Thursday, May 26, 2011

USA - CDS Spreads Higher than Mexico

Bloomberg:

Trading of credit-default swaps insuring U.S. Treasuries has doubled as the government struggles to agree on plans to cut its budget deficitand raise the $14.3 trillion national debt limit.

A total of 819 contracts covering a net notional $4 billion of debt were outstanding as of May 20, up from 449 contracts covering $2 billion a year ago, according to the Depository Trust & Clearing Corp. Average daily trading volume surged to $490 million last week from $10 million the week before, making the U.S. the fourth most active among 1,000 contracts tracked by DTCC, up from 633rd.

Swaps insuring Treasuries for five years are trading at 50 basis points, according to CMA. That compares with 37 basis points in April and a record 100 basis points at the peak of the financial crisis in 2009. One-year contracts are now more expensive than Panama, the Philippines and Mexico, CMA prices show.

Anyone else see the humor here?

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A student of the markets that has held portfolio management, analysis and trading positions for over 15 years.