The story dominating headlines this week was how a couple of hedge fund managers toured Western Sydney, meeting with mortgage brokers and real-estate agents and viewing multiple properties. Their conclusion was that the Australian housing market was a “Ponzi scheme”, “insane” and “crazy”. House prices, in their view were likely to fall around 50% and that banks, mortgage insurers and other lenders would suffer massively as a result.
Of particular interest to YieldReport readers will be how credit markets reacted and the news isn’t good.
The ‘Big Short’ story, as it was being called, made international headlines, was on the front page of the Financial Review and the pair were interviewed for a story on this week’s 60 Minutes programme. Bank shares were smashed, yields on bank bonds rose sharply and the cost of insurance on defaults by the banks (credit default swaps) soared.
Over a day or so, $20 billion of bank share market value was destroyed and the drop in value of debt securities was also substantial as the story gained traction. Credit default swaps on the big four banks rose sharply, with the average price now 140 basis points per annum, significantly higher than the 80 basis point premium at the start of 2016. Hedge funds that bought CDS and short sold bank shares would have made large gains without their doomsday scenario even coming to fruition.
Christopher Joye, the ex-RBA senior analyst and now-columnist at the Australian Financial Review, has written several articles suggesting that the hedge fund managers had positioned their funds to benefit from the publicity and market volatility that ensued by short-selling banks and buying credit default insurance. The hedgies played the media and markets like a Stradivarius and have likely already made profits from the publicity of their ‘research’ and the market moves.