In recent days, the $29 trillion Treasury market experienced massive washouts as speculators seeking to take advantage of minor price fluctuations in the foundation of financial markets were overtaken by volatility brought on by President Trump’s tariff battle.
In recent years, the “basis trade,” as it is sometimes called, between Treasury cash and futures has become increasingly problematic. In February, financial supervisory officials at the Federal Reserve issued a warning that any “rapid unwinding” might worsen market stress. By employing leverage to magnify possible returns, the trade aims to capitalize on minute variations between Treasury futures and the underlying cash Treasury.
However, dealers and investors claim that a separate, more common basis trade among investors has been wreaking havoc in markets recently.
It depends on changes in the swaps market, which is a vital component of international trade. The swaps spread, or differential, between Treasury rates and the 30-year floating Secured Overnight Financing Rate, or “SOFR,” is specifically related to this. Over the past few years, the scandal-plagued London Interbank Offered Rate, or “LIBOR,” has been replaced by the new, more transparent benchmark rate known as SOFR.
A few months ago, hedge funds and other investors began to pour money into this little-known basis trade in earnest, anticipating that the Trump administration would prioritize “pro-growth” and market-friendly policies on Inauguration Day.
The spread was supposed to widen, but that hasn’t been happening. Instead, tariffs and bond volatility caused the world’s largest trade war in a century, forcing some leveraged players to abruptly wipe out their positions.
There is concern that the tariff crisis is upending hedge funds, upending both basis trades, and pushing the indiscriminate liquidation of positions. Despite a steep selloff in stocks this week, Treasury yields surged, which increases the risk of a market meltdown. Analysts attributed Trump’s decision to halt some tariff rises against the majority of U.S. trading partners on Wednesday to concerns of a broader crisis.
“The SOFR swaps spread has been significantly tightened since the start of all this tariff talk,” stated Matthew Scott, AllianceBernstein’s head of core fixed-income and multiasset trading. “There’s been a trend of investors selling cash bonds to reduce risk, and fear of foreign buyers pausing purchases amid tariff uncertainty.”
Conditions drastically worsened early this week, bringing things to a head. The 30-year SOFR swap spread collapsed overnight on Tuesday, as seen in the figure below.
Brij Khurana, a fixed-income portfolio manager at Wellington Management, stated that what had been referred to as “the trade of the year” was abruptly struck by intense volatility.
‘Other’ base trade
On the one hand, constant, high demand from insurance firms and pension funds that require access to longer-duration assets to fulfill their commitments has caused the 30-year SOFR to fall below the 30-year Treasury yield.
Recently, hedge funds and others seeking opportunities on the opposite side of the trade started shorting SOFR and purchasing Treasurys.
According to Khurana, the trade was beginning to pay off for hedge funds for a time. Fears of a possible strike by foreign buyers of U.S. debt fueled the tariff turbulence and a selloff in longer Treasurys.
The unwinding of swaps basis transactions and growing concerns about a possible crisis that would necessitate some degree of Fed involvement caused traders to report that Treasury liquidity had momentarily slowed to a trickle on Wednesday morning.
When a trader over their exposure limitations, Daniel Siluk, head of global short duration and liquidity at Janus Henderson Investors, said, “You can picture all of those traders getting a tap on the shoulder.” “They are essentially told to decrease their leverage.”
Because basis trades rely on borrowed funds, a lender may want additional collateral when market risks rise. Until the unwind clears, traders may then be compelled to sell all they can in an illiquid market in order to raise money, which might lower prices and create a potentially hazardous feedback cycle. This trend was demonstrated in August when financial markets were agitated by the abrupt unwinding of the Japanese yen carry transaction.
The “classic” hedge-fund basis trade, which has drawn a lot of attention recently as a possible source of instability, seeks to magnify minor disparities between cash bonds and Treasury futures contracts with leverage. However, traders claim that in recent years, it has become more popular and has a wider range of participants. Theoretically, if highly leveraged basis trades were forced to unwind, it should help reduce the size of market swings.
The Fed noted that it needed careful observation and fixed this cash-futures basis trade at more than $1 trillion on a notional basis in recent years.
However, until the last few days, the other basis trade, which is more recent and linked to the SOFR swaps spread, was mainly ignored. It has become more popular for a number of reasons.
In addition to focusing on tariffs, Trump’s second term has aimed to reduce Treasury yields, limit the issuance of longer Treasurys, and potentially alter large banks’ policies regarding the Supplementary Leverage Ratio, a rule intended to reduce systemic risks.
Powell stated in February that a proposal to amend the regulation could help the Treasury market. The buyer base for U.S. government debt could grow if Treasurys were given preferential treatment in the way capital buffers were determined at banks, which may lower bond yields.
According to Amar Reganti, fixed-income strategist at Hartford Funds, it was believed that banks would receive regulatory respite when the new administration came office.
Instead, Trump quickly turned his attention to new tariffs, which were unexpectedly higher and more pervasive than expected when they went into effect on April 2. Then, as markets shook on Wednesday, they were suddenly halted, with the exception of those against China.
With Trump’s persistent threat to penalize foreign owners of U.S. debt and America’s trading partners in 90 days, tariff shocks continued to tremble financial markets ahead of the weekend.
After a crazy week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and the S&P 500 index (SPX) stayed erratic. There are concerns that the remainder of the stock market may soon follow the Nasdaq Composite index COMP and Russell 2000 RUT, which have already fallen into a bear market, which is defined as a decline of at least 20% from their most recent peak.
The steep sell-off in even common safe-haven assets, such as 30-year Treasurys and 10-year BX:TMUBMUSD10Y, has caused rates to rise.
According to Dow Jones Market Data, the 30-year yield BX:TMUBMUSD30Y increased to 4.873% on Friday, securing its largest weekly increase since 1987, a gain of 48.2 basis points in a week.
Traders stated that volatility and the possibility of further turmoil have not gone away, even though some damaged basis trades tied to swaps seem to have passed through markets without causing a wider widespread liquidity issue.