The First Degree View
  • Home
  • Fund Manager Platform
  • The First Degree View
  • CONTACT
  • Login
  • Menu Menu

The EFSF Opens for Business … But Will it Make a Profit?

October 9, 2011

Come next Friday October 14, Malta, the final European state to approve the EUR 440B European Financial Stability Fund, will have given their assent. This is no mean feat – organising and winning approval from 17 separate parliaments in three months is quite an accomplishment. The EFSF will be open for business …

What should we expect? The main objective is to lower interest rates on offer to distressed countries such as Greece, Ireland, Portugal and, to a lesser extent, Spain and Italy. The logical action is to buy up the discounted bonds of these countries, squeeze out the shorts and provide liquidity to nervous holders. The EFSF can borrow at AAA rated levels to buy these bonds – as such, it has been labelled “the Mother of all Hedge Funds”.

What will happen? My guess is that it will take the EFSF a few weeks to get the courage to enter the water. But, when they do, they will meet little resistance. The only shorts in the market are those expecting the EFSF to fail to get approval, immediate default and contagion – despite their doubts, these investors will quickly reverse their positions, recognising the EFSF is here to stay. Similarly, the presence of the EFSF in the market will embolden existing holders who will be less likely to sell at low prices.

The EFSF will either quietly start buying bonds across the curve or announce a public tender. The former approach would soak up cheap securities, while the latter would seek to backstop the market at a demonstrably higher price. I think that they will do the former for a month or so, and then announce a tender.

The EFSF’s main problem, as I see it, is being able to show a profit! Its profit measure is how much it can buy at rates higher than its cost of funds. Theoretically, if the EFSF can buy up all of Greece’s debt at 40 cents on the Euro, it will wipe out 60% of its debt, in turn saving the authorities EUR 180B relative to having to make good on the outstanding. As soon as it hits the market, however, prices will jump on very little volume. It will successfully drive down interest rates, albeit without spending much of its war chest … and therefore produce little profit.

What should existing bondholders do? Absolutely nothing – your bonds are going up and they will mature at par.

Share this entry
  • Share on Facebook
  • Share on X
  • Share on WhatsApp
  • Share on Pinterest
  • Share on LinkedIn
  • Share on Tumblr
  • Share on Vk
  • Share on Reddit
  • Share by Mail
https://www.firstdegree.asia/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/logo.png 0 0 Tim https://www.firstdegree.asia/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/logo.png Tim2011-10-09 06:53:532018-05-21 06:54:19The EFSF Opens for Business … But Will it Make a Profit?
0 replies

Leave a Reply

Want to join the discussion?
Feel free to contribute!

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

You must be logged in to post a comment.

Sign up

Recent Posts

  • My LLM
  • Could Trump’s tariffs deliver luxury to the masses?
  • Markets and penguins
  • How to win the tariff war
  • Deep Seek benefits from some Human Intelligence
  • The brain inside a Large Language Model is a random number generator
  • How much is that DOGE in the window? A lesson in Government
  • US Election-eve special
  • The Private Debt renaissance
  • Godzilla Government v King Kong Elon Musk
© FIRST DEGREE GLOBAL ASSET MANAGEMENT PTE. LTD. | fewStones
  • Link to LinkedIn
Link to: Beware the IMF Link to: Beware the IMF Beware the IMF Link to: The EU’s Short Term ‘Money Grab’ … But Will they Bear the Cost in the Long Term? Link to: The EU’s Short Term ‘Money Grab’ … But Will they Bear the Cost in the Long Term? The EU’s Short Term ‘Money Grab’ … But Will they Bear...
Scroll to top Scroll to top Scroll to top
We use cookies to ensure that we give you the best experience on our website.