Kyle Bass, whose Dallas-based hedge- fund firm Hayman Advisors LP made $500 million in 2007 betting against U.S. subprime mortgages, said the Bank of Japan's recent doubling of money is "the beginning of the end" for Japanese Government Bonds.
Bass has been short - long term - the JGBs for three years already and announces he's only betting 1-2% of his capital to possibly make 300 times his wager. This bet has been a loser so far, and it is called the "Widowmaker" bet by wags on Wall Street. Despite this, Bass is now more firmly committed to his view the JGBs will blow up sooner than later.
He thinks when the Japanese Government Bonds finally crash and burn, that it will happen rapidly and because they have 20 years of "buildup" behind them.
Bass made one observation which rings true: "The whole world is chasing yield." He points out the US stock market is being led by formerly big dividend paying utilities which are not the normal stocks to lead a rally. As he said, "Things that don't typically lead us into new highs, it's because of their dividend yields."
Another notable quote: A host asks Bass about other instruments with yield which are popular at this time. He observes, "With Bernanke pinning rates at zero," . . . "structured credit, and even mortgage credit, they're one of the most liquid areas of the marketplace today. People can't get enough of them. And think about sub-prime credit . . . 97% of the 20,000 line items are still rated below investment grade, they're still junk. The ratings based buyers aren't even there yet! The money is being mis-allocated by the printing press."
On Gold
On gold, Bass admits his firm has always had a position in gold. "Monetary policy is the only policy in town. I am perplexed as to why gold is as low as it is."
". . . The global monetary base is north of $70 Trillion, all the gold in existence is only $7 or $8 Trillion, there's only $2-$3 Trillion of investable gold . . . at some point in time, I'd rather own gold than paper. I just don't know when that time is."
Bass goes on about gold, "They can't print any more. They can mine some more. They can't (produce) at the rate the Central Banks are printing money. I just view gold as another currency, it's that simple. I don't view it as a commodity."
"If Monetary Policy is the only game in town, then we're in for a world of trouble."
On Housing
"We're not expecting housing to get materially better, but we're not expecting it to get materially worse."
"We think it (housing market) will marginally improve going forward.
On Interest Rates & Quantitative Easing In The USA
"One of my underlying beliefs is that the US rates can't go up. For a long time Bernanke said low for a long time, then he said low for two years. I think he means low forever, as long as he can keep them there. Every point of interest rates, every full one-hundred basis points of interest rates represents another $150 Billion in interest rate payments."
"It is crazy to think we can raise interest rates by 100, 200, 300 basis points." Bass suggests the Fed might only be able to raise rates 25 to 50 basis points tops, and says, "I don't think we can raise interest rates."
He explains because of his views on interest rates, he believes ". . . housing will have a bid."
". . . If rates go higher, all bets are off on my perspective in housing."
Keeping A Wide Angle View On The World of Cryptocurrencies, Blockchains, Economics, Politics, Science And The Environment
09 April 2013
News & Views For Week Of April 7 - 13, 2013
Note: I will be adding the freshest news and opinion pieces to the top of this list, refreshing it daily, sometimes at night, somtimes (shudder) during daylight hours. - Rock
- PC Company Stocks Hammered On Thursday
- Front Running The Fed With TBTF Insider Trades
- Australia: Hits 3 Year High In Unemployment
- Takata Air Bag Recall Affects 3.4 Million Late Model Honda, Nissan & Toyota Cars
- Charles Hugh-Smith explains, with charts, which European small depositors will be shaken down next
- Goldman Sachs Takes The Opposite Trade Of What It Is Selling It's Clients (Muppets) . . . Again: Buys Gold, Sells Bonds, Tells Clients To Do The Opposite
- First Solar (Nasdaq: FSLR) Blows Away Analyst's Expectations, Sees Very Bright 2013 through 2015, causing stock to jump 31.28% yesterday
- 4.2 Million Borrowers To Receiving Payments This Friday of $300 to $125,000 From 13 Firms Who Botched Foreclosures
- Student Loan Rates Boost Government Profit As Debt Damps Economy
- Kyle Bass takes way out of the money bets against Japanese Government Bonds: "The investors ran the other way from the central bank, they didn’t run with it. I find that to be fascinating.”
- Natural Gas Reserve Estimates Upped Again For The USA
- The Big Picture: Ugly Chart Contest
- Matt Taibbi: The Growing Sentiment on the Hill For Ending 'Too Big To Fail'
- Auto sales for March highest since 2007
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