Why does Bund Carry switch on every roll? #607
-
Hi Rob, I've been investigating Carry on the Bund, to better understand the P&L for that combination of Trading Rule & Instrument: On every roll, Carry & Price switch around. This means the unsmoothed forecast keeps alternating between almost +-20, and the smoothed forecast zigzags between those values. Why does this happen for the Bund? I don't see this in WTI mini, where the Diff between Price and Carry has much more occasional random spikes. Sorry if this has been covered before. Data taken from PST's Multiple Prices csv, using the last available price on each date, where both Price and Carry have a value. I've pasted in the graphs as pictures from Excel as I was fighting too much with Google Sheets to get what I wanted. Regards, |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Replies: 3 comments 3 replies
-
Discussed in my new book. Excerpt: Footnote for bond nerds: What is going on here? Do people like to buy bunds as presents for their relatives at Christmas and for German unity day (on the 3rd October, in case you wondered). The real explanation is that every 6 months the German government issues a new batch of bunds, which then become the ‘cheapest to deliver’ (CTD) (as yields are very low the new bonds with the longest maturity become the new CTD). |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
There are similar patterns in 5-year German bonds (Bobls), and Spanish 10-year bonds (Bonos). |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
-
It's good to get an explanation behind the behaviour, and that it is only certain instruments that it impacts. Another Chart: Price and Carry Price vs Forecasts (Smoothed and unsmoothed) With Carry smoothing switched on , the Carry Forecast is heavily influenced by the previous quarter, where the signal has the opposite value. This will dwarf any signal from "actual" carry. With smoothing off, the Forecast will suddenly switch between +-20. I'm not clear why the value is always at the max. With Carry weighted at 50%, this has a big impact on trading for the Bund. |
Beta Was this translation helpful? Give feedback.
Discussed in my new book. Excerpt:
Footnote for bond nerds: What is going on here? Do people like to buy bunds as presents for their relatives at Christmas and for German unity day (on the 3rd October, in case you wondered). The real explanation is that every 6 months the German government issues a new batch of bunds, which then become the ‘cheapest to deliver’ (CTD) (as yields are very low the new bonds with the longest maturity become the new CTD).