Common variations include the Treasury basis (cash bonds vs futures), credit basis (cash bonds vs CDS), and index basis (cash equities vs futures). The Treasury basis trade's profitability and size fluctuate with monetary policy conditions and market positioning.
This strategy’s spread widens during periods of market stress, particularly when:
The March 2020 COVID-19 market stress demonstrates how market dislocation and funding pressure can generate substantial basis trade profits or losses based on positioning. Initial pandemic panic sparked overwhelming cash demand as investors faced margin calls, businesses drew down credit lines, and global USD safe-haven demand surged. Widespread Treasury selling, leveraged fund deleveraging, and money market redemptions followed. Market structure collapsed as remote work and risk limits prevented dealers from meeting demand.
Treasury basis spreads widened dramatically to over 100 basis points versus a historical 2-3 basis point average. This extreme widening inflicted huge losses on managers with long Treasury basis trade exposure due to the confluence of adverse factors. Meanwhile, the few well-capitalized investors with short treasury basis exposure captured returns exceeding 20%. Ultimately, this event drove many participants to abandon the trade semi-permanently.
Current market conditions present a more challenging environment; higher rates and economic uncertainty have fueled strong Treasury demand. Treasury market structure reforms over the past 5 years have implemented stricter oversight and transparency requirements for non-bank participants. The 10-year Treasury yield has climbed substantially from roughly 1.5 percent in late 2021 to around 4.5 percent in 2025, reflecting the Fed's aggressive tightening cycle.
Data shows more normalized basis spreads during this period, with maximum deviations reaching -15.89 basis points during the October 7th Middle East turmoil and 13.48 basis points following the Fed's 75 basis point move in June 2022. While geopolitical and monetary policy uncertainty still create opportunities, meaningful returns typically require substantial leverage, making the trade both potentially lucrative and risky.
The relatively tight distribution of basis spreads, despite significant market moves, reflects the effectiveness of post-COVID market structure reforms in maintaining orderly Treasury market functioning. However, current market uncertainty is heightened by several factors including potential policy changes from the new presidential administration, persistent inflation concerns, shifting economic conditions, and the impact of tariffs on global trade flows. This heightened uncertainty strengthens the case for deploying capital into basis trades, provided investors can accurately anticipate the direction of basis movements. However, this complex environment still demands rigorous risk management and continuous market monitoring.