Analysis: Bonds 'boring' no longer as unpredictability returns
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[September 16, 2021] By
Dhara Ranasinghe
LONDON (Reuters) - Erratic and volatile,
with positioning swinging from one extreme to another: a new norm is
taking hold in the world's biggest debt markets which for years saw
activity crushed by the hefty presence of central banks.
Bond-buying stimulus remains a powerful downward force on borrowing
costs, with the balance sheets of six major central banks amounting to
almost $30 trillion, from under $10 trillion in 2008, BofA estimates.
But unusually sharp swings in sovereign bond yields this year suggest
that low volatility, something investors have become accustomed to,
cannot be taken for granted.
Take the $22 trillion U.S. Treasury market, of which the Federal Reserve
owns roughly 20%. Having held a net short position - essentially a bet
on prices going down - for around 2-1/2 years, investors have since
around June 2020, flitted in and out of net long and short positions.
For a graphic on Net positioning in the US Treasury market:
https://fingfx.thomsonreuters.com/
gfx/mkt/movankmdjpa/
USTthisone.png
The price moves reflect perhaps the lack of clarity over what will
follow the four-decade bond bull-run.
Treasury 10-year yields jumped some 60 basis points in the six weeks to
late-March, peaking at 1.78%. They then tumbled almost to 1% in July,
before rising back above 1.3% in August..
"Fixed income investors are meant to be the boring investors... they are
not the ones that strike you as the aggressive types that want to roll
the dice every morning, so why are they doing that now?," said Ludovic
Colin, a senior portfolio manager at Swiss asset manager Vontobel.
Investors, including Colin, have these explanations.
First, while COVID-linked uncertainty was a 2020 story, virus mutations
this year have made it harder to predict the economic outlook and
implications for central banks.
Economists polled by Reuters offered a median 2021 forecast for U.S. GDP
growth of around 2% in early-2020, which rose to 4% last May, then
dropped a little before standing at almost 5% in February and at 6%-plus
in May.
Second, major economies are debating, for the first time in years,
whether long-dormant inflation is back.
All that implies a "lot of guesswork", BlueBay Asset Management CIO Mark
Dowding said.
"This can lead yields to fluctuate from one end as we saw in Q1, when
everyone was very optimistic, to another as pessimism returned. This
will likely persist until we get clarity."
Even in Germany, where the European Central Bank holds roughly a third
of the bond market, it's no longer straightforward to bet yields will
fall.
Yields on ten-year debt, known as Bunds, rose to -0.07% in May, within
striking distance of turning positive, before dropping to a six-month
low of -0.52% last month.
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British Pound Sterling and U.S. Dollar notes are seen in this June
22, 2017 illustration photo. REUTERS/Thomas White/Illustration
And September is shaping up to be the most volatile month since April
2020, according to one gauge measuring the average daily move between
the highest and lowest Bund futures price.
Yields were driven up by a hawkish ECB chorus calling for stimulus cuts,
before the bank itself struck a dovish note at its last meeting.
Mike Riddell, head of macro unconstrained at Allianz Global Investors,
expects recent swings to be followed at some point by bigger volatility
shocks.
"I don't believe central banks have killed volatility," he said.
For a graphic on Volatility in German Bund futures rises:
https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-BONDS/
zjvqkjqyxvx/chart.png
BE NIMBLE
With central bank activity still dominating bond markets, volatility is
unlikely to spiral too much. Nor is it manifesting yet in market-based
gauges such as the MOVE index which has ticked only modestly higher this
year.
Vontobel's Colin said the early-2021 bond selloff was likely triggered
by an inflation rethink, with the likes of hedge funds quick to seize
upon signs of faster price growth.
"The quick-buck guys jumped on this argument, they forced the long-term
guys to listen, which is why you got this extreme positioning on bonds
and yields going higher, earlier this year," Colin added.
But being first did not mean top returns; macro and fixed income
strategies gained 4.6% and 3.8% respectively between January and July
2021, Eurekahedge data shows.
Its broader hedge fund index, meanwhile, rose 8%.
Greater market swings up the stakes for mainstream investors too,
forcing them to become more nimble, said Bethany Payne, global bonds
portfolio manager at Janus Henderson Investors.
Investors have to move quickly, she said, "...or you're out of it
because it's happened within a couple of days."
For a graphic on Government bond trading volumes rising:
https://graphics.reuters.com/GLOBAL-BONDS/
zdpxoomjzvx/chart.png
(Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe; Additional reporting by Maiya Keiden,
Jamie McGeever and Saikat Chatterjee; Editing by Sujata Rao and Toby
Chopra)
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