Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility A balancing act for monetary policy – and bond investors - Janus Henderson Investors

A balancing act for monetary policy – and bond investors

Daniel Siluk

Daniel Siluk

Head of Global Short Duration & Liquidity | Portfolio Manager


Jason England

Jason England

Portfolio Manager


9 Nov 2021

Portfolio Managers Jason England and Dan Siluk explain that inflation expectations and their influence on monetary policy will go a long way in dictating the way forward for global bond markets.

Key Takeaways

  • Central bankers must try to strike a balance between maintaining economic momentum and quelling a period of elevated inflation.
  • If continued supply disruptions lead to solidifying expectations for higher prices, the timetable for raising policy rates may get pulled forward in even more countries.
  • With the Federal Reserve (Fed) likely to err on the side a patience, bond investors must emphasize managing duration as longer dated yields could rise further.

Fixed income investors are confronting a thorny period as uncertain trajectories for both the global economy and monetary policy are fraught with risks regardless of which outcomes ultimately come to pass. Guiding investors on this journey will be the hopefully steady hand of the world’s central bankers as they seek to sustain momentum for the economic recovery without allowing inflation to get out of hand.

Whether these two forces are properly balanced has been on the minds of bond investors for much of 2021, starting with the early-year spike in Treasury yields as faith grew that largescale vaccination efforts would  help pull the global economy out of its pandemic-era slump. Although not as pronounced as what occurred at the beginning of 2021, the third quarter’s rise in  yields indicated investors remain aware that the intermingled forces of economic reopening, inflation and an eventual reduction in accommodative monetary policy all have the potential influence the near-term path for bonds. Unfortunately, the current selloff has been driven by one of the less attractive combinations of these factors with economic growth forecasts being dialed back at the same time persistent inflation is causing central banks to pull forward policy normalization plans.

A Not Completely Unexpected Visitor

Given last year’s plunge in economic activity, an inflationary spike in 2021 on the back of unleashed pent-up demand was expected. Notably, the early-year rise in bond yields preceded any meaningful acceleration of inflation. That was not the case in the more recent selloff as the annual change in the headline U.S. Consumer Price Index had already breached 5% by May. What has caught policy makers off guard is the duration of accelerating prices as headline inflation has remained above that level ever since.

It’s no coincidence that lingering inflation is occurring at the same time as softening economic data. Rather than the “demand-driven” variety associated with a humming economy, much of the current inflationary pressure is attributable to the same supply-chain bottlenecks clouding economic prospects. While monetary policy tends to be less effective at confronting rising prices due to supply shocks, the current spike has put policy makers on notice as inflation has the potential to be self-fulfilling once consumers come to expect a sustained period of high prices.

Inflation in Select Countries

Source: Bloomberg, as of 29 October 2021

Taking the Foot off the Gas

After a year of rhetorical gymnastics by members of the Federal Reserve (Fed), the “taper” is likely here. The central bank’s balance sheet taper – a reduction of monthly asset purchases – is the first step in what will be the long journey of decreasing highly accommodative monetary policy. Case in point: once the Fed completes its taper – likely in mid-2022 – its balance sheet will still exceed $8 trillion. In that context, this move can be seen as the Fed taking its foot off the gas rather than applying the brakes.

The next step in policy normalization should be the interest-rate “liftoff,” with the market pricing an initial 25 basis point hike by the middle of next year in the U.S.  An uncomfortable jump in consumer prices is forcing other countries to be even more aggressive. New Zealand has already lifted rates by 25 basis points. The Bank of England has all but telegraphed an impending rate hike, a development the market has heeded as it now prices an initial increase by the end of this year. And increasing hawkishness by the Bank of Canada – it has already terminated its bond-buying program – now has the market pricing in three rate increases by mid 2022, whereas the call was for only one just a few weeks ago.

And What of the Front End?

An eventual increase in policy rates will inevitably put upward pressure on the front end of the yield curve. Given downgraded growth forecasts and the chance the Fed’s “transient” inflation call is proven correct, we don’t believe a higher U.S. policy rate is imminent. Based on its track record, we suspect the Fed will err on the side of patience for fear of unduly curtailing growth during a global health crisis with an uncertain endgame.

Markets, however, tend to move faster than monetary policy. The futures market is pricing in two hikes in the U.S. by end of 2022 and in reaction, the two-year Treasury  yield has more than doubled, to 0.50%, since late August. These moves have occurred despite the Fed calling for just one rate increase in 2022. While we think the front end of the Treasuries curve has sold off a bit too aggressively, the trend is clear, and the bias is for shorter dated rates to rise.

The prospects for longer dated bonds are less certain. The pace of inflation is key. While stickier than anticipated, several contributors behind the recent uptick appear attributable to dislocations caused by the Delta variant. Among these are shortages of key goods and services, including drivers to carry products the “final mile” to customers. Should these issues be resolved and prices moderate, central banks will have more latitude to allow the economy to run. But if the Fed falls behind the curve – either in reacting to the current spike or to an acceleration of economic growth – longer dated yields could continue their climb. Conversely, a more aggressive hiking schedule, in any jurisdiction, may tap the brakes enough on growth expectations to place a ceiling on longer dated yields or see them reverse.

Two- and Ten-Year Bond Yields

Source: Bloomberg, as of 29 October 2021

An Investor’s Perspective

Rather than fretting over a half-empty glass, investors should keep in mind that rising rates are not necessarily a bad development.

For over a decade, market participants have griped about astonishingly low bond yields. As we have stated in the past, it’s the pace of the rise that should dictate the trajectory of bond returns. If methodical, investors would have the opportunity to reinvest maturing securities at yields higher than what had been available only months prior. This tactic is all the more relevant for shorter-dated strategies than can exit highly liquid positions and reallocate toward longer-dated, higher-yielding securities of similar quality.

If inflation proves more persistent than expected but policy rates remain on hold, shorter-dated strategies could be less affected by rising rates than those that have extended duration to chase returns.

We maintain the view that over the longer term, the disinflationary forces of demographics and technology get a vote on the trajectory of prices. But with inflation, expectations matter, and if consumers’ minds latch onto the fear of rising prices, global central banks may have to pull forward normalization plans even more than what they’ve already announced. Given these crosscurrents amid an ongoing pandemic and its economic ramifications, vigilantly managing interest rate exposure should remain a high priority for fixed income investors.

 

Duration measures a bond price’s sensitivity to changes in interest rates. The longer a bond’s duration, the higher its sensitivity to changes in interest rates and vice versa.