Wall Street is betting on Russian debt
The idea is what’s known as a negative-base trade, or purchasing dirt-cheap Russian government or corporate bonds along with credit-default swaps, which act as insurance on the potential default of a borrower.
Data from the website MarketAxess shows that Russian sovereign debt traded at a volume of $ 7 billion between February 24 and April 7, up from $ 5 billion in the same period in 2021[ads1] – a 35% uptick.
Russian bonds are trading furiously, said Philip M. Nichols, an expert on Russia and social responsibility in business and a professor at the University of Pennsylvania’s Wharton School. “There’s a lot of speculators that are buying up these bonds that have been severely downgraded and are on the verge of becoming junk,” he said.
Nichols says he’s getting constant calls from analysts interested in whether the potential trade makes sense. “The spread on Russian sovereign debt is astonishing right now,” he said. “They’re making an unusual amount of money with respect to volume.”
The cost to insure Russian debt grew to 4,300 basis points on April 5, up from 2,800 the previous day.
“This is Wall Street,” said Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at the Schwab Center for Financial Research. “It does not surprise me that they saw some sort of a loophole they could exploit to make money.”
JPMorgan representatives say they are acting as middlemen, simply looking to aid clients. “As a market-maker, we have been helping clients reduce their risks and manage their exposures to Russia in the secondary markets. None of the trades violate sanctions or benefit Russia,” said a spokesperson.
If clients wanted to quickly unload their exposure to Russia they could look to Russian oligarchs who would happily buy back sovereign bonds, said Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist and head of Global Bonds at PGIM Fixed Income. Selling Russian debt to US hedge funds keeps any accrued interest out of Russian hands.
The trades are legal and lucrative, said Nichols, but highly speculative and subject to large swings based on news of Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and further sanctions.
It also illustrates an alarming disconnect between Wall Street and the actual state of the global economy: Typically, investors would base their valuation of Russian debt on whether or not it will be repaid, and the likelihood that it would be repaid would depend on the strength and durability of the Russian economy.
But that’s not happening. New sanctions by the US Treasury on Tuesday, which blocked Russian access to any dollars they held in American banks, significantly increased the chances that Russia would default on its debt and that its gross domestic product, the main measure of a country’s economic strength, would tumble.
The US Congress voted this week to remove Russia’s most favored nation’s trade status, a major economic downgrade that would pave the way for deeper sanctions and import controls on products essential to Russia, like chemicals and steel.
The removal of that status, said Nichols, would sever Russia’s integration into the global economy. If Wall Street were associated with the real world, he added, it would not want to be anywhere near Russian debt.
“Russian debt is the province of high risk takers,” said Nichols, “and institutions should probably stay away.”