Global Macro in 2009. Think again |
Date: Monday, April 20, 2009
Author: Bryan Goh, hedged.biz
In the recent
investor surveys a number of hedge fund strategies stand out as strategies
which investors expect will do well going forward and which they intend to
increase their exposure to. Among these are distressed credit, global macro
and CTAs. Of the three, distressed debt hedge funds had a poor 2008 whereas
macro and CTAs did well. The naïve reasons for favoring distressed debt are
that the world is in recession, default rates are expected to surge. Quite
what condition the companies are in when they do file is another matter. I
have no comment about CTA’s.
Investor expectations about
macro are interesting. They expect macro to perform well in 2009 and beyond.
Given the nature of macro investing, this implies that investors have some sort
of macro view, at least loosely. If it is volatility in markets in general, then
the probability of loss is enhanced as much as the probability of gain. Manager
selection is of course paramount and what allows investors to generate more
gains than losses out of volatile markets. Risk management at some level
requires the investor or their manager to scale leverage to take into account
underlying market volatility in the first place. These are more technical
matters.
It seems that there is a
tendency for investors to chase returns, to prefer strategies or managers which
have been doing well recently. We can critique this approach in general or we
can look specifically at the preference for macro in 2009. The clear macro
trends that macro managers capitalized upon in 2008 were:
Whether these were clear
before the fact we cannot tell. Maybe macro managers were smart enough maybe
they were lucky. We hear about the successful ones. Many of the trades were
event driven, signaled by the collapse of one financial institution or the
rescue of another or some narrow escape.
In 2009 what are the macro
trends that managers could capitalize on?
Where are the catalysts and
events? There are the various rescue plans but these are for the moment limited
to the housing, banking and asset backed markets in the US. Default rates will
most certainly rise. But these are events more traditionally traded by ABS
specialists and distressed credit investors. Where are the big macro events? One
could argue that all the big macro events are behind us and that the path of the
economy now follows the excruciating process of deleveraging, consolidation and
repair, and releveraging. If so, where are the easy pickings for macro?
Investors are likely exhibiting serially correlated expectations based on the
recent performance of the strategy class and will likely end up disappointed.
Macro managers work by forming
a view of the macroeconomic conditions that will unfold and then take bets to
reflect those views. Whether they be in relative value or directional macro
trades, whether they are long and short different parameters of the same market,
most macro trades are expressed in the levels. For example, a curve steepener
long 2s and short 10s, is betting on the levels of the 2 yr rates and the levels
of the 10 year rates. Fewer managers trade the gamma of these markets as part of
a macro strategy, an approach that adds a dimension which may be useful in a
year when the traditional macro pickings are less obvious.