I should correct myself, the two year german bunds are negative in nominal yield at the moment. I didn't see the -.20% target they have. Still, my previous comments stand, I would bet the other way with cheap options.
TBT? Can go long a short product and its liquid. Even options not too much of a spread.Traded on exchange.Suppose you think negative interest rates are ludicrous that you want to profit from them. Suppose you aren't really concerned with timing and so you are going to "buy and hold" this trade. Suppose you are a retail trader and you don't necessarily have a huge amount of capital or you want to "invest" in this trade over time (i.e., dollar cost average). What is the best way to short negative yielding bonds or rates so that you get paid while you wait for the inevitable day of reckoning? And what is a good way of doing this if you want to add only limited amount of capital at a time?
TBT? Can go long a short product and its liquid. Even options not too much of a spread.Traded on exchange.
How would you trade the other way for example.... Being short bonds has a costAgain, they are NOT negative nominal yields. They are negative "real" yields. And yes, banks will charge them to collateralize the trade. And "if" we were to hit another recession which is actually "highly" likely in the next two years, these trades could blow up big time. I think the trade of the lifetime could be betting the other way.
This article was from early 2015, but it shows an example of someone getting paid to take out a loan:
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/02/28/b...ugh-the-looking-glass.html?smid=tw-share&_r=2
Is there a way I can trade an instrument somewhere in the world where if interest rates rise I get a windfall, but if they fall or stay the same, I get paid to wait (or at least I don't have to pay anything while I wait)?
How would you trade the other way for example.... Being short bonds has a cost
Honestly you should not be trading things you don't understand.
I'm obviously not trading anything at the moment. I am trying to understand if there is a way to take the other side of negative interest rates as a retail trader.
No.