| >Sure, but the thing they bought also had almost no yield, so that's what I'm not understanding. Why is shitty 1% 10 year T notes "yield chasing"? Exactly. the 1-year notes had zero interest rate risk, and almost no yield. The 10-year notes offered very high interest rate risk (remember: rates were almost zero) and barely-more-than-no-yield. Choosing 1.5% return at high interest rate risk vs. 0.5% return for low rate risk. Either way you are getting almost nothing, but one has the risk of putting you into a liquidity crisis. In a sense you're willing to risk it all to squeeze an extra 1%, It is the absolute definition of yield chasing. >and apparently have lots of mechanisms by which you can borrow against them should you need to in almost any non-runlike scenario. If your $1000 bond is worth $1005 at maturity, and it has dropped to $990 and you want to borrow from me against the bond, I will charge you at least $15 in this scenario. That's slightly oversimplified, but lenders (other than the Fed/QE) will loan at a rate where you're essentially locking in a loss, because they have what you need to offset your risk you failed to hedge against (liquidity). >If the SVB bankers were "yield chasing" surely there were more effective ways of doing so at approximately the same risk. Not that I am aware of, at that scale of money. There's also high-risk lending to borrowers (which SVB did) but companies might borrow $10M, $20M, maybe $100M. When you're talking $50-100B, Bonds are the only game in town. |
30 year T notes, for example, seem to have been at double the 10 year notes in return at this time. Why not go for those if we're assuming greed as the driving factor here?