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Moody’s: Negative interest rates have a limited effect on EMEA ABS, RMBS cash flows and note payments

Let’s be frank… they will have a limited effect until they have an unlimited effect.  Beware of unhedgeable spread risk. Here we go again!

 

About 190 rated tranches in European residential mortgage-backed securities (RMBS) and asset-backed securities (ABS) had  coupons at negative levels as of Q1 2016, says.  Almost 50% of these tranches are concentrated in Spain and 80% correspond to RMBS tranches, which are also reaching negative coupons calculated according to the transaction documents. However, the vast majority of issuers are choosing to floor these coupons at zero in the absence of explicit reference to negative interest in the documentation. By year end, the number of rated RMBS and ABS tranches with negative coupons may increase to about 550 tranches, projects the ratings agency.

“The immediate impact has been a fall in excess spreads in deals that have interest rate swaps. By year-end, we expect that the average annual impact will be a fall of 15 basis points (bps). As of Q1 2016, the average annual impact was a decrease of 4bps,” says Antonio Tena, a Vice President at Moody’s.

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South China Morning Post: How to survive in the brave new world of negative interest rates

The new portfolio for perilous times is high quality bonds, gold and some cash

by Peter Guy

 

It remains an article of investment faith that low interest rates translate into stimulus and growth, but history and current events are proving this to be dangerously wrong. Negative interest rate bonds and bank deposits have become an expanding asset class.

The trade started in smaller countries then spread to Germany and Japan. Today there are close to US$17 trillion of negative yield sovereign bonds. And their issue by central banks is setting up another financial and political crisis that regulators and central banks will be unable to stop.

 

http://www.scmp.com/business/article/1992741/how-survive-brave-new-world-negative-interest-rates

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Larry Fink: Negative Interest Rates Are “Biggest Crisis in the World”

This is a harrowing cautionary tale of what is lies ahead….

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igMitEJ1WP0

 

 

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Bill Gross: Negative Interest Rates and Flat Yield Curve Will Spell Disaster

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uFVsKTZf9-E

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Brookings Institution: Symposium on Negative Interest Rates

Okay–  its three hours but at least people are starting to take NIRP seriously

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JAKHb5dom9E

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BlackRock: Why negative interest rates are a bad idea

Excellent piece from Peter Fisher– must watch!

Three channels for monetary policy:  credit channel, exchange channel, wealth effect.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Nmaw0icw16s

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Out of Ammo: Yellen on Possibility of Negative Interest Rates

Keeping your powder dry is no longer a viable option so Janet Yellen grapples with the  best bad options and is “taking alook” t future accommodation.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tWPV_7YL3FU

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Warren Buffett on Negative Interest Rates: They Distort Everything

 

 

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Zero Hedge: Negative Interest Rates, S&P and the Coming Crisis in Confidence

In an analysis that may rival that infamous “McKinsey report” from early 2015 which found that not only had there been no deleveraging since the financial crisis but that total global debt has risen to an unprecedented $199 trillion as of 2014, or up by $52 trillion in 7 years, earlier today S&P Global Raters issued a new report in which it forecasts that global corporate debt is set to rise by 50% over the next four years, rising from $51.4 trillion currently to $75 trillion by 2020 as a result of easy central bank monetary policy and low interest rates.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2016-07-20/sp-warns-crisis-confidence-around-globe-corporate-debt-hit-75-trillion-2020

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BIS: How have central banks implemented negative policy rates?

Bank for International Settlements (BIS) has emerged as a leader in analyzing negative interest rates and the implications.

Since mid-2014, four central banks in Europe have moved their policy rates into negative territory. These unconventional moves were by and large implemented within existing operational frameworks. Yet the modalities of implementation have important implications for the costs of holding central bank reserves. The experience so far suggests that modestly negative policy rates transmit through to money markets and other interest rates for the most part in the same way that positive rates do. A key exception is retail deposit rates, which have remained insulated so far, and some mortgage rates, which have perversely increased. Looking ahead, there is great uncertainty about the behaviour of individuals and institutions if rates were to decline further into negative territory or remain negative for a prolonged period.

http://www.bis.org/publ/qtrpdf/r_qt1603e.pdf