Do you really really, in your heart of hearts, think that the Fed's on hold till May 2012? Even I, a relative bear, have a hard time seeing this as a central scenario.Quote from Daal:
But I'm considering taking a small position there and treating as an option. The May 2012 will pay more than $4,000 per contract if the Fed doesnt hike anything by then. And it has protection against 100bps worth of hikes, so even if the Fed were to pull a Hoenig, you are still doesnt lose a penny(you make $1,000 per contract actually).
Its an alternative to levering up like crazy in the more near term contracts like I'm doing. I will think about that more and see if I put some bets there
Quote from Martinghoul:
Do you really really, in your heart of hearts, think that the Fed's on hold till May 2012? Even I, a relative bear, have a hard time seeing this as a central scenario.
That sounds about right... I was seeing a wee bit better earlier on, but it's roughly like that. But open interest on these May12s is smth like 2.5k contracts, so there's hope. Still, I'd go for Eurodollars that far out, if I were you. Then you could switch into FF/ZQ, when you get closer and if you're not happy with the LIBOR/OIS basis position. Might potentially be cheaper to do it that way.Quote from Daal:
The farther that I see is ZQ/FF May 2012 liquidity of 1 contract per side with a spread of 2bps
Quote from Martinghoul:
That sounds about right... I was seeing a wee bit better earlier on, but it's roughly like that. But open interest on these May12s is smth like 2.5k contracts, so there's hope. Still, I'd go for Eurodollars that far out, if I were you. Then you could switch into FF/ZQ, when you get closer and if you're not happy with the LIBOR/OIS basis position. Might potentially be cheaper to do it that way.
Another slowdown is very likely, IMHO. My central scenario (say 70%) is that neither a double-dip nor significant growth occurs for the next couple of years, actually. A bit of a square root, so to speak, while the West undergoes further deleveraging. Rates are likely to remain low for a while, but won't stay at 0. Obviously, all this changes if China allows yuan to appreciate meaningfully.Quote from Daal:
What about your views on the likelihood of another US recession or at least a slowdown?
What about the chances that grow picksup and the US reaches 'escape velocity'?
Quote from Martinghoul:
Another slowdown is very likely, IMHO. My central scenario (say 70%) is that neither a double-dip nor significant growth occurs for the next couple of years, actually. A bit of a square root, so to speak, while the West undergoes further deleveraging. Rates are likely to remain low for a while, but won't stay at 0.