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by pclmulqdq 1195 days ago
Perhaps they could learn that doing consecutive 50-75 bps rate hikes for an entire year will bring with it a lot of adverse effects in a world where they are expected to hike 25 bps at a time?

Nobody pricing interest rate risk would have priced what happened last year correctly - it would have been considered a one-in-a-million event, not a routine response to high inflation.

4 comments

I think what really drove actors like SVB to indulge in speculative yield-chasing was central banks driving rates to zero, saying they'd be near zero for a long time, and as inflation ticked up that they weren't even "thinking about thinking about raising interest rates", and then continuing to hold them at zero while calling inflation transitory as it reached multidecadal highs.

This trained everyone to speculate that the Fed was ignoring inflation on purpose and they should allocate accordingly.

So many people unbuckled their seatbelts as the driver sped through several red lights while saying he wasn't even planning to touch the brakes. When he did eventually slam the brakes a moment later, the passengers flew through the windshield. The driver deserves blame, but blame him for speeding, not for slowing down -- the latter is the only responsible thing he did.

This is just not true. I saw many people predicting that after leaving interest rates low for so long and breezily treating inflation as transitory, that the Fed would have to frantically overcorrect with rapid hikes to keep their credibility. And if I saw that multiple times in public places, big institutions with experienced people probably knew it even better, which is probably why SVB is hosed while CDSs at JPMorgan/GS/etc. have barely budged- they knew what they were doing.
I'd say they should learn that super low interest rates are nonsense.
The point is that consistent bad behavior is probably better than inconsistent good behavior. That makes you predictable.
I don't know anyone who expected sub 50 bps raises each quarter for a while now.
SVB bought those assets 2 years ago, prior to the yield curve inversion or any of the current macro conditions. Also, the last rate hike was 25 bps, and early in 2022 people were expecting a slowdown to 0-point hikes by now. Prognosticating about this stuff to price long-term fixed-income vehicles is tricky.