by Lance Roberts, RIA
The term āBond Vigilantesā is a nostalgic twist on an old-west theme. In the nineteenth century, the American West formedĀ self-appointed groups, or committees, to seize the duties of law enforcement and judicial authority in situations when citizens found law enforcement lacking or inadequate.
In the bond market, the term āBond Vigilanteā was first coined by Ed Yardeni in 1980 when bond traders sold Treasurys in response to the growing power of the Federal Reserve and its policies on the U.S. economy. (Sound familiar?) According to Investopedia:
āA bond vigilante is a bond trader who threatens to sell, or actually sells, a large number ofĀ bondsĀ to protest or signal distaste with policies of the issuer. Selling bonds depress their prices, pushingĀ interest ratesĀ up and making it more costly for the issuer to borrow.ā
If the āSheriffā in town isnāt doing their job, the premise is that holders will become āBond Vigilantesā and ātake the law into their own hands.ā
Over the last couple of years, the fear of āBond Vigilantesā has returned with the surge of inflation since 2022. Even Ed Yardeni, the economist who coined the term āBond Vigilantesā and has regularly predicted their return to the investment landscape ever since, says theyāre āsaddling up.ā
The problem is that the expected return of the āBond Vigilantesā is flawed as it is based on the premise that those vigilantes have the power to ātake the law of monetary policy into their own hands.ā
āShorting government bonds when the central bank is politically aligned with the Treasury is a sure-fire way to lose lots of money. The consolidated governmentās balance sheet consists of IOU liabilities that it can manufacture in infinite quantities. Why would anyone think they can win that game? Itās like my writingĀ IOUs for blog points. Maybe I write more than I can ever cover for. But IĀ createĀ the points. I can always create more. if I write too many, their value depreciates.ā ā Credit Writedowns, circa 2011.
As shown in the chart below, since 1980, betting on the return of the vigilantes has been a losing bet. (It is worth noting that previous spikes in the annual rates of change in rates preceded either financial events or recessions. The current episode is magnitudes more significant than any prior event since 1954)

Lastly, if you are betting on the return of the vigilantes, the track record of betting against the bond market since 1787 remains quite dismal.

The biggest flaw in the āreturn of the Bond Vigilantesā theory remains the āTown Sheriff.ā
The Central Bank Sheriffs
As noted above, since 1980, the Federal Reserve has been a critical player in the bond market. Either through monetary policy changes, raising or lowering interest rates, or, as seen since 2008, directly intervening in the bond market. Those actions by the Federal Reserve were always in response to a financial event, crisis, or recession.

While Central Banks have always been the āSheriffā in town, the āBond Vigilantesā can run amok for a while before finding themselves on the wrong end of the hangmanās noose. Such has mainly been the case following the Financial Crisis in 2008.
āEarlier this year, the worldās most famous bond investor,Ā Bill Gross, was short U.S. government debt. He was hailed as THE VIGILANTE byĀ Megan McArdle at The Atlantic. At long last, it seemed, the long-dormant bond vigilantes had arrived on horseback, ready to force the U.S. government into austerity.ā ā Business Insider, 2011
Of course, that venture by Bill Gross backfired as Central Banks repeatedly stepped in. To quote the President of the European Central Bank, Mario Draghi.
āWe will do whatever it takes to preserve the continentās common currency.ā
Doing āwhatever it takesā has not been just the stance of the ECB āSheriff,ā but every major Central Bank since 2008. As discussed in āDeficit Surge:ā
āManyĀ ābond bearsāĀ suggest that rates must rise as deficits increase and more debt is issued. The theory is that at some point, buyers will require a higher yield to buy more debt from the U.S. Such is perfectly logical in a normally functioning bond market where the only players are the individual and institutional bond market players. In other words, as long asĀ āall else is equal,āĀ rates should rise in such an environment.ā
All Else Is Not Equal
However, all else is not equal in a global economy where government debt yields are controlled by Central Banks colluding with Governments to maintain economic growth, control inflation, and avoid financial crises.

This monetization of debt issuance to support anemic economic growth, suppress inflationary forces, and depress borrowing costs will not change in the future. The biggest problem with theĀ āBond VigilanteāĀ thesis is the inability of the economy to sustain higher rates due to mounting debt issuance and rising deficits. The chart below models the CBO analysis using the growth trend of debt but also includes the need for the Federal Reserve to monetize nearly 30% of the issuance.

At the current growth rate, the Federal debt load will climb from $32 trillion to roughly $140 trillion by 2050.Ā Concurrently, assuming the Fed continues monetizing 30% of debt issuance,Ā itsĀ balance sheet will swell to more than $40 trillion.
While you may think such is unsustainable, there is a clear example of why āBond Vigilantesā keep getting arrested.
Japan Is A Good Example
Since 2008, Japan has run a massive āquantitative easingā program. That program, on a relative basis, is 3-times more extensive than in the U.S. Not surprisingly, economic prosperity is only marginally higher since the turn of the century. Nonetheless, if the thesis of āBond Vigilantesā is valid, and if they exist, then Japan should be fighting significantly higher interest rates and inflation, given a debt-GDP ratio of more than 210%.

Surprisingly, there is no evidence of such. Maybe the situation would be markedly different if the Bank of Japan (BOJ) didnāt own most ETF, corporate, and government debt markets. However, such is also why Japan continues to be plagued by rolling recessions, low inflation, and low-interest rates. (Japanās 10-year Treasury rate fell into negative territory for the second time recently.)Ā

While many argue the U.S. economy will eventually āgrowā its way out of debt, there is no evidence such a capability exists. We know that interest rates in the U.S. and globally are telling us economic growth will remain weak in the future. While the recent surge in U.S. interest rates resulted from massive one-time liquidity injections, the similarities between the U.S. and Japan remain a stark reminder of where interest rates will ultimately be.

The reality is that each time interest rates tick higher, the rumors of the return of the āBond Vigilanteā surface. In the short term, it may seem like they are moving markets. However, eventually, the āSheriffā will arrive to reassert its force on the markets. This isnāt a good thing, as noted by my colleague Doug Kass:
āThe fact is that financial engineering does not help an economy, it probably hurts it.Ā If it helped, after mega-doses of the stuff in every imaginable form, the Japanese economy would be humming.Ā But the Japanese economy is doing the opposite. Japan tried to substitute monetary policy for sound fiscal and economic policy. And the result is terrible.ā
Japan is a microcosm of what the U.S. will face in the coming years.
As in the play by Samuel Beckett, those waiting for the āBond Vigilantesā to arrive may just as well be waiting on Godot.