Ahead of the Federal Reserve’s rate announcement, investors are pursuing yield.
Ahead of the Federal Reserve’s rate decision next week, investors have been scrambling this month to lock in higher rates in the approximately $60 trillion U.S. bond market.
Investors’ strong interest for freshly issued corporate bonds in September, as well as for yield in other industries, such as longer-duration assets that were previously unpopular, has been the driving force behind the activity.
According to Bryce Doty, a senior portfolio manager with Sit Investment Associates, “yields are pretty decent right now, but they are going away.” According to him, this notion has been feeding a “fear of missing out,” and investors “like the economic porridge,” which is “not too hot, not too cold.”
“It’s just right to get the Fed to cut,” the analyst stated. Even though consumer delinquencies are increasing and the job market is weakening, he believes that the capital markets’ liquidity faucet and the anticipated deregulation of the banking industry would calm concerns about a recession and a “bloodbath of defaults.”
The Fed’s case to resume its rate-cutting cycle on September 17 was strengthened by Friday’s dismal jobs report and Wednesday’s falling wholesale inflation statistics for August.
However, Brij Khurana, a fixed-income portfolio manager at Wellington Management, stated that a “Goldilocks” scenario for the economy is still based on inflation having been defeated.
That is why Thursday’s August consumer-price index report is so crucial. “What upsets that narrative is if inflation starts picking up again,” added Khurana.
On Wednesday, the odds were in favor of the Fed lowering interest rates by 25 basis points the following week. More importantly, traders believe that the central bank will reduce its current policy rate by 150 basis points over the course of the next year, with a range of 2.75% to 3% being the most likely conclusion, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
Khurana added, “I do think everyone is focused on generating income,” citing investor demand as the reason why bond spreads have compressed, particularly in assets with short and intermediate durations, meaning that investors get paid less to take on credit risks.
In light of this, Khurana stated that it makes sense to think about inflation-protected securities and to increase the duration of U.S. fixed income investments. “I don’t see a lot of value in U.S. fixed income under 7 years of duration,” he stated.
According to BondCliQ data, the yellow line below illustrates the increased demand for highly rated U.S. corporate bonds in the 10- to 15-year term bucket. This trend is evident elsewhere. However, throughout the last ten trading days, customers have been selling assets with shorter durations (red line) ranging from three to five years.
Corporate bonds with longer maturities—ten to fifteen years—are being seized by investors.
Gold, mortgage bonds
According to Khurana, spreads in agency mortgage-backed securities have also decreased by roughly 40–50 basis points in recent weeks, in addition to the demand for corporate bonds with longer durations. That, in conjunction with declining Treasury yields, has been facilitating the relaxation of financing requirements in the stagnant U.S. housing market.
BofA Global analysts stated last week that they were “warming up to the idea” that the Fed would resume purchasing agency mortgage-backed securities in the upcoming year, in addition to the increase in home debt. MarketWatch recently looked into that.
The policy-sensitive 2-year yield, BX:TMUBMUSD02Y, has seen a decline in Treasury yields due to labor market concerns, while the benchmark 10-year Treasury rate, BX:TMUBMUSD10Y, was recently set at 4.05%, according to FactSet.
It’s challenging to predict where inflation will go from here, though, because President Donald Trump’s tariffs are obviously bringing in money this year, so someone must be footing the bill.
Eric Gerster, chief investment officer of AlphaCore Wealth Advisory, stated, “We are thinking inflation continues to trend higher over the next six-to-nine months than what’s in current expectations.”
“I think the Fed is in a very difficult spot,” Gerster stated, adding that a short-term decline wouldn’t be all that shocking given that stocks SPX DJIA COMP are close to all-time highs, especially if inflation is still a concern.
According to Gerster, this implies that investors should consider a third, diversified bucket of investments in addition to the conventional 60/40 portfolio of stocks and bonds. These might include real estate or infrastructure assets that can assist reduce the risk of inflation, such as gold (GC00) GLD, which has increased by about 40% this year.
“Gold will continue to be a diversifier over the next five-plus years,” Gerster stated, citing recent purchases from central banks throughout the world as well as deficits in the US and other countries that may put significant pressure on interest rates.
He remarked, “You need that extra leg,” “You can’t just rely on 60/40.”