Bill Gross On Today’s Muni Bond Crash

February 29, 2008

Municipal bonds – which had been a model of stability and safety in investing - started sliding on February 12th. This was the day Money Magazine posted “Munis: The new power portfolio” and just days after Investor’s Business Daily penned, “Munis A Safe Haven While Bear Rampages”.

Yesterday, this slide turned into an avalanche. Many conservative municipal bonds funds fell between 1% and 2% and some leveraged closed-end municipal bond funds fell over 3%. Today promises to be worse than yesterday - troubling news because investors have been encouraged to buy municipal bonds recently to earn about 1% more after tax than safe treasuries. These investors have lost about 5% in the last couple of weeks in ordinary long term muni bond funds, and could be down in the double digits within a few days – to say nothing of the sixty billion or so in leveraged closed-end muni bond funds.

Bond kingpin Bill Gross or PIMCO fame appeared on the FOX Business Network’s “Cavuto” yesterday evening (in the segment after the one in which I appeared). He discussed yesterday’s wipeout in the municipal bond market and forecast that the real bloodbath would be today and perhaps Monday. Gross also predicted major buying opportunities in the next few days in munis:

Gross: There’s significant unwinds in terms of leveraged structures and the municipal market is in shambles. But it doesn’t mean that the credits themselves are not credit-worthy. And so if you can buy California at 5.5% to 6%, what an attractive value. Non taxable to the California holder. State of New York the same way.

These are values that probably won’t come around for another generation but they’re here at the moment. Yes, they’re risky because their prices are moving at the moment down. But they’re not uncreditworthy….

Cavuto: When do you start investing?

Gross: I think you start tomorrow. There’s 100s of municipal closed-end funds. Nuveen’s got some. Blackrock’s got some. PIMCO’s got some. They’re all out there. Tomorrow my forecast: They’re going to be hit hard.

Cavuto: Hit hard, responding to what?

Gross:Responding to these liquidations that are happening as we speak. Tomorrow will be a nasty day for the municipal market. For somebody who is willing to step in into a credit-worthy double A single A type of quality instrument that’s not going to default – cross your fingers – with no guarantees.

These values tomorrow and Monday and Tuesday of next week are going to be enormous."

What Bill Gross is talking about is highly leveraged hedge funds that have been buying up muni bonds and probably shorting treasury bonds.

The logic behind the trade is based on what many financial experts have been telling investors for the past few months: that municipal bond yields are historically high relative to treasury bonds – which is a good deal when compared to taxable treasuries for higher tax bracket investors.

For speculators it was a rationale to gamble. This yield gap between treasuries and munis should eventually converge, or so they thought, so shorting treasury bonds (which would make money if yields went up) and buying municipal bonds (which would make money if municipal bond yields went down) could make money with minimal risk because there is virtually no default rate on municipal bonds and no default rate on government bonds. General interest rate swings would not matter because both treasury bonds and muni bonds would move up or down together (assuming similar duration or interest rate sensitivity). The absolute ONLY risk was if municipal bonds yields went up while treasury yields went down…but why would that happen from already historically wide yield spreads between the two?

Well guess what happened yesterday? Municipal bond fund Vanguard Long-Term Tax-Exempt (VWLTX) was DOWN 1.21% (the fourth worst one-day drop in over a decade) while taxable government bond fund Vanguard Long-Term U.S. Treasury (VUSTX) was UP 1.49%! Now imagine being long munis and short treasuries with say, five times leverage. Doh!

We could have sworn we saw Bill Gross smirk at the trouble now facing the brilliant hedge fund managers. Watch the video closely. For those looking to follow Bill Gross’s lead and buy after the drop, consider unleveraged muni bond funds, like open end Vanguard funds, or closed-end funds that do not leverage, like Nuveen Municipal Value Fund (NUV).

4 COMMENTS: POST A COMMENT
Dunno ... default risk seems real
Anonymous — POSTED March 2nd, 2008 10:53AM

I dunno - I live in California and public financing is a house of cards - Vallejo came within a hair's breadth of Chapter 9 and others are sure to follow. California munis are riskier than a lot of people let on; risk of default is real.

No Real Default Risk
Anonymous — POSTED March 2nd, 2008 11:05PM

While there may be some degree of increased risk premia with stories like Vallejo in the news, virtually all of the dramatic price drop in the muni market this week has been because of the hedge fund unwinds. New York Port Authority 10 bonds are about as likely to default as a 10 year Treasury, but price is down 5.4 % in the last few days. This is hedge fund de-leveraging, and nothing else.

muni's
Anonymous — POSTED March 1st, 2008 9:35PM

im confused my broker has me in at 7.23on fktfx before the crach and now says hold ...6.84on friday....on what's the common guy to do with his nest egg while you guys f ---- with the market he told me to get in this because i=of low to low risk????

Bill Gross on the Muni Crash
Anonymous — POSTED March 1st, 2008 2:28AM

Good article.