Foreign Governments Dumping U.S. Assets [View article]
How does doing a call-write strategy hedge downside risk? I could see selling the in-the-money calls, especially for February or March, and getting a quick 1.5% with some downside protection. But in the event the bonds yields rise, having out-of-the-money calls short doesn't hedge your position in any way I can see.
On Jan 19 02:22 PM Whippet wrote:
> To avoid the leverage trap on TBT, you can buy at the money (115 > strike) LEAPs puts for Jan 2011 on TLT. For about $23.50, your breakeven > would be at $91.50 but I would sell them long before then if you > really think the Treasury bubble will burst within the next 6-12 > months. I'm preferring to go long TBT and sell one-month calls on > it (a few dollars out of the money) to hedge risk. The leverage > trap doesn't kill you too bad with this one because its volatility > is relatively low, and selling calls makes up for this.
Foreign Governments Dumping U.S. Assets [View article]
I had a feeling this would be happening, but it's a difficult thesis to prove.
Consider this: spendthrift Middle Eastern governments, along with Russia and China, are accustomed to humming along on a giant sea of exports to America, and using that cash for their own spending, and to support our capital account. Now, the prices they commanded for crude have collapsed, the Chinese exporters are getting murdered, and the flow of green is drying up. They've now turned to selling dollar-denominated instruments not because of their concerns of US creditworthiness, but because they represent the one asset they do have that can be turned into spendable cash in a big hurry. Just my take. It would be interesting to see where, specifically, the foreign selling is coming from.
Foreign Governments Dumping U.S. Assets [View article]
On Jan 19 02:22 PM Whippet wrote:
> To avoid the leverage trap on TBT, you can buy at the money (115
> strike) LEAPs puts for Jan 2011 on TLT. For about $23.50, your breakeven
> would be at $91.50 but I would sell them long before then if you
> really think the Treasury bubble will burst within the next 6-12
> months. I'm preferring to go long TBT and sell one-month calls on
> it (a few dollars out of the money) to hedge risk. The leverage
> trap doesn't kill you too bad with this one because its volatility
> is relatively low, and selling calls makes up for this.
Foreign Governments Dumping U.S. Assets [View article]
Consider this: spendthrift Middle Eastern governments, along with Russia and China, are accustomed to humming along on a giant sea of exports to America, and using that cash for their own spending, and to support our capital account.
Now, the prices they commanded for crude have collapsed, the Chinese exporters are getting murdered, and the flow of green is drying up. They've now turned to selling dollar-denominated instruments not because of their concerns of US creditworthiness, but because they represent the one asset they do have that can be turned into spendable cash in a big hurry.
Just my take. It would be interesting to see where, specifically, the foreign selling is coming from.