Yields Flashing Yellow

Moving up is usually how we describe a favorable life event, like a promotion or buying a house. But when yields move up, there is less cause for celebration. From the start of December to their recent peaks, 10-year yields have gained 68 basis points in the U.K., 60 basis points in the U.S., 55 basis points in Germany and 48 basis points in Canada. Local factors are at play in each case, but they share common origins.

The sustainability of public finance is an ongoing concern. As we have regularly discussed, demands for government spending are rising, but tax revenue is not keeping pace. Inflation risk is ever-present and difficult to manage; bonds must compensate buyers for potential changes in purchasing power. The uncertainty around inflation has contributed to a rising term premium, which investors demand in exchange for locking up capital for longer periods of time.

Falling bond prices reflect a wide array of risks.

Persistent inflation is also reducing prospects of central bank easing, which feeds into the higher for longer story surrounding interest rates. Quantitative tightening has reduced central banks’ participation in bond markets, reducing quantity demanded from buyers who helped to keep yields low. A general reconsideration of neutral rates in the post-pandemic world has raised an additional uncertainty over the appropriate price of fixed-income securities.

Only the timing of recent surges comes as a surprise. Bonds have been in a bear market since 2020, when yields reversed a downward trend that had lasted about 40 years. Year-to-date volatility is consistent with the longer-run forces that have moved fixed income markets.