Bond market re-focus on US elections throws wrench into 2024 rally hopes
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[July 05, 2024] By
Davide Barbuscia
NEW YORK (Reuters) - A recalibration of how the U.S. presidential
election plays out is causing bond investors to bet yields stay higher
for longer as November approaches.
Yields have risen sharply after President Joe Biden's stumbling
performance against Republican rival Donald Trump in the first
presidential debate last month, which increased speculation about a
second Trump win when voters go to the polls on Nov. 5. The benchmark
10-year yield rose about six points to 4.34% following the debate.
Some investors are betting on higher inflation under Trump because of
trade and economic policies such as higher tariffs on imports, and
profligate government spending along with lower tax revenues, which
would boost fiscal deficits and U.S. debt levels. Trump's team has said
his pro-growth policies would bring down interest rates and shrink
deficits.
Republican National Committee spokesperson Anna Kelly said in a
statement that the market reaction to Trump's "debate victory reflected
the anticipation of the strong-growth, low-inflation reality that
President Trump will deliver once again."
Some have said a reckoning on U.S. debt will eventually catch up with
the country and market.
"The lens (is) really starting to turn to the fiscal and the debt
dynamics," said Mary-Therese Barton, fixed income chief investment
officer at Pictet Asset Management. "(The) rate-cutting cycle is perhaps
shallower than expected with a focus more on the longer end."
Those concerns around widening fiscal deficits and the rising government
debt burden threaten to limit any nascent rally in bonds, expected as
the Federal Reserve gets closer to cutting rates after an aggressive
hiking cycle to tame inflation.
"We feel the probability of (a) Trump election victory has risen," John
Velis, Americas macro strategist at BNY, wrote in a note. "Our faith in
lower yields going forward has been eroded and we wouldn't be surprised
to see a continuation of the very recent moves higher in yields."
Shorter-dated Treasuries, more directly linked to changes in monetary
policy, could still rally in case of rate cuts, but even for bond bulls
the outlook for longer-dated Treasuries has become cloudier. Longer
dated debt tends to reflect expectations for economic growth, inflation
and the fiscal outlook.
"The headwind that we've been seeing should start abating and we do
think investors will start focusing more on the cutting cycle," said
Anders Persson, chief investment officer and head of global fixed income
at Nuveen.
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The Treasury Department is pictured in Washington, U.S., April 25,
2021. REUTERS/Al Drago//File Photo
However, "that's probably going to show up more on the front end of
the curve like the two-year for instance," he noted. "The 10-year
will be a little bit trickier to call given the elections and if
inflation is a little bit stickier."
'FRUSTRATION'
Investors had bet heavily early this year on a normalization of
interest rates, but that has sharply changed with the Fed
increasingly being seen as pushing rate cuts out further. Traders of
futures contracts tied to the Fed's policy rate are betting on about
two rate cuts for the rest of 2024, one-third of the policy easing
investors were hoping for in January.
Bonds rally when rates are lowered because existing securities yield
more than new ones and become more valuable. But as monetary easing
has proven elusive, what appeared to be a straightforward trade as
the year began has become a test of patience for investors.
"I think there was some frustration with some people who took that
big positioning," especially on behalf of clients, said Kevin
McCullough, portfolio consultant at Natixis Investment Managers.
"That's a real hard conversation to have."
A measure of total returns for Treasuries since the beginning of the
year remains in negative territory despite yields having declined
from their annual peak in April.
Year-to-date total returns, which include bond payouts and price
fluctuations, were still minus 1.1% this week, the ICE BofA US
Treasury Index showed. Returns have been negative since early
February.
Regardless of the election outcome, many investors are optimistic on
bonds as yields have become more attractive in an environment of
higher rates.
"We still have six months left to carry in fixed income ... and
obviously if yields move lower from here still, there's potential
for even more appreciation," said Mike Cudzil, managing director and
generalist portfolio manager at PIMCO, one of the world's biggest
bond investors.
"Whoever wins the election, regardless if Republican or Democrat,
the loser is going to be the deficit," he said. "I think what will
matter more is the slowing of inflation, the slowing of growth."
(Reporting by Davide Barbuscia; editing by Megan Davies and Richard
Chang)
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