In a recent sweeping discussion on Market Exchange, Mackenzie Investmentsā Chief Fixed Income Strategist, Dustin Reid, unpacked a constellation of global developments set to shape fixed income strategy through the rest of 2025āand possibly well beyond. From central bank positioning and the evolution of tariffs to Canadian political risks and a fiscal sea change in Europe, Reidās latest update on Market Exchange1 was both urgent and instructive.
Backed by data, context, and decades of market engagement, Reid provides a blueprint for advisors and investors looking to understand not just the headlinesābut how they translate into risk positioning and opportunity across portfolios.
Fed Steady, But Not Certain
The U.S. Federal Reserveās March policy meeting offered no surprises on the surface. Rates were held steady, and the dot plot kept its 2025 median rate outlook unchanged. But as Reid notes, under the surface, things are shifting.
āThe Fed moved from the comments in the January statement from having a relatively balanced outlook to an outlook of more uncertainty,ā Reid explained.
He highlights that the number of FOMC participants expecting zero or one rate cut this year doubled from four to eight. Yet, the Fed continues to project two cuts for 2025āa contradiction that underscores the current policy ambiguity.
Market reaction split along familiar lines: rates markets keyed in on lower growth and higher inflationāa mild whiff of stagflation.
āYou have lower growth and higher inflationā¦ those are kind of stagflationary tendencies,ā Reid notes.
The rise in the Fedās preferred inflation measureācore PCEāfrom 2.5% to 2.8% for year-end 2025, coupled with a downgraded GDP estimate, was enough to fuel that narrative. But as Reid points out, out-year inflation estimates remain unchanged, suggesting the Fed views current inflation pressures as temporary.
Still, the central bankās hesitancy is clear.
āWe are a little bit unsure and we are a little bit surprised that we have not seen the hard data reflect as much downside riskā¦ as the soft data.ā
In essence, the Fed is watching and waiting. But the market may not wait with it.
The Tariff Clock Is Ticking
If the Fed is delicately navigating economic crosswinds, Reid sees a storm gathering on the trade front.
āI will be a little surprised if Canada escapes April 2nd without any tariffs. That does not seem to be the direction of travel here.ā
Reid outlines the evolving tariff landscape, shaped by Trump-era executive orders and an upcoming announcement flagged by Secretary Bessent. According to Reid:
āEarlier this weekā¦ Bessent said that on April 2nd, every country will get a numberā¦ those 15% of countries will be where the bulk of the tariffs are enacted.ā
Canada is expected to be among those targeted. Reidās base case now tilts toward targeted tariffs of 10ā15%, possibly higher depending on sectoral carve-outs.
āI think 25% is probably a bridge too farā¦ but Iām kind of thinking 10ā15 here.ā
The more important question may be: how long will tariffs last?
āThis is something for quarters, a year, maybe longerā¦ If Iām Trumpā¦ why would you not have something on Canada from a tariff perspective as a negotiating point ahead of the real negotiating for USMCA?ā
Tariffs, Reid emphasizes, could be used strategicallyānot just tacticallyāand may shift the framework of fiscal revenue collection itself.
Canada: Caught in the Middle
Reid's analysis of the Canadian outlook weaved together monetary policy, political risk, and the looming tariff shock.
Following a widely expected 25 basis point cut from the Bank of Canada, he flagged an underappreciated dynamic: the central bankās upcoming neutral rate reassessment in April.
āThereās a pretty good chanceā¦ that theyāre gonna up their neutral rate again from 2.25ā3.25 to 2.5ā3.5.ā
Currently, the policy rate sits at 2.75%āthe midpoint of the old neutral range. But if the range shifts upward, further cuts become less likelyā¦ unless tariffs force the bankās hand.
āIf Iām right on tariffsā¦ and itās uglyā¦ weāll move below what the bank perceives as the bottom end of neutral.ā
Meanwhile, the domestic political picture adds another layer of complexity. With former Bank of Canada and Bank of England governor Mark Carney leading the Liberal party into a likely April 28 election, Reid sees a āhorse raceā developing.
āMaybe some of the best debates the country has seen in decades between Carney and Poilievreā¦ itāll be really quite interesting to see policy differences.ā
Tariffs could be a defining issue, particularly if the economic shock spills into a need for a fiscal response. The choice between leadership stylesāand their economic philosophiesācould set the tone for Canadaās negotiation strategy going into 2026ās USMCA review.
Germanyās Fiscal Breakthrough: A Generational Shift
One of the most consequential developments Reid flagged wasnāt in North Americaābut in Berlin. Over just a few weeks, Germany effectively suspended its long-held ādebt brake,ā paving the way for over ā¬1 trillion in defense and infrastructure spending.
āIf I said it was a generational event, it might actually even be an understatement.ā
Spurred in part by geopolitical uncertaintyāparticularly Zelenskyyās emotional appeals in WashingtonāGermany has shifted from austerity to expansionism almost overnight.
āThe Germansā¦ have now suspended their debt brake for the first time inā¦ a very, very long time.ā
Bond markets reacted immediately: 10-year bund yields surged from the mid-2s to nearly 2.90% in 48 hours. The implications extend far beyond German borders.
āGerman growthā¦ now on a long-term run rate needs to be recalibrated.ā
Reid expects similar fiscal awakenings across Europe to follow. With France politically hamstrung, eyes are on whether other EU economies can rise to the occasionāand how the ECB responds.
āWhat a change over the last six monthsā¦ this is why macro is extremely interesting and extremely important.ā
Portfolio Positioning: Active Tilts in a World of Shifting Risk
Against a backdrop of monetary ambiguity, geopolitical friction, and fiscal transformation, Reid and the Mackenzie Fixed Income team are leaning into selective positioning that reflects both macro conviction and careful risk management. Their approach is emblematic of how institutional portfolios can absorb complex information and express it in ways that are both thematic and tactical.
At the heart of the strategy is a multi-tiered approach to interest rate differentials, inflation hedging, global diversification, and relative value. Hereās how that plays out across key portfolio segments.
1. U.S.-Canada Long-End Spread Compression: Recalibrating the North American Narrative
Reidās flagship macro trade has been a long-end U.S.-Canada spread trade, executed across Mackenzieās Global Unconstrained, Core, and Core Plus bond mandates.
āUS 30-year yields were 155 basis points higher than Canadaā¦ and we thought, well, we donāt necessarily disagree with the negative sign, [but] the right magnitude of it was too big.ā
With the Fed signaling a more uncertain outlook and the Bank of Canada potentially facing asymmetric downside risks from tariffs, the team initiated a long Canada / short U.S. duration trade to capitalize on narrowing spreads.
āWeāve seen that spread move from -155 to above -130ā¦ [and] had an original target of around -110 before we reassessed.ā
The trade expresses a nuanced view that Canadaās long-end yields had overshot relative to U.S. Treasuries, and that relative growth and policy risksāparticularly around tariffs and domestic political uncertaintyācould help drive convergence.
This kind of relative value trade is especially attractive in a macro environment where directional rate calls are fraught with uncertainty. Advisors overseeing global fixed income exposures may consider similar approaches when macro divergences open up pricing anomalies across yield curves.
2. Inflation Hedging: Tactical TIPS Management
Reid also touches on Mackenzieās use of Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS), emphasizing that real duration still mattersābut only at the right price.
āWe had a decent amount of duration in real duration TIPSā¦ [but] we hit our profit level there and took some of that off.ā
This decision reflects the teamās disciplined approach to opportunistic profit-taking amid still-elevatedābut deceleratingāinflation metrics. With goods inflation flattening and market expectations reasonably priced, the trade was unwound, though Reid remains open to re-engagement.
āIf the inflation picture, particularly the goods inflation picture, starts to move higher againā¦ we could re-enter that trade.ā
For advisors, this underscores the value of dynamic inflation protectionānot as a set-it-and-forget-it allocation, but as a position that should flex with macro inputs and valuation levels.
3. Global Duration Capture: New Zealand Bonds with a Currency Hedge
Seeking to enhance yield without significantly increasing credit or duration risk, the team also pursued New Zealand sovereign bond exposure, fully hedged to Canadian dollars.
āThe yield capture on tens in New Zealand versus here is significantly moreā¦ and the currency hedge was relatively inexpensive.ā
Although some softening in New Zealandās domestic data has tempered enthusiasm, Reid frames the trade as a convergent expression of macro alignmentāhighlighting similarities between New Zealand and Canada as small, open, commodity-linked economies with floating currencies and inflation-targeting central banks.
The position illustrates how global sovereign diversificationāwhen paired with active FX managementācan provide incremental return without materially altering a portfolioās core risk exposures.
4. EM Exposure: De-Risking Amid Volatility, Staying Opportunistic
In emerging markets, Reid and his team have de-risked meaningfully, shedding positions in Brazil, Mexico, and South Africa.
āWe have very little on the emerging markets side at this pointā¦ weāve dumped a lot of other things including Brazil, [Mexico], South Africa.ā
Current exposures are limited, with Indonesia being one of the few remaining EM allocationsāa testament to the importance of credit selectivity and volatility management in todayās market.
Yet, Reid isnāt writing off EM entirely. He flags the potential for carry trades to re-emerge if volatility stabilizes.
āOne of the questions Iām always asking myself is, is carry a thematic? And what is volatility doing?ā
Advisors with global fixed income mandates should take note: the EM universe remains investableābut increasingly so on a rolling, case-by-case basis, where structural fundamentals, idiosyncratic policy moves, and FX dynamics drive relative value.
5. Volatility, Carry, and the Path Forward
Across all positions, Reid emphasizes a foundational truth for fixed income investing in 2025: macro risk premia are returning, and advisors must adapt accordingly.
āWe could be entering an era again where carry is interesting, but it might be carry balanced against higher volatility across asset classes.ā
That volatilityāwhether driven by central bank ambiguity, geopolitical disruptions, or shifting fiscal dynamicsārequires a framework that can pivot between defensiveness and opportunity. The Mackenzie Fixed Income team is doing just that, leaning into trades with asymmetric upside while remaining quick to exit when the environment shifts.
Bottom Line for Advisors
In an age of policy pivots, trade disruptions, and fiscal rearmament, fixed income portfolio construction demands nuance. Reidās positioning highlights three key takeaways for advisors:
- Look for relative value, not just directionalityāespecially in government bond markets.
- Manage inflation exposure dynamically, not statically.
- Stay global, but stay selectiveāparticularly in EM and higher-yielding sovereigns.
In this moment of global complexity, Mackenzieās fixed income desks are showing that macro awareness, valuation discipline, and flexible execution can still deliver clarityāand convictionāin a market landscape thatās anything but clear.
Footnote:
1 "Global Economic Uncertainty Abounds | The Invested." 20 Mar. 2025, mackenzieinvestments.podbean.com/e/global-economic-uncertainty-abounds.
2 Mackenzie Investments Podcasts." Home, 20 Mar. 2025