by Kathy Jones, Head of Fixed Income, Charles Schwab & Company Ltd.
10-year Treasury yields have risen sharply since September 2024
Source: Bloomberg. U.S. Generic 10-year Treasury Yield (USGG10YR INDEX). Daily data as of 1/3/2025.
Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Nonetheless, we see opportunities on the horizon. Bond yields are likely to trade in a wide range as the markets sort through the impact of these various factors. Navigating through the volatility can mean capturing higher nominal and real yields for portfolios longer term. Maintaining some flexibility to act when yields move to the upper end of the expected range can prove beneficial.
Treasuries look fairly priced
At the December Federal Reserve Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, policymakers cut the federal funds rate (the rate banks charge each other for overnight loans) by 25 basis points, or 0.25%, to a range of 4.25% to 4.5%. At the same time, the Fed's median projections for the future path of the federal funds rate shifted significantly compared to the September FOMC meeting. The FOMC's "dot plot" projection now suggests only two rate cuts of 25 basis points each in 2025 and a longer-run rate of 3.0%.
The Fed's most recent dot plot suggests two rate cuts in 2025
Source: Bloomberg and the Federal Reserve, as of 12/18/2024.
Each dot represents the view of a Federal Reserve policymaker for the rate's target range at the end of each year shown.
Source: Bloomberg.
Federal Funds Target Rate - Upper Bound (FDTR Index) and US Generic Govt 10 Yr (USGG10YR Index). using weekly data from 1/1/1990 through 1/3/2025. Chart only includes periods when the federal funds rate was 1% or higher. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
2025: Keeping it real
Real yields are above the Fed's 2% inflation target
Source: Bloomberg, as of 1/2/2025.
US Generic Govt TII 5 Yr (USGGT5Y Index), US Generic Govt TII 10 Yr (USGGT10Y Index).
Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur management fees, costs and expenses, and cannot be invested in directly. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
U.S. interest rates are high compared to those in other countries
Source: Bloomberg.
Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index Total Return (LBUSTRUU Index) and Bloomberg Global Aggregate ex-USD Total Return Index (LG38TRUU Index). Daily data as 1/3/2025.
Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur management fees, costs and expenses, and cannot be invested in directly. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
The rising risks are showing up in the "term premium"—the extra yield that investors demand to hold longer-term Treasuries as compared to a series of short-term Treasuries. It can be thought of as the market's price of uncertainty. The term premium for 10-year Treasuries has moved up from negative 25 basis points last fall to nearly 50 basis points as of Jan. 2, 2025. It reflects the market's concerns about the potential for a shift in the outlook.
The 10-year Treasury term premium has risen to nearly 50 basis points
Source: Bloomberg.
Adrian Crump & Moench 10-year Treasury Term Premium (ACMTP10 Index). Daily data as of 1/2/2025.
The term premium is the compensation that investors require for bearing the risk that short-term Treasury yields do not evolve as they expected. The term premium in the chart above is obtained from a statistical model developed by New York Federal Reserve Bank economists Tobias Adrian, Richard K. Crump, and Emanuel Moench (Tobias, Crump and Moench, "Pricing the Term Structure with Linear Regressions," Journal of Financial Economics, October 2013). Past performance is no guarantee of future results. For illustrative purposes only.
How wide a range?
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