Volatile Bond Market Puts Traders on Defense Amid Fed-Cut Doubts
Bond investors are going on defense as the outlook for the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cutting path turns more uncertain.
The combination of sticky inflation and weak labor-market figures last week led traders to trim bets on the degree of Fed easing left in 2024, while also driving yields to the highest since July. Meanwhile, a closely watched measure of expected volatility in Treasuries rose to the highest since January.
It’s a backdrop that’s making it hard to decide where to deploy cash in the world’s biggest bond market. To lessen the vulnerability to a resilient economy, potential fiscal shocks or turbulence around US elections, asset managers including giants like BlackRock Inc., Pacific Investment Management Co. and UBS Global Wealth Management advocate for buying five-year debt because the maturity is less sensitive to such risks than its shorter or longer counterparts.
At UBS Global, Solita Marcelli suggests investments with medium-term duration, such as Treasuries and investment-grade corporate securities with about a five-year maturity.
“We continue to recommend investors position for a lower-rate environment, deploying excess cash, money-market holdings, and expiring fixed-term deposits into assets that can offer more durable income,” said the firm’s chief investment officer for the Americas.
Marcelli’s preferred part of the yield curve outperformed last week as the bond market was whipsawed by an unexpected jump in weekly jobless claims that outweighed a slightly hotter read for US consumer prices.
The upshot for the bond market is that traders have tempered their rate-cut bets, with just 45 basis points of easing priced in for the next two Fed meetings, whereas a full half-point of cuts was seen as a lock prior to the September jobs report. Options flows, meanwhile, have targeted just one more additional cut this year. A more complicated options trade targets one quarter-point reduction for this year followed by a pause in the easing cycle early next year.
Investors anticipate further easing as they expect the central bank to move to less restrictive rates over the coming months to secure a soft landing for the economy.