27 March 2015 US Fixed Income Weekly United States Derivatives Rates Rates Volatility Gov. Bonds & Swaps • No directional cues emerged after the last FOMC meeting. The net effect is essentially a distributional modification, a swelling of the tails - the probabilities of rates moving both higher and lower have increased, at the expense of the likelihood of staying within the range. The novelty of the Fed communication this time was the mechanism whereby Fed consensus is converted into the market dissensus. Fed language became a pure volatility effect. In this environment any residual overweight in assets for which valuation has been distorted by monetary policy so far is likely to come under scrutiny and possibly be corrected. That should free some maneuvering space for the Fed and make potential hikes less damaging and thus possibly more likely. As far as an attempt to return vol to the markets, this is mission accomplished. • We are buyers of tail risk at the short end of the curve in the mid-run: • Sell $100mn 8M10Y 8bp wide strangles vs. buy $325mn 3M3Y straddles costiess • Sell $100mn f3M3Y straddles vs. buy $200mn 60bp wide 8M3Y strangles confess In our view, risk assets are at a bifurcation point - their future path depends on the way the economy and stimulus unwind interact with one other. We are buyers of hybrid S&P calls and puts conditioned on different rates responses to the Fed. We recommend: • 18-Dec-2015 SPX 95% put subject to Ss > ATMF t 25 , offer 1.15%, an 73% discount to vanilla at 4.30% • 18-Dec-2015 SPX 103% call subject to 10a < fwd-25bp at expliy, offer 1.00%, a 70% discount to vanilla at 3.37% From Fed consensus to market dissensus: Volatility could be here to stay The last FOMC could be seen as a template for what to expect in the near term. Two parts of the statement cause this. The combined statement reflects the divided subject of the future economic path and sets the terrain for a period of ele