Investment Strategies
OPINION OF THE WEEK: The Markets Dodged More Than Just A Bullet

We publish an article that talks about how the world's markets avoided far worse trouble, arguably, from the big drop – and partial recovery – of more than a fortnight ago.
The following article reflects on the market slide and
partial bounce-back of more than two weeks ago. Financial markets
haven’t entirely settled down and speculation on what central
banks will do on interest rates is part of the mix. The VIX, a
measure of US equity volatility (based on options prices) is only
slightly above where it was at the start of January, and down
from almost 40 around 6 August. Investors had a taster of what
happens when confidence in US markets, and the prowess of the
“Big Techs,” are called into question.
To reflect on what happened, and what wealth managers ought to
consider, is Toby Hayes, portfolio manager, Trium Alternative
Growth Fund. The fund is overseen by London-based Trium Capital.
The editors are pleased to share these insights; the usual editorial disclaimers apply. Email tom.burroughes@wealthbriefing.com if you wish to respond.
The market moves over the last week or so have been quite severe,
to state the obvious. My thoughts on what caused the moves are a
little more circumspect than what the standard narrative would
suggest. At the most basic level, I think all the moves can be
traced back to the most crowded trade in macro – the short yen
carry trade.
The unwind of this trade then triggered a selloff in the most
crowded and leveraged dollar markets. Yen carry trades are not
uncommon or new, but how this one played out has a dynamic and
transmission mechanism that has not been seen before, so it's
worth exploring in a bit more detail what happened during the
recent risk asset selloff.
The Bank of Japan has been regularly intervening in the yen
market to attempt to halt the yen slide. As BoJ rates held so low
versus the rest of the world post the Covid inflationary hiking
cycle, this has led to interest rate differentials stacked
against the yen. It was simply too tempting for the global macro
community to borrow in a depreciating currency at interest rates
hundreds of basis points lower than their domestic funding costs,
and to use these funds to buy appreciating dollar
assets.
The BoJ has had decades of experience in managing a depreciating
yen, but its recent attempts to flush out speculators with yen
intervention were clearly not working and had less effect every
time they attempted them. In short, the BoJ was losing
credibility quickly and this was a recipe for a currency crisis
that threatened the entire dollar system.
So the BoJ took on a hawkish tone in early July. At the same
time, (perhaps with suspicions of central bank coordination),
China also made a surprise cut and other central banks also
started their cutting cycle with varying degrees of surprise. The
Fed joined in and signaled the path of its first cuts for early
September. Given the abrupt change in global interest rate
differentials, the expected direction of travel of the yen versus
the rest of the world swung into reverse and the yen began to
rally. Job done.
But the BoJ wasn’t finished: the BoJ did a hawkish hike
toward the end of July despite clearly deteriorating
economic data, and then the yen position unwind accelerated
dramatically. Once the momentum had taken off, there was no
stopping the unwind, as carry traders rushed to close their
shorts in an epic squeeze.
But the yen carry trade is at its heart a funding trade, i.e. you
borrow in yen to buy (typically) dollar assets, and so a
depreciating yen is, in effect, a liquidity injection for
dollar-based markets, of which the US tech sector had been the
primary recipient, simply by crowding in tech was so extreme.
So a short squeeze in the yen directly caused a selloff in Nasdaq
– a classic yen carry unwind, perhaps this time deliberately set
off by coordinated central bank policy, a controlled demolition
if you like. However, there was a more subtle transmission
mechanism, and one we had not seen before, that also contributed
to the equity market drawdowns, and this was via the equity
volatility markets.
The options market
Most market participants active in the zero-day options (OTDE)
market are selling unhedged daily options in the hope that the
option will expire worthless by the end of the day. For an
unhedged option exposure, an investor's biggest risk is
delta [the sensitivity of the option to the underlying share or
index price], and when the option is very short-dated, gamma
(rate of change of delta) is a close second.
As we saw with “Volmageddon,” volatility pricing can
sometimes be independent of what is going on with wider equity
markets. However, gamma risk is always dependent on the
underlying share/index price, as the equity price will determine
whether the option expires worthless or in the money.
Hence, gamma risk is always path-dependent on the underlying
share/index price. This path dependency implies that the
investor's gamma risk will change throughout the day as the
underlying index price moves. As will the (opposite) gamma risk
of those market participants on the other side of the trade
– usually taken by brokers/banks. As such, participants in
the OTDE market are always selling gamma, not volatility, and
this point is crucial to understanding a secondary transmission
mechanism of the yen carry trade unwind into the dollar-based
markets.
If you are selling intraday gamma, any gap events during trading
hours could prove cataclysmic for market players. Fortunately for
the OTDE market, which has grown monstrously large over the last
few years, most of the equity drawdowns of the last few weeks
happened outside US trading hours, meaning that US cash
markets opened gap down. Therefore, any gamma squeeze in the OTDE
market that would have ensued if there was a gap event within US
trading hours did not occur.
However, what did happen was that many broker-dealers refused to
make a market when the US OTDE market opened: and this was the
new ingredient, an exotic spice added to a classic yen carry
trade dish.
If an investor's entire portfolio risk is in the OTDE market,
then there is no problem – no trading for the day. On the other
hand, any participants using the OTDE option market in
combination with other markets were forced to move into the 1
million cash option market to replace the hedge/trade leg
they couldn't place in the OTDE market.
This rush for liquidity in 1 million cash options no doubt
coincided with the same broker-dealers pulling back from the cash
option market as well (risk in the OTDE market is often laid off
in the 1 million market), so this caused bid offers in 1 million
options to blow out intraday to such an extent that the spot VIX
(which is priced off the 1 million cash option market) went to a
high of 65.
As the option traders in OTDE are selling gamma and not
volatility, there was no commensurate rush to buy volatility in
the VIX futures market, so we saw only a muted spike in VIX
futures pricing (it peaked at 37), and hence the biggest
dislocation in history between the spot VIX and VIX futures was
born.
But the technical explosion in the spot VIX set off other
technical dominoes. The VIX market spot is widely used in
trend/momentum and CTA strategies just as much as it is used as a
fear index barometer for fundamental investors. The erroneous
spike to 65 would have triggered numerous stop loss/liquidation
trades that exacerbated the selloff, especially in tech, as you
typically sell what you own (or leveraged up to the hilt in), and
everyone owns tech.
Given the epic bull run in tech this last year, systematic trend
strategies were all max long: the severity of the drawdown would
have breached all moving average floors, and when combined with
the technically driven and erroneously high VIX spike, commodity
trading advisor sell signals were aggressively activated even for
slower moving strategies.
Negative feedback
The OTDE, VIX and Nasdaq markets all demonstrated negative
feedback linked to the yen carry trade and effectively acted
together in a recursive doom loop that was technically driven
rather than fundamental.
Outside of this technically-driven carry unwinding, only one
market had outsized moves that appeared to be driven by
fundamentals – the interest rate futures market. The market
“fundamental” narrative being pushed by many market commentators
was that due to a weak Non-Farms Payroll print, the US was
tipping into recession, and the equity market was responding to
this new information.
Personally, I believe that this is a classic case of the tail
wagging the dog, where market commentators try to explain market
moves with a suitably fitting narrative. The “tell” that this was
a retrofitted narrative, was that the narrative changed
coincidently, if not after the equity market drawdown was well
underway, and similarly, the rate of change of the narrative
moved just as fast as the equity market; in a blink of an eye, we
went from the economy and jobs are fine to we need several cuts
to stop the recession that is underway. Help us Oh Fed!
But there was a clear response from the interest rate futures
markets as it aggressively priced in cuts as equity markets
tumbled. The move in interest rate futures was partly a
reflexive move from macro traders reacting to the sudden and
extreme narrative change but also partly algorithmically driven –
several systematic strategies will reflexively buy interest rate
futures as a momentum hedge to capitalize on the Fed (rate cut)
put which historically has never failed to come into play with
severe S&P drawdowns.
Either way, while being quite extreme, the interest rate market
repricing was reflexive in nature and not part of the technical
doom loop that transpired in VIX/yen/tech.
While it won’t feel comforting to those investors nursing
battered portfolios, I suspect that the global financial system
dodged more than a bullet, but rather the detonation of Buffet’s
fabled weapon of mass financial destruction. If the gap down
events had occurred during US trading hours, then the toxic
feedback loop from the OTDE market into US stock market would
have been by many orders of magnitude worse than what transpired.
But it didn’t happen. The BoJ has bought some more time, the
yen carry traders will take a well-earned break, and we will all
keep calm and carry on.