I would not call that a structural edge in any way...Any body can do it,and it's far from riskless.Watch the Big Short..
People like buying dollarized debt im emerging markets for the increased yield and not hedging out convertability and default risk..
That's not a structural edge...
Better technology,models,customer flow,information flow are structural edges IMHO..Trading the yield curve,Trading term structure,chasing yield in foreign markets without hedging the risks is not a structural edge..
People like buying dollarized debt im emerging markets for the increased yield and not hedging out convertability and default risk..
That's not a structural edge...
Better technology,models,customer flow,information flow are structural edges IMHO..Trading the yield curve,Trading term structure,chasing yield in foreign markets without hedging the risks is not a structural edge..
Here is an example:
For the longest time fixed rate mortgages were expensive because home owners loved the certainty of fixed monthly payments and didn't mind paying a higher interest rate for the peace of mind. So, there was a positive structural bias built into mortgage back securities. If one could borrow short term and bought MBS he made money year in year out without risks, it was a structural edge.
What was even more surprising, as interest rates dropped, many home owners didn't refinance making the structural edge even better.
