US bond bulls look to 2024 Fed pivot to sustain searing rally
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[December 27, 2023] By
Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK (Reuters) - As bonds emerge from a historic selloff, some
investors expect better times in the U.S. fixed income market next year
- as long as the Federal Reserve’s rate cuts play out as anticipated.
A fourth-quarter rally saved bonds from an unprecedented third straight
annual loss in 2023, following the worst-ever decline a year earlier.
The late year surge came after Treasuries hit their lowest level since
2007 in October.
Fueling those gains were expectations that the Fed is likely finished
with rate increases and will cut borrowing costs next year - a view that
gained traction when policymakers unexpectedly penciled in 75 basis
points of easing in their December economic projections amid signs that
inflation continued to cool.
Falling rates are expected to guide Treasury yields lower and push up
bond prices - an outcome that a broad swathe of investors are
anticipating. The latest fund manager survey from BofA Global Research
showed investors are holding their biggest overweight position in bonds
since 2009.
Still, few believe the path to lower yields will be a smooth one. Some
worry the over 100 basis point drop in Treasury yields since October
already reflects expectations for rate cuts, leaving markets vulnerable
to snap backs if the Fed doesn’t cut soon enough or fast enough.
The market has priced some 150 basis points in cuts next year, twice
what policymakers have penciled in, futures tied to the Fed’s main
policy rate show. Benchmark 10-year Treasury yields stood at 3.88% last
week, their lowest level since July.
Many are also watchful for the return of the fiscal worries that helped
drive yields to their 2023 peaks but ebbed in the later part of the
year.
“As long as the Fed doesn't totally have this wrong, we should expect to
see some rate cuts next year,” said Brandon Swensen, a senior portfolio
manager on the BlueBay Fixed Income team at RBC Global Asset Management.
However, “it could be a bumpy path."
‘BONDS ARE BACK’
U.S. bond year-to-date returns, which include interest payments and
price changes, totaled 4.8% as of last week, compared with negative 13%
last year, according to the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index.
"Bonds are back," Vanguard said in an outlook report published earlier
this month.
The world's second largest asset manager expects U.S. bonds to return
4.8%-5.8% over the next decade, compared with the 1.5%–2.5% it expected
before the rate-hiking cycle began last year.
Year-to-date, the Vanguard Total Bond Market Index Fund, with over $300
billion in assets, posted a 5.28% return as of last week, up from
negative 13.16% last year. PIMCO's flagship $132 billion bond fund, the
Income Fund, had year-to-date returns of 8.92% as of last week, from
minus 7.81% last year.
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A trader watches U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell on a
screen during a news conference following the two-day Federal Open
Market Committee (FOMC) policy meeting, on the floor at the New York
Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S., March 20, 2019.
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo
Though not everyone sees a recession ahead, most bond bulls are
counting on slowing U.S. economic growth and ebbing inflation to
push the Fed to cut interest rates.
Eoin Walsh, partner and portfolio manager at TwentyFour Asset
Management, said 2023’s rise in yields means fixed income can offer
the best of both worlds - income with the potential of capital
appreciation.
“From where we are right now, you are going to get your yield on
Treasuries and you probably will get a capital gain as well,” he
said.
He expects 10-year yields to be between 3.5% and 3.75% by the end of
next year.
Others believe some parts of the Treasury yield curve may have
already rallied too far.
Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of global fixed income at
BlackRock, said the recent rally has left both longer-dated and
shorter-dated bonds “quite rich.” “Much of the 2024 return for the
very front end and for the very back end … has already been
achieved," he said.
At the same time, concerns over wide fiscal deficits and
expectations of increased bond supply could boost term premiums - or
the compensation investors demand for the risk of holding long-term
bonds. Meanwhile, demand could lag as the Fed and large foreign
buyers such as China trim their Treasuries holdings.
The recent bond rally has also eased financial conditions, a measure
of the availability of funding in an economy. Some worry that could
fuel a rebound in growth or even inflation, delaying the Fed's rate
cuts.
The Goldman Sachs Financial Conditions Index has fallen by 136 basis
points since late October and on Dec. 19 stood at its lowest level
since August 2022.
"The more markets move to price in cuts, the less urgency the Fed
should probably feel about delivering them, because the markets are
doing the easing for them," said Jeremy Schwartz, U.S. economist at
Nomura.
(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia, editing by Ira Iosebashvili and Anna
Driver)
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