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Bond sell-off: An opportune moment
Calendar01 Sep 2023
Theme: Fixed Income

Bond yields have surged to their highest level in over 15 years, propelled by resilient economic data and revised expectations for Federal Reserve policy. Nevertheless, the looming threat of subdued growth in 2024 suggests that bond yields are likely near their peak. This presents a potential opportunity for investors—add to duration exposure as the economic slowdown approaches.

The relentless bond sell-off has reached a new milestone. 10-year U.S. Treasury yields hit 4.34%, the highest level since 2007, up almost 110 basis points since the regional bank crisis earlier this year. Several factors have contributed to the sell-off:

- Robust economic growth: Incoming economic activity data has generally been very resilient, leading to an upward revision in growth forecasts.
- Higher for longer expectations: Markets have been revising their Fed rate path expectations, pushing out the date of the Fed’s projected first cut and reducing the number of cuts.
- Bank of Japan policy adjustment: The central bank has loosened yield curve control, allowing long-suppressed Japanese government bond yields to rise, raising concerns about weakening foreign demand for U.S. Treasurys.
- Greater issuance: The U.S. Treasury recently increased its estimates for government borrowing, implying greater longer-dated debt issuance.

The sustainability of the recent rise in bond yields hinges on the performance of the U.S. economy in upcoming quarters. Slowing growth next year (even a soft landing) would push inflation lower, opening the door for a less restrictive Fed policy stance, and putting downward pressure on bond yields.

While bond yields may have shifted to a higher range, they’re likely nearing their peak. Given the elevated level of yields and the potential risk of muted growth next year, this could be an opportune time to add to duration exposure.