The Bond Market Is Watching and Waiting

The Bond Market Is Watching and Waiting

Irrespective of your political leanings, you have to admit that the last few weeks have been quite interesting, to say the least. Maybe “interesting” is the wrong word. Be that as it may, fortunately for investors, none of the fireworks in the political arena have really seeped into the overall tone of the financial markets.

On a global basis, the financial markets are still all about the synchronized global recovery that started in the second half of last year and continues to be strong, if not gather further momentum. Growth outlooks are being revised higher and reported inflation numbers are edging higher as well. On the back of this economic strength and cyclical momentum, equity markets are reaching new highs. Expectations about improved earnings and corporate tax reform are all the rage. Furthermore, talk of reflation is not just talk; it’s getting embedded in market prices.

But here’s the thing: The bond market is having some difficulty latching on to the reflation trade in a meaningful way. 10-year Treasury rates are meaningfully higher than their lows, for sure, but are having a great deal of difficulty breaking out (Exhibit 1).

Five-year, five-year forward breakeven rates are also up, but off their highs (Exhibit 2).

Further, U.S. Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen basically threw in the kitchen sink for hawkishness—with talk of tightening, balance-sheet moves, etc.—and we had a very strong inflation number, yet the 10-year barely broke through 2.5%.

In other words, the U.S. bond markets are watching and waiting but far from convinced that the regime has changed. Equity prices, on the other hand, have already assumed that the regime has indeed changed. There is a bit of a disconnect there.

None of this is to imply that the Fed isn’t tightening. That train has certainly left the station and, on the basis of Yellen’s testimony yesterday, two rounds of tightening may occur this year: June and December seem like a given. But the point of all of this is that two tightening rounds would not be a regime change for interest rates and inflation, in our view. They would simply reflect the synchronized cyclical momentum in the global economy.

As I have mentioned before, for the interest rate and inflationary regime to change on a global basis, savings in East Asia have to go down meaningfully. And those savings don’t appear to be changing anytime soon.

In a world of free-floating capital, inflation is a global phenomenon. As a result, for the interest rate and inflation regime to change in the U.S. over the medium to longer term, despite extra savings being generated in East Asia, the policy prescription has to be radically stronger than the status quo—and it has to result in better productivity, meaningfully higher investment spending and a fiscal expansion.

The Trump administration and the current Republican-controlled Congress have promised just that.

Yet there’s a challenge: The probability of radical policy prescriptions and fiscal expansion is high, but from what I can gather from the vacillations coming out of Congress, the trend is lower rather than higher. To some extent, the bond markets are incorporating a bit of that skepticism about policy prescriptions and their net impact on the outlook for regime change. Equity markets, on the other hand, continue to incorporate a significantly higher probability of radical policy prescriptions happening—and soon. There is a clear market divergence that needs to be resolved.

So, there’s nothing significant investors can do right now. But it would seem to me that if one had an extended position or had gains to protect, reducing downside risk somewhat would be prudent at this juncture.

Want to read more from me? Visit News and Insights from OppenheimerFunds.

DISCLOSURE:

These views represent the opinions of OppenheimerFunds, Inc. and are not intended as investment advice or to predict or depict the performance of any investment. These views are as of the publication date, and are subject to change based on subsequent developments.


Raymond Topp

Owner, Topp Wealth Builders

8 年

Amen !

回复
Prashant Parasher

Technical Architect

8 年

Equities have more room for speculations and somehow they got disconnected from the real economy, on the other hand fixed income represents inflation expectations and may be less speculations after all the manipulations by the agencies . longer the wait to catch up reality, bigger the fireworks show.

回复
Dave Fisher

Retired Executive

8 年

What could drive the 10 year Treasury rate higher? The 800 lb. gorilla (i.e. The Fed) currently sitting on the sidelines. Fed Chair Yellen stated that the Fed is not currently contemplating reversing the Quantitative Easing (QE) policy. But remember why the Fed needed to implement QE. Dropping interest rate to zero did not have the desired impact. The "velocity of money" was still dropping, perhaps reinforced by the zero rate policy. At zero rates, people and businesses left money sitting idle. Now, with rates up, stocks up, the economy (and spending) potentially moving up, the velocity of money will likely increase. If that happens, the Fed will need to take extraordinary steps to keep the economy and inflation in check. As the Fed can only directly impact the money supply - and not velocity - they may need to quickly reverse QE.

Charles "Chick" Trakas

Helping CPAs Empower Their Business Owner Clients to Take Control of Their Taxes & Stop Writing Big Checks to the IRS.

8 年

We need to mirror East Asia's saving habits

要查看或添加评论,请登录

Krishna Memani的更多文章

社区洞察

其他会员也浏览了