LONDON (Reuters) -A broad selloff in world government bonds on Wednesday drove up U.S. 30-year Treasury yields to 5% for the first time since 2007 and German 10-year yields to 3%, moves that could hasten a global slowdown and hurt stocks and corporate bonds.
The tone was calmer later on Wednesday as bond yields, which move inversely to prices, retreated. But with resilient U.S. economic data, a sharp unwinding of traders’ positions for a bond rally and rising bond supply, the growing sense that interest rates in major economies will stay higher for longer to contain inflation has hit home.
In the U.S. Treasury market – considered the bedrock of the global financial system – 10-year yields have jumped as much as 20 basis points (bps) to 4.8% this week alone. They are up almost 100 bps this year, having jumped over 200 bps in 2022.
Many asset managers who had held bonds expecting prices to rally are now throwing in the towel.
“Right now there is huge momentum behind the sell off (in Treasuries) because the positioning in the market has been wrong,” said Juan Valenzuela, fixed income portfolio manager at asset manager Artemis.
“A lot of people bought into the idea that because the Federal Reserve was reaching the peak of rate hikes, it was time to buy government bonds.”
Thirty-year U.S. yields on Wednesday touched the 5% level for the first time since the global financial crisis and, as the rout spread, Germany’s 10-year Bund yield hit 3%, a fresh milestone in a market where yields were negative in early 2022.
U.S. 30-year yields later retreated and were recently at 4.87%, after the ADP National Employment Report showed U.S. private payrolls increased far less than expected in September.
Australian and Canadian 10-year bond yields have surged over 20 bps each this week, and British 30-year government bond yields hit a fresh 25-year high above 5% on Wednesday before declining to 4.993%.
In a further sign of investor nervousness, the closely-watched MOVE bond volatility index is at a four-month high.
Also weighing on prices is an increase in the supply of bonds, as governments sell more debt to fund budget deficits while offloading the vast bond holdings they built up through recent crises.
“The sell off is mostly technical, driven by bigger supply due to deficits and less demand,” said Pablo Calderini, chief investment officer at Graham Capital Management.
Concerns over U.S. political governance are another factor. A handful of Republicans in the U.S. House of Representatives on Tuesday ousted Republican Speaker Kevin McCarthy, just days after Congress narrowly averted a government shutdown.
The recent weakness in Treasuries “suggests that a political uncertainty risk premium is being built in again,” said Michael Metcalfe, head of global macro strategy at State Street Global Markets in London.
RIPPLES
Government borrowing costs influence everything from mortgage rates for homeowners to loan rates for companies.
The speed of the bond rout sparked alarm across equity markets and drove the safe-haven dollar to its highest in months against the euro, pound and embattled Japanese yen.
World stocks hit their lowest since April on Wednesday, and the cost of insuring exposure to a basket of European corporate junk bonds hit a five-month high, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence.. The pullback in yields later on Wednesday, however, gave some respite to U.S. stocks, with the S&P 500 last up 0.49%.
“We are very cautious on risky assets at this juncture,” said Vikram Aggarwal, sovereign bond fund manager at Jupiter.
He said riskier assets like equities and corporate credit were vulnerable to an eventual recession caused by central bank rate hikes. Or, “we get a higher for longer scenario where (interest) rates stay where they are… that’s ultimately pretty negative for risky assets too.”
A fresh surge in borrowing costs is a headache for central banks, as they weigh up the need to keep rates high to contain inflation against a deteriorating economic outlook.
However, uncertainty about when and in what form that deterioration occurs is driving further complications in bond markets, and contributing to the sharper sell off in longer dated bonds.
The 10-year U.S. term premium, a closely-watched measure of the compensation investors demand to lend money for the longer term, has turned positive for the first time since June 2021 and risen over 70 basis points since the end of August, according to the New York Fed.
“Everybody’s been calling for a recession that just simply refuses to arrive. And then you’ve got the march higher in oil prices, which of course is complicating the picture in terms of the outlook for policy rates,” said Rabobank head of rates strategy Richard McGuire.
“All of that, I think is conspiring to see investors very wary of locking up their money in longer dated government bonds. They’re demanding compensation for that,” McGuire said.
(Reporting by Dhara Ranasinghe, Naomi Rovnick, Alun John, Yoruk Bahceli, Chiara Elisei, Marc Jones, Andy Bruce, Carolina Mandl, Davide Barbuscia; Writing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Alun John; Editing by Kim Coghill, Toby Chopra, Elaine Hardcastle)
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