With blistering inflation and hawkish Fed, bond investors push for
safety
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[June 15, 2022] By
Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss
NEW YORK (Reuters) -Bond investors are
embracing safety in their portfolios as volatile markets price in a
super-sized hike from the Federal Reserve following evidence of
scorching inflation.
Investors have drastically shifted their expectations about Wednesday's
decision to a rate hike of 75 basis points (bps) - not the 50 bps the
market was expecting last week. The increased hawkishness has sent
equity markets tumbling and bond yields surging, briefly inverting the
yield curve and pushing stocks into a bear market.
Many investors support the Fed moving faster to dampen inflation, but
they worry about the risk of recession.
"A surprise 75 basis-point hike would be a happy one," said Nancy
Tengler, chief executive officer and chief investment officer at Laffer
Tengler Investments in Scottsdale, Arizona.
"The question is whether the economy can avoid recession and that would
depend on what the Fed does. If the Fed raised by 50 and they say
they're willing to consider 75, then we know that they're not going to
get ahead of inflation. You need to front-end load the hikes."
Tengler said her firm has been "defensive" in its bond portfolios,
shortening duration and increasing the underlying quality of the assets.
Shorter-duration debt typically outperforms longer-dated debt in a
rising rate environment.
Overall, futures on the fed funds rate, or the rate on unsecured
overnight loans between banks, now reflect an 87% chance of a 75 bps
rate hike on Wednesday, and a 75% probability of another such increase
in July. The market has also factored in a fed funds rate of 4% by the
summer next year.
Pershing Square Capital Management founder and chief executive officer
Bill Ackman, in comments on Twitter on Tuesday, pushed for multiple 75
bps hikes, noting that market confidence in the Fed can only be restored
if it delivers on what the market expects.
The Fed has already raised rates by 75 basis points this year. It also
began to shrink its balance sheet this month, a process called
quantitative tightening. The Fed's balance sheet ballooned to nearly $9
trillion as part of its pandemic policy accommodation
The recent big spike in inflation was a major catalyst to the shift in
expectations. Last Friday, data showed that in the 12 months through
May, the U.S. consumer price index (CPI) surged 8.6%, the largest
year-on-year increase in roughly 40 years.
BOND MARKET BETS
Ahead of the Fed decision, fixed income market players have kept short
duration bets.
Some, however, have reduced those short-maturity trades, believing there
are opportunities in the market given how credit spreads have widened
and how rates have risen significantly since the beginning of the year.
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The exterior of the Marriner S. Eccles Federal Reserve Board
Building is seen in Washington, D.C., U.S., June 14, 2022.
REUTERS/Sarah Silbiger
"We are still short duration albeit to a lesser degree. We have been upgrading
the quality of our portfolios under the premise that choppier markets and
tighter monetary policies should cause credit spreads to widen," said R.J.
Gallo, senior portfolio manager at Federated Hermes in Pittsburgh.
His portfolios are also slightly overweight Treasuries and even though their
duration is short, "we still like the high-quality nature of Treasuries for
playing defense."
But despite the Fed's aggressive tightening, bond investors see opportunities in
the fixed income space and for some, it may be time to start moving away from
safety bets.
"At this point, being incredibly conservative from both a credit and duration
standpoint is not the right place to be," said Jason Brady, chief executive
officer at Thornburg Investment Management in Santa Fe, New Mexico, overseeing
$46 billion in assets.
"That's where we were and we're moving away from that."
From a credit spread standpoint, Brady said his firm has become marginally less
conservative.
Brady, for instance, cited U.S. high yield debt, with its spread to Treasuries
widening to 487 basis points on Monday. On top of a 3.5% yield in U.S. five-year
Treasuries, he noted that an investor would net a more than 7% yield, which is
"not terrible."
David Petrosinelli, managing director at broker-dealer InspereX in New York, has
also been advising investors to be defensive in bond portfolios since the fourth
quarter of last year, but still believes the Fed could slow the pace of
tightening later this year.
He recommends a barbell strategy, which combines short and long maturity bonds.
If rates rise, the investor will have the opportunity to reinvest the proceeds
of the shorter-term securities at the higher rate.
Petrosinelli believes the Fed's aggressive hikes this year will lead to a
dramatic tail-off in consumption by end-2022.
"That's going to slow the Fed down in the fourth quarter in terms of hiking
rates. They will still need to raise rates, but the magnitude is going to
decline quickly."
(Reporting by Gertrude Chavez-Dreyfuss; Editing by Alden Bentley, Megan Davies
and Richard Pullin)
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