Volatility puts verve back in ETF shorters
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Derivatives

Volatility puts verve back in ETF shorters

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Last summer investors turned to shorting bond exchange traded funds as the bond market kicked back into life amid the Greek crisis. Volatility has continued in earnest in 2016 as the Markit iTraxx Europe index, which tracks CDS spreads across investment grade issuers, hit a three year high of 121bp earlier this month.

Simon Colvin, Markit

The surging credit risk across Europe (and globally) has seen investors short European listed bond ETFs with renewed vigour. This comes as the aggregate value of short positions across the asset class crossed the $1bn mark for the first time ever in February to top out at $1.16bn last Monday.

While short interest across the asset class has receded under the $1bn in the last week, the current $930m of aggregate short positions is still higher than that seen at any point last year, which shows that bearish sentiment across bonds is still highly elevated.

The products that have attracted the most bearish sentiment in the recent wave of shorting activity have been on the riskier end of the scale as two high yield funds currently top the list of the most borrowed European bond ETF. The two funds, the Ishares $ High Yield Corporate Bd Ucits ETF and Ishares Euro High Yld Corporate Bd Ucits ETF make up over half of the current short base as both funds now have more than $250m of shares out on loan.

Emerging market bonds have also been in the crosshairs as the Ishares JP Morgan $ Emerging Markets Bond Ucits ETF saw as much as $215m of borrow in recent weeks.

The fact that investors now use ETFs to short US high yield and emerging market bonds speaks volumes about the growth of European ETFs in recent years. Investors now use the asset class to express both long and short views on an increasingly diverse set of asset classes. In fact, investors can access an all-time high $4.1bn of European listed bond ETFs now sitting in lending programmes, a number that has grown by 6% year-to-date, twice the rate of assets-under-management growth by European ETFs.

The bond ETFs sitting in lending programmes are also proving increasingly lucrative to owners willing to lend them out. The increased demand to borrow the asset class in recent weeks has seen the stock lending revenue generated by bond ETFs sitting in lending programmes jump to a recent high of 25bp on an annualised basis.

This trend is highly concentrated towards a minority of funds which see the most demand to borrow and in turn generate the most stock lending revenue, with five funds making 85% of the current annualised stock lending revenues. 

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