E The U.S. Treasury Sell-Off Needs To Be Confirmed By Inflationary Pressures


As bond yields worldwide surged last week, the bond bears were out in full force to announce that the 35-year bull market has ended. Although these claims have been made numerous times over these past three decades, this ‘time could be different’ or so it seems. Of course, we cannot declare the demise of this long trend until more years have passed into the history books. At this point, we should examine what is behind the recent run-up in yields and whether these conditions are likely to continue unabated.

For starters, the U.S. bond market has been under pressure for most of 2018 as low unemployment and solid growth supported the Fed in its moves to raise the Fed Funds rate. It went on to signal that it will continue to raise rates into 2019 and possibly into 2020. In addition to rate increases, the Fed continues to shed bonds upon maturity from its balance sheet, a technique often referred to as quantitative tightening’.

A batch of economic data gave the market its impetus. The ISM survey reached a post-2008 high, the unemployment rate for September was the lowest since 1969. Moreover, Chairman Powell referred to the ‘remarkably positive’ U.S. economy. Powell went on to say that the Fed is a long way from reaching the ‘neutral ‘rate, at a rate that allows the economy to grow without inflation. Naturally, long bond globally sold off as yields were re-aligned to maintain previous spreads between the U.S  and Canadian, European, U.K and Australian markets.

What was missing in the economic data was any solid evidence that inflationary expectations were at work. Strong economic data should generate rising prices and higher wages, but both these measures were not apparent in the recent data. As the accompanying chart reveals, TIPS or inflation-protected bonds rose while ‘break-even’ [1] rates (which measure inflationary expectations) remain very steady. In other words, investors bid up yields, not because of any expectation that inflation is accelerating. Rather, real yields were bid up slightly, but not significantly beyond their range this year.

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