Chinese stock market loses BILLIONS in days following crash of snowball derivatives
Stock markets in Hong Kong and mainland China are experiencing a massive avalanche, leading to losses on billions of dollars worth of derivatives linked to the communist nation's equity indexes, known as snowball derivatives or simply snowballs.
Snowballs -- named because of the potential "snowballing" accumulating gains for investors who hold them – are structured derivatives sold in China and Hong Kong that are tied to the performance of certain underlying indexes. They offer dividends to investors in the form of bond-like coupons but only as long as the indexes of the snowballs are tied to stay within certain predetermined ranges.
If the indexes rise above the top of the ranges, then a so-called "knockout" is triggered, and the contracts tied to these indexes are terminated and investors receive coupons for the period to date. If the indexes drop below the bottom of the range, then a "knock-in" occurs, in which the holders receive no coupon and potentially lose at least a part of their investment.
The snowballs usually offered by brokers in China offer annualized returns of between 12 and 20 percent. They are most frequently linked to the two most popular small-cap indexes, the CSI 500 or CSI 1000.
Tens of billions of yuan being lost in snowballs
There is no single level for when knock-ins begin occurring. Partially state-owned brokerage firm China International Capital Corporation previously estimated that levels where most investors would begin losing coupons would be 4,865 points on the CSI 500 and 4,997 on the CSI 1000. Both of these bottom levels were breached this month, and as of press time trading levels remain below the trigger point for many knock-ins to occur.
Investment firm Guotai Junan Futures earlier this month estimated that there was a combined 30 billion yuan ($4.23 billion) worth of snowballs on the CSI 500 with knock-ins beginning at around 4,845 and on the CSI 1000 at 5,200 -- far above what the latter is currently trading at.
The worst is far from over for Chinese stock market, with analysts at the Bank of America -- who blame the snowballs as one of the main reasons for the stock market drops – estimating a further six to seven percent decline in the CSI 500 or CSI 1000, which are likely to trigger another round of knock-ins.
One retail investor, who spoke with Reuters under the pseudonym "Mr. Shi," said he invested at least a million yuan ($141,000) in snowballs tied to the CSI 1000 index and just recently discovered that his products had hit the knock-in level on Monday, Jan. 22.
When he bought the two-year products in early 2023, he was expecting to earn a return of at least eight percent annually. But now, unless the index rises above the 7,000 point-level within a year -- a more than 40 percent rise from current levels – he will earn no coupon and also lose a big portion of his principal investment.
While investors like Mr. Shi are holding on and hoping for a resurgence in the CSI 1000, others are selling stock index futures now to hedge their exposure to future dips in the stock market. Futures contracts on the CSI 1000 due in September fell by the daily maximum limit of 10 percent on Monday to levels below eight percent, where the index was initially trading that day.
Futures contracts tied to CSI 1000 due in February saw turnover spike to 93 billion yuan ($13.12 billion) on Monday. For comparison, the average daily turnover for the past month was 13 billion yuan ($1.83 billion).
The Chinese government itself is not doing much to counteract the plunge in snowball indexes, as Beijing is more focused on coming up with a way to intervene to stop a $6 trillion stock market meltdown.
Instead, all China's main securities industry regulator has done is ask firms to ensure that their snowball products are sold only to qualified investors and that they fully disclose the relevant risks involved with investing in these volatile funds. The Asset Management Association of China, one of the main self-regulatory associations that polices the sector, has also capped how much a company can invest in snowball products at 25 percent of a company's total assets.
https://www.yourdestinationnow.com/2024/01/chinese-stock-market-loses-billions-in.html
I was a futures trader. The derivatives market is precisely the reason the financial markets are trading at such inflated levels. No one will talk about this. The derivatives dwarf the actual underlying securities they represent...meaning...if you suddenly called all the derivatives at once, there wouldn't be enough stocks, bonds, or commodities available to fill all the orders.
Let me just outline one example of this: the ETF market. Each ETF fund must represent the outlay of the index it represents. The S&P 500 ETF must own all of the S&P 500 stocks in its portfolio, in exact proportion to the representation in the actual index. Number one, there are a lot of dogs in the S&P 500 that don't deserve owning, but the proliferation of the ETF funds means there's a lot of stock purchasing of a number of equity issues that normally wouldn't happen. But that's not the worst part of it. All those dozens of ETF funds have been allowed to own more shares outstanding than are actually available for ownership! So, not only are dogs overweighted, but the entire field of ETF funds have more shares in their portfolios than actually exist.
How bad is it? I was a technical trader. Not too long ago, I did a paper napkin assessment of what the Dow Jones should be trading at, currently. It should be 15,000 to 18,000 -- not 40,000.
Thanks, do you think utility stocks are' safe'?
You mean, for dividends, or preservation of capital? When the equity markets tank, they'll pull everything else along with them in the downdraft. Everything will get re-valued.
I think preservation of capital is what everyone is thinking.
Doesn't seem like a good time in history to be speculative imo