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Why are bonds a great investment.
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Are rates going down?
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Why long-duration bonds?
To grasp the significance of the current moment as a potential opportunity
to either enhance bond exposure in portfolios or acquire bonds for the
first time not only for income but even more so for the potential capital
appreciation.
Bond prices and interest rates share an inverse relationship. Bond prices
tend to decline when interest rates are low and experiencing an upward
trend. Conversely, bond prices tend to rise when interest rates are high
and on a downward trajectory.
So, are rates going lower?
As we approach the end of the hiking cycle, the disinflationary trend
likely remains well-established. The Consumer price index (CPI) dropped to
4.0%, as May marked the 11th consecutive month of slower year-on-year
inflation. Not only that, but the inflation index is crashing quicker than
it rose after it peaked at 9.1% only 11 months ago; it fell with pretty
much the same lightning speed at which it climbed.
Even the sticky components have started to roll over, most notably shelter
inflation (which accounts for over a third of the index) tumbled twice in
the past two reports, from 8.2% in March (highest since 1982) to 8.0% in
May. A continued move lower in Shelter inflation will significantly impact
overall CPI as the money supply continues to tumble and the various
inflation measures with it.
And with inflation continuing its hellish descent, some market players such
as Credit Suisse are now expecting a further CPI nosedive for the June
report to 3.2% YoY.
The US economy can’t handle high rates.
This hiking cycle rates have skyrocketed 5% lightning fast, in just 15
months to the highest level since June 2006. That has spelled problems for
many financial institutions. The corporate sector feels the heat from
nearly 500 basis points increases this cycle. Bankruptcy filings are being
made at the fastest pace in over a decade. Over the first five months of the
year, there have been 286 corporate bankruptcies, the highest total since
2010, according to S&P 500 Global.
The narrative around rate cuts shifts from one relating to
recession/bank contagion to one where the Fed moves from a less
restrictive stance, given the progress on inflation, to accommodative
by year-end.
Now that we’ve established why fixed income looks attractive.
Why Long the long end of the yield curve?
For the potential price appreciation, just a 1% rate decline would produce
a whopping 23.8% capital appreciation for 30-year bonds, as visible from
the graph below.
That comes from the duration effect – the long end of the yield curve
benefits more over the short end, from price appreciation when
rates fall
. That’s because higher-duration bonds are more sensitive to changes in
interest rates.
Let’s illustrate this with a real-world example. Look at the decline in the
TLT ETF (20Y+ Treasury bonds) from the end of 2021, when inflation turned
out not to be “transitory”. As it was nearing 5%, it was apparent that the
Fed would have to embark on a massive rate hike cycle to slay the inflation
beast. The ETF dropped over 40%.
The TLT, currently just over 102 is way below its mean value of 127.52; as
soon as market participants wake up to the idea that the economy is
cracking and deflation becomes the biggest tail risk the market is facing,
it can break that consolidating channel to the upside as it mean-reverts.
If history is any guide, following periods of bond market declines (such as
2022 and 2021), subsequent years often yield great risk-reward returns,
combined with the potential massive interest rate cuts means that
the time for bonds is now.
Investors can bet on long duration bonds using our
5x 20+ Year Treasury Bond
.
Alternatively, they can short duration bonds using
our
-5x 20+ Year Treasury Bond .