Cold Trade
Several hedge funds in Copenhagen have made hay in pursuing a spread trade involving Scandinavian covered bonds—mortgage-backed debt, which, unlike MBS, are of high quality and remain on issuing banks’ balance sheets with well-maintained loan-to-value ratios. Bonds are double backstopped first by the banks and then by ring-fenced mortgage pools. Since they were invented more than 200 years ago, these bonds have never defaulted.
Michael Petry, head of Danske Capital’s Invest Hedge Fixed-Income Strategies, with nearly $1.5 billion under management and annualized returns of nearly 14% since it started in 2005, says the financial crisis created a special opportunity in this asset space that has lasted into 2014.
The trades are short in duration, typically playing out over six to 12 months. The fund rarely holds until maturity. Instead, it rotates exposure to maturities ranging from one to five years to capture the most attractive spreads versus short-term rates while hedging interest rates to protect against a move against the portfolio’s position.
The trades are premised on the belief that profits can be churned from relatively wide covered bond spreads and/or from the financing of three-legged trades involving swaps to hedge interest rate risk and repos to finance the trade.