Anchor in a Stormy Sea

Key takeaways

  • Bond market volatility has remained low despite economic and policy uncertainty. Our base case is that most fixed income investments seem likely to deliver solid returns this year, in line with their starting yields, but if volatility picks up from the current low levels, investors may have to ride out some ups and downs to earn those yields.
  • We continue to see a steeper yield curve as the dominant trend in the bond market in 2026. A focus on intermediate-term duration can help balance inflation and policy risks.
  • A growing economy suggests that taking moderate credit risk is appropriate.
  • International bonds can make sense for diversification if the dollar continues to trend lower.

The bond market has been remarkably calm in a world of rapidly changing economic policies, international conflicts, and heightened concerns about changes at the Federal Reserve. Treasury market volatility, as measured by the ICE BofA U.S. Bond Market Option Volatility Estimate (MOVE) Index, has been falling over the past year and now sits near its lowest level since 2021. While occasional bouts of volatility are likely, we expect the fixed income markets to remain a ballast for portfolios and it seems likely that they deliver solid returns in 2026.

ICE BofA Move Index
Chart shows the performance of the ICE BofA MOVE index dating back to December 2020. A yellow dotted line reflects its current value. As of February 5, 2026, the index was at 62.2 index points.

The major discernible trend in the fixed income market has been a steady steepening of the yield curve. Short-term yields remain anchored due to expectations for further Federal Reserve interest rate cuts while long-term yields have edged higher in response to resilient economic data, stubbornly high inflation, growing worries about financing costs of the federal deficit and rising global yields. Two-year Treasury yields, which can be viewed as a proxy for expectations for the federal funds rate a year from now, are holding near 3.5%. The yield spread between two- and 10-year Treasuries stands near 70 basis points, or 0.7%, the highest level in four years.