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Bonds Are Roaring Back to Life: Should You Invest Now?

Published 12/26/2023, 07:47 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

The US bond market has had a rough ride for much of the past two years, but the powerful rally over the last two months suggests the worst is over.

Cherry-picking analytics from the recent crop of 2024 outlooks that are seasonal standards this time of year provides inspiration for thinking that the new year could reverse more (all?) of the damage inflicted on fixed income since the Federal Reserve started raising interest rates in March 2022.

An ETF proxy for the US bond market, Vanguard Total Bond Market (NASDAQ:BND), has rallied sharply, but it’s still far below 2021 levels. The bullish interpretation: there’s still plenty of room to run, assuming macro conditions are supportive.BND-Daily Chart

The critical factor for bond prices in the year ahead, of course, is inflation’s path. Recent history provides support for expecting that pricing pressure will continue to ease and move closer to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target.

The Wall Street Journal reports:

“The Federal Reserve is winning its fight over inflation, boosting Americans’ spirits and offering greater reassurance that the U.S. economy can avoid a recession while bringing prices under control.

The Fed’s preferred inflation measure, the personal-consumption expenditures price index, fell 0.1% in November from the previous month, the first decline since April 2020, the Commerce Department said Friday. Prices were up 2.6% on the year, not far from the Fed’s 2% target.”

Andrew Hunter, deputy chief U.S. economist at Capital Economics, advises:

“Adding in the further sharp slowdown in rent inflation still in the pipeline, it’s hard to see any credible reason why the annual inflation rate won’t also return to the 2% target over the coming months.”

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The Federal Reserve appears to be on board with the upbeat outlook. Courtesy of a chart from JP Morgan, the Fed’s current outlook sees inflation and its target rate sliding in the months ahead.Fed Funds Rate Expectations

MG Investments sees an opportunity in the expected trend.

“The rationale for adding duration now is underpinned by our belief that both the timing and valuations are favorable for investing in government bond markets,” the firm explains in its 2024 outlook.

“Historically, the 10-year US Treasury yield has tended to rally after the Federal Reserve (the Fed) ends its hiking cycles.

Research from Deutsche Bank shows that the biggest fall is typically seen within three months of the last hike – this has even been as much as 3 percentage points, equivalent to a capital gain of around 7% (Figure 1).”

10-Yr Treasury Yield Before & After Fed Hike

Pimco advises that this is “Prime Time For Bonds.” In its November asset allocation report, analysts wrote: “We strongly favor fixed income in multi-asset portfolios.

Given current valuations and an outlook for challenging economic growth and diminishing inflation, we believe bonds have rarely appeared more compelling than equities. We also look to maintain portfolio flexibility in light of macro and market risks.”

A key part of Pimco’s reasoning for favoring bonds over stocks: valuation.

“Although not always a perfect indicator, the starting levels of bond yields or equity multiples historically have tended to signal future returns.” 

Fixed Income vs Equities

The one-two factors of lower expected inflation and projections of Fed rate cuts are at the core of the bulls’ forecasts for higher bond prices. Fed funds futures are pricing in a 77% probability that the first rate cut will arrive at the March 20 FOMC meeting.

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If there’s a joker in the deck, it will reveal itself in the form of upside surprises in incoming inflation data. For the moment, however, some inflation projections and surveys suggest the fix is in for 2024 and pricing pressure will continue to ease.

“Although some volatility may continue, we believe interest rates have peaked,” predicts Kathy Jones, chief fixed income strategist at the Schwab Center for Financial Research. “We expect lower Treasury yields and positive returns for investors in 2024.”

Latest comments

.... the elephant in the room is ww3 with the Russians and Chinese. it's here for sure and as it escalates will crush the bond market.
WW3, no way, russia can’t take small Ukraine, china wants Taiwan’s info structure, which war destroy’s
fact that the Fed is no longer buying bonds and now decreasing their balance sheet along with massive new debt coming to market every month will normalize the yield curve,so higher long term taxes coming
From what I read, they plan to lean issuing TBills
Bonds are hardly roaring back to life. The fed are buying up and we're looking at rate cuts. If anything, I'd expect equities to continue growing in Q1. Beyond this I think we're looking at valuations again.
This article is talking about bond values, and not bond return rates.  When you buy and etf like, TLT, it will go up if rates come down.  Markets actually run in such a  way that they predict what's coming next rather than run with it when it happens  So, bond etfs like TLT recently hit bottom and went up by about 20 percent.  Seeing that rates cuts were coming and predicting it, as well as seeing that the etf had fallen an unprecedented 50 percent, you could buy starting about a couple of months ago.  The bond market is predicting that rates will come down, and so these types of etfs are going up.  If the market crashes, and rates crash, and etf like this will spike.  These types of etfs also pay dividends of the bond return rate.  So, TLT is paying a dividend of close to 4 percent a year.
I would say, if you want to be a great investor, you should have already gotten in about a couple of months ago.  You are already too late from my perspective.
Who is this alien analyst!?!
Isn't it true that the Fed is by far the largest buyer and that other countries are all selling our TLT bonds. High risk of Bond market failure. I won't be duped by Fed using debt to buy debt!
hey this my first time trying out trade any suggestions tips for a first timer
Overseas private investors and central banks now own about 30% of all outstanding U.S. government debt, down from roughly 43% a decade ago Among those buyers, over the last decade there’s been one 500-pound gorilla — or a $4.9 trillion gorilla, if you measure by the amount of Treasurys it still owns: the U.S. Federal Reserve.“The debt ceiling gives us a path to default,” explains John Chambers, former head of Standard and Poors Sovereign Debt Committee. The group gives credit ratings to countries (kind of like the FICO score individuals get). Chambers points out almost no other country has a debt ceiling.
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