Monday, June 11, 2007

What Happened To Bonds?

During the last month, the bond market has weakened dramatically. This is particularly evident in maturities from 10-30 years. The 10 Yr Treasury yield went from 4.63% on May 8 to an intra-day high yield of 5.25% on Friday (6/8) before ending the day at 5.14%. The Treasury market has suddenly become big news, and dominates the talking heads on TV. Investors would do well to ignore the trader talk on TV about bonds, and concentrate on the long-term fundamentals for bonds.


The Fundamentals

The two most important determinants of bond yields are:
1. Inflation expectations
2. Strength/weakness of the economy

The Fed has been concerned about reining in inflation, and raised the Fed Funds rate from a low of 1.0% on 5/4/2004 to the current level of 5.25%. This target was established almost 1 Yr ago on 8/8/2006. Since then, they have been in a holding pattern as inflation has fallen from 2.4% to 2.0% on the core PCE price index. The Fed would like this measure to be within the 1-2% target band. We view the progress on inflation as a positive for bonds. There is no evidence that the recent decline in the bond market is linked to an increase in inflationary expectations. The economy has slowed from about a 2.5% growth rate in August of 2006 to a recent weak 0.6% for the 1st quarter of this year (while the Fed has been on hold). This slowing in the economy is also a positive for the bond markets. So, the economic fundamentals are still positive for bond investors.


The Technicals

Since the long-term fundamentals are still positive for bonds, the most likely explanation for the sharp rise in bond yields last month is to be found in short-term changes or the technicals that pre-occupy the minds of traders. Here are some of the technical developments of the last month:

1. The amount of 10 Yr Treasury securities purchased at the last quarterly refunding on 5/8 by Foreign Central Banks was the highest since November 2005. This appeared to be a positive technical development for the market. These bonds sold at 4.63% at the May auction.
2. Shortly after the auction, the Fed stated it was still concerned about inflation and began to raise doubts that it would ease rates soon. These doubts increased during the month as several hawkish comments were made by different Fed Governors. The chart below from a 6/8 Citigroup report shows the change in expectations for a Fed easing over differing time periods.


As recently as 4/18, the market was pricing in an easing of 75 bp’s this year. This probability has now declined to a 0.0% chance. We believe this change in perception is the primary catalyst for the sell-off this month.
3. There has been Foreign Central Bank tightening by the European Central Bank and the Bank of New Zealand, which has added to the change in psychology of bond traders. Their logic is, "how can the Fed ease when the rest of the world is raising rates?" Were we overly optimistic about the Fed cutting rates 75 bp’s this year?
4. Mortgage durations have been rising in lenders' portfolios as ARMS are replaced with longer fixed rate mortgages by borrowers. This has led to hedging activity by lenders such as FNMA, selling 10 Yr Treasury securities to help shorten the duration of their huge loan portfolios.
5. Traders who look at charts feel that the 20 year bond market rally has ended and are shorting bonds. This has contributed to the weakness in the market.
6. The yield curve has steepened significantly which has been caused by large curve flattening trades being liquidated and replaced by curve steepening trades. This is very plausible because during the time long term yields have risen, short term yields have fallen modestly. Since 3/2/2007, the yield curve has gone from being inverted by (60) bp’s to having a positive slope of 17 bp’s on 6/1/2007. To implement this trade, the trader sells the long bond and buys shorter maturity bonds. This has contributed to the recent rise in rates.


Conclusion

There have been several technical factors that have contributed to the recent rout taking place in the bond market. This has driven yields to attractive levels for investors. This is a good time to ignore the traders on TV. Traders frequently change their opinions and have different time horizons than the investor. These same traders were telling us less than 2 months ago that there was a high probability that we would see a 75 bp's cut in rates this year by the Fed. Now they think there is no chance for a cut in rates. Future actions by the Fed are data dependent. If inflation continues to slow and the economy stays weak, rates will fall. The recent rise in rates should have a dampening effect on the economy which could lead to lower rates in the future. We feel the current sale in the bond market represents an opportunity for investors to add to their fixed income positions.

1 comment:

Peng said...

Great summary of the recent events in the US bond markets. From a global perspective, with the foreign Central Banks raising rates, this may have the same effect as a FED ease.