Bond traders surrender to higher-for-longer rates from Federal Reserve (2024)

Treasury yields on cusp of setting new highs as data continues to point to persistent inflation

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Bond traders surrender to higher-for-longer rates from Federal Reserve (1)

Bloomberg News

Ye Xie and Michael Mackenzie

Published Mar 18, 20244 minute read

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Bond traders surrender to higher-for-longer rates from Federal Reserve (2)

Bond investors who were once convinced that the United States Federal Reserve would start cutting interest rates this week are painfully surrendering to a higher-for-longer reality and a murky path forward for the market.

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Treasury yields spiked in recent days and are on the cusp of setting new highs for the year as data continues to point to persistent inflation, which is causing traders to push back their timetable for U.S. monetary easing.

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Interest-rate swaps now reflect market expectations for fewer than three quarter-point rate cuts this year. That’s less than the Fed’s median projection in December and a shade of the six reductions that were priced in at the end of 2023. And the first move lower? Investors are no longer confident that it’ll even happen in the first half of the year.

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Bond traders surrender to higher-for-longer rates from Federal Reserve (24)

The shift underscores mounting worries that U.S. central bankers led by Fed chair Jerome Powell may signal an even shallower easing cycle at this week’s two-day gathering, which begins on Tuesday. Already, economists at Nomura Holdings Inc. scaled back their estimate for Fed rate reductions this year to two cuts from three.

And recent trading flows in options markets show investors are seeking protection against the risk of higher long-term yields and fewer rate cuts, even if their longer-term view is for rates to eventually come down.

“The Fed wants to ease, but the data isn’t allowing them,” Earl Davis, head of fixed income and money markets at BMO Global Asset Management, said. “They want to maintain optionality to ease in summer. But they will start to change if the labour market is tight and inflation remains high.”

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U.S. 10-year yields jumped 24 basis points last week, the most since October, to 4.31 per cent — nearing their year-to-date high of 4.35 per cent. Davis sees 10-year yields rising toward 4.5 per cent, a move that would eventually offer an entry point for him to buy bonds. The benchmark rose above five per cent last year for the first time since 2007.

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Both two- and five-year U.S. yields surged more than 20 basis points, for their biggest rise since May. The selloff extended Treasuries’ losses for the year to 1.84 per cent.

As recently as December, bond traders were all but certain the Fed would start to ease at this week’s meeting. But after a raft of surprisingly strong data on growth and inflation, they see zero chance of action this week, slim odds of a move in May and only a 60 per cent possibility of a cut in June.

For the year, traders have penciled in expectations for a total reduction of 71 basis points, meaning three full quarter-point cuts are no longer seen as guaranteed.

Nomura Holdings Inc. now expects Fed easing in July and December, instead of in June, September and December.

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“With little urgency to ease, we expect the Fed will wait to see whether inflation is slowing before beginning a rate-cut cycle,” economists including Aichi Amemiya said in a note.

The margin to shift the Fed’s median rate projections on its so-called dot-plot is thin. It would take only two policymakers switching to two cuts this year from three for the central bank’s median forecast to move higher.

“It’s not going to take a lot” for the median dots to move higher, Ed Al-Hussainy, a rates strategist at Columbia Threadneedle Investment, said. “What I am nervous about is the front end of the curve. It’s super-sensitive to the near-term policy path.”

Even if 2024 median rate projections remain intact, the dots in 2025 and 2026 as well as the long-term “neutral” rate — the level seen as neither stoking growth nor holding it back — may move higher, a scenario that will prompt traders to price in fewer rate reductions, according to Tim Duy, chief U.S. economist at SGH Macro Advisors LLC.

“We don’t think market participants need to wait for the Fed’s permission” to price in fewer cuts, he said. If the two-cut scenario doesn’t materialize this week, it may come by the June meeting, “or at least that market participants will price it as coming by June,” he added. “The risks at this moment are decidedly asymmetric.”

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But instead of sweating over two or three reductions, investors shouldn’t lose the big picture that the Fed’s next move is a cut, not a hike, Baylor Lancaster-Samuel, chief investment officer at Amerant Investments Inc., said. That means it’s time to buy bonds and take the interest rate, or “duration” risk, in Wall Street parlance.

“You can debate the timing, but in our opinion, the Fed is still likely to cut sometime this year,” he said. “In that environment, we think the level of rates does not have too much risk of ratcheting higher from here. So, we believe the opportunity cost of not taking duration is higher than the risk of taking it.”

Options traders are less sanguine. On the heels of last week’s stronger-than-expected data on producer prices, traders rushed to buy hawkish protection for this year and next in options linked to the secured overnight financing rate, a measure that closely tracks the central bank policy rate.

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“Higher inflation readings, coupled with outsized deficits, the potential for the Fed to remain on hold longer, lends itself to another move toward the 2023 yield highs,” Gregory Faranello, head of U.S. rates trading and strategy for AmeriVet Securities Inc., said.

— With assistance from Edward Bolingbroke.

Bloomberg.com

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