stock exchange’s swaps mar-
ket makes it more difficult for investors
to estimate their impact on the bank’s
reserves, which have climbed since
theirMarch2019nadir.
“If we can get timely information on
the size of these swaps, the issues about
the real level of reserves can be
addressed easily,” said a London-based
analyst, who asked not to be named.
“Butnowit’snotthateasy.”
Additional reporting by Chelsea Bruce-
Lockhart

Speaking at the central bank’s
regular inflation report event, Mr
Uysal sought to allay some concerns,
saying that using swaps to provide
funding to the market was a “conven-
tional instrument used by central
banks all over the world” and that
the bank was transparent about the
matter.
He also suggested that the rate
applied to this swaps-based funding was
in line with the benchmark one-week
repo rate of 14 per cent but did not give
precisedetails.
An executive at a Turkish investment
bank, who asked not to be named, said

bank’s recent series of benchmark
ratecuts.
Turkey’s shift to using the Borsa
Istanbul swaps market also raises fresh
questions about the true level of the for-
eign currency reserves the central bank
has available todefend the lira nda
underwrite the nation’s large external
debtburden.
“We don’t know the size of these
transactions — we don’t know the inter-
est rate applied on these transactions,”
said Haluk Burumcekci, founder of the
Istanbul-based Burumcekci Research
and Consulting, who challenged Mr
Uysal at Thursday’s meeting on the lack
of transparency. “These are question
marks.”
Economists and analysts had been
puzzled in recent months by a sharp
drop in the volumes of funding being
providedtothemarketthroughthecon-
ventional channel of short-term repur-
chaseagreements.
Mr Uysal confirmed on Thursday the
suspicions that the central bank had
turned to the exchange instead, saying
the total value outstanding on the Borsa
Istanbul swaps market was around
$12bn to $13bn. He did not say what
share of the central bank’s overall fund-
ingthatrepresents.

L AU R A P I T E L —ISTANBUL
A DA M SA M S O N —LONDON


Turkey’s central bank has sparked a
fresh wave of concern among investors
and analysts after saying it is supplying
billions of liras to the financial system
through an opaque market.


After a heated series of questions from
journalists and analysts on Thursday,
central bank governor Murat Uysal
ubliclyacknowledgedforthefirsttimep
thatthecentralbankhadbeenusingthe
Istanbul stock exchange to conduct
swap operations — taking dollars from
Turkish financial companies in
exchange for lira — as a means of
“providingfundingtothebanks”.
Previously, the central bank had
largely done that through the repo
market, where users exchange high-
quality collateral for cash, or through its
own swaps facility, where interest rates
arepubliclyavailable.
The switch to the stock exchange stirs
concerns that the central bank could
effectively be undercutting its own
benchmarkinterestrates.
This is viewed by analysts as a
risky punt considering inflation is
still running at close to double the
5 per cent target and given the central


MEMX,said. “You will see innovation
around technology but not so much
aroundmarketstructure.”
By becoming an exchange, MEMX
would join a small group of stock mar-
kets overseen by the SEC. Official
exchange status means trade orders
must be routed to these exchanges if
theyofferacheaperprice.
In addition to these exchanges, a pro-
liferation of private stock markets
known as “dark pools” have emerged,
drawing trading activity away from
thesepublicmarkets.
MEMX will not charge for connectiv-
ityordatawhenitlaunches,markingan
attempt to push down fees, which have
become a source of contention between
exchanges,customersandtheSEC.
Brokers and investors have argued
that the exchanges hold a near monop-
olyontradinginformationandcanraise
prices at will.NYSE, Nasdaq and Cboe
Global Markets control about two-
thirdsoftradingintheUSstockmarket.
Late last year, the SEC blocked a price
rise for market data for NYSE and Nas-
daq, a rare move, and followed up with
guidance this year calling exchanges to
justifyhigherfees.

R I C H A R D H E N D E R S O N— NEW YORK

Members Exchange, astock market
backed by some of the biggest names
on Wall Street, cleared an important
regulatory hurdle on Thursday, bring-
ing it closer to competing with the likes
of the New York Stock Exchange and
Nasdaq.

MEMX’s backers include trading
groups Virtu Financial, Citadel Securi-
ties, Fidelity Investments and TD
Ameritrade.
Virtu and Citadel alone account for
about 40 per cent of US stock trading,
giving the enterpriseheft in challenging
incumbents and potentiallydriving
downfees.
The Securities and Exchange Com-
mission posted MEMX’sapplication on
its website for public comment, signal-
ling the end of a private consultation
with the regulator that began in January
when the group announced plans to
buildanexchange.
The exchange is aiming to launch in
themiddleofnextyear.
“The focus here is building a simpler
market and a cheaper market,”
Jonathan Kellner, chief executive of

MARKETS & INVESTING


Derivatives


Turkey stirs concern with opaque funding tool


Equities


Virtu-backed bourse MEMX


clears vital regulatory hurdle


FastFT
Our global
team gives you
market-moving
news and views,
24 hours a day
ft.com/fastft

R I C H A R D H E N D E R S O N A N D
J E N N I F E R A B L A N— NEW YORK


As Jared Woodard, aBank of America
investment strategist, steps into the
elevator at work each morning in Mid-
town Manhattan, he already knows
what investors will call to ask a repeated
question.
Why has the US stock market hit
record highs while investor confidence,
reacting to a worsening economic
outlook,hasdeteriorated?
“It’s the most frequently asked ques-
tion we’ve had this year,” Mr Woodard
said. “Investors we speak to are incredi-
bly cautious. They see the market rally
buttheydon’ttrustit.”
US economic growthslowed n thei
third quarter as business investment
continued to weaken, adding to con-
cerns the global economy rests on a
knife-edge.
But the S&P 500 hit arecord high hist
week, capping a 20 per cent rise this
year. If this performance holds until the
end of December, it would mark one
of the best annual returns since the
financialcrisis.
Other market indicators seem more
responsive to the economic picture. The
closely monitored yield curve of US
government debt inverted this year — a
haunting sign that has foreshadowed
recessions over the last five decades —
and a capital squeeze in the market for
overnight bank lending caught the US
Federal Reserve off-guard, forcing it to
injectbillionsofdollarsofliquidity.
Nervous investors have continued to
rush to their favourite retreats, includ-


ing cash and low-risk bonds, sending
yields plummeting. This has swelled the
universe of negatively yielding debt to
$13.5tn. “It’s hard to think of a better
measure of pessimism about global
growth,”MrWoodardsaid.
Set against the gloomy economic
picture, the US stock market’s meteoric
rise is “a fantastic dichotomy”, said Mr
Woodard.
A series of rate cuts by the Fed —
includingaquarterpercentagepointcut
on Wednesday, the third this year — and
cautious optimism that the US and
China will resolve the trade stand-off
havepushedstockshigher.
The Fed’s decision to increase tempo-
rary liquidity injections to $120bn a day
from the current $75bn have also added
further support for stocks, said Nick
Maroutsos, co-head of global bonds at
assetmanagerJanusHenderson.
The stock market has a record of
pricing in today what will happen to the
economyinthenearfuture.
But given the weak growth outlook,
this pattern is being called into ques-
tion, said Alessio de Longis, a senior
portfolio manager on the multi-asset
investing team at fund manager

Invesco. “There is a disconnect between
wherethemarketisgoingandwherethe
economyisheading,”MrdeLongissaid.
On this reading, investors should look
instead to the bond market to under-
standwhystockscontinuetoclimb.
The debt market, highly sensitive to
bad news, has been raising red flags
about slowing domestic and interna-
tional growth as reflected in sliding
yields.
Major central banks responded
quickly to the deteriorating economic
outlook with aggressive monetary pol-
icy action in the form of interest-rate
cutsandbond-buying.
This seems to have reassured inves-
tors. “We hit a bottom in global yields
over the summer and, since then,
they’ve moved up, suggesting the fears
of a global recession have eased,” said
AliciaLevine,chiefmarketstrategistfor
BNYMellonInvestmentManagement.
Yields on Japanese, German and Chi-
nese government debt have inched
higher since the summer as investors
have sold safe bonds in favour of riskier
assets like equities. “Everyone was
really negative and the most crowded
trade was the safety trade,” she said.

Analysts now think this trend is revers-
ing.
Corporate activity is another part of
the puzzle. US corporate profits con-
tracted in the first and second quarters
of the year, sending them into an “earn-
ings recession”, according to FactSet
data. It forecast this trend to continue
intothethirdquarter.
Balancing that, stock buybacks on-c
tinue to provide support to the stock
market. When companies buy their
ownstock,theyreducethetotalamount
of shares on the market, inflating com-
mon metrics like earnings per share,
whichtypicallybooststhestockprice.
Last year, companies in the S&P 500
spent a record $806bn uying backb
shares. Activity this year has slowed
slightly but remains on track to be one
ofthemostactiveonrecord.
In the third quarter alone, companies
areexpectedtospendaround$170bnon
their own stock, according to data
compiled by Howard Silverblatt, senior
index analyst for S&P Dow Jones
Indices.
“Whether it’s good or bad, the market
has gotten used to buybacks,” Mr Silver-
blattsaid.
Apple, which consistently ranks
among the most active companies to
buy its own stock, spent almost $18bn
on buybacks in the third quarter, in line
withpriorquarters.
Persistent stock buybacks combined
with the upbeat tone on trade negotia-
tions between the US and China and his-
torically low rates in the US are likely to
keepstockselevated,saidMrWoodard.
Investors who have sat on the side-
lines will begin to grow anxious that
stockswilljustkeeprising,headded.
“When the market reaches new highs
there is a ‘fear of missing out’ trade,” he
said. Fresh all-time highs would suggest
thatthis“FOMOtrade”isinfullswing.

Buybacks and Fed rate cuts


have provided support despite


bearish signals from economy


‘There is a


disconnect


between


where the


market is


going and


where the


economy is


heading’


Traders at the
New York Stock
Exchange have
seen the S&P
500 hit records
this week— Justin
Lane/epa-EFE/Shutterstock

Equities. rading dichotomyT


Meteoric rise of US stocks


creates puzzle for investors


J E N N I F E R A B L A N— NEW YORK

US short seller Jim Chanos has enjoyed
one of the most profitable months in his
firm’s history, thanks to bets against a
food delivery company that warned
Uber was eating into its market and a
California utility partly blamed for the
state’swildfires.
Mr Chanos’ Kynikos Capital Partners
posted returns of 5.3 per cent in October
for a year-to-date gain of 20.4 per cent,
according to two investors in the $1.3bn
fund.
“October has been one of our best
months, both absolutely and relatively,
in a long time,” Mr Chanos old thet
FinancialTimes.
Shares in the food delivery company
Grubhub fell 43 per cent in a single day
this week after a gloomy profit forecast
it blamed on “promiscuous” diners
pickingother services uch as Ubers
Eats,DoorDashandPostmates.
Meanwhile, the bankrupt utility
Pacific Gas and Electric, whose shares
still trade, fell 29 per cent and 30 per
cent on consecutive days as itshut off
power o nearly 3m people to preventt
fallingwiresfromignitingfurtherfires.
Mr Chanos argued that there
was “almost no margin” in the food
delivery business when he hinted about

his Grubhub position in a CNBCinter-
view nSeptember.i
As for PG&E, he predicted its equity
would be wiped out by claims from last
year’sfatalwildfires.
“We also question whether PG&E will
beabletoexitbankruptcy-courtprotec-
tionintheforeseeablefuture,”hesaidin
amemotoinvestors.
The short seller’smost famous bet
was against energy company Enron
beforeitscollapsein2001.
He took his position against Grubhub
in the middle of this year at an average
price of $70 and PG&E in February at an
average price of $17, according to two
peoplefamiliarwiththematter.Thetwo
shares were $34 and $6, respectively, as
Octoberended.
Both stocks are popular shorts. Grub-
hub short sellers ollectively madec
paper gains of $521m on Tuesday alone,
according to Ihor Dusaniwsky, manag-
ing director of predictive analytics at S
Partners, a research firm. PG&E short
sellers are up $134.2m in mark-to-mar-
ket profits in October, bringing their
year-to-dateprofitupto$606.1m.
Mr Chanos is still short both Grubhub
and PG&E and bearish on Edison Inter-
national, another California utility,
whose shares were sharply lower in
October.
Mr Chanos has been a lightning rod
for criticism of short selling because of
his outspoken bets againstcompanies
such as Tesla, the electric car-
maker.Tesla shares, which were up 30
per cent in October, were a drag on
Kynikosperformanceinthemonth.

Equities


Short seller


Chanos enjoys


windfall in


October


‘We question whether


PG&E will be able to exit


bankruptcy protection in


the foreseeable future’


Turkish central bank winds
down its own swap facility
Bank has shifted activity to Borsa
Istanbul (cumulative borrowing, bn)

Sources: Turkish central bank; FT analysis













Mar  Oct

US stocks hit record high
S&P  index

Source: Bloomberg

























Jan Oct

First Federal Reserve
rate cut of the year

Second cut

Third cut




NOVEMBER 2 2019 Section:Markets Time: 11/20191/ - 18:40 User:stephen.smith Page Name:MARKETS1, Part,Page,Edition:EUR , 13, 1

Free download pdf