by Kathy Jones, Global Fixed Income Strategist, Charles Schwab & Company
Despite high volatility in the bond market during the first half of the year, what's surprising is how much didn't change.
Bond market volatility was high during the first half of the year
Source: Bloomberg. ICE BofA Move Index (MOVE INDEX).
Daily data as of 6/6/2023 Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
The MOVE index is a market-implied measure of bond market volatility. The MOVE index calculates the implied volatility of U.S. Treasury options using a weighted average of option prices on Treasury futures across multiple maturities (2, 5, 10, and 30 years).
Yields for Treasury securities maturing in two years are more are nearly unchanged
Source: Bloomberg US Treasury Actives Curve, as of 6/6/2023 and 12/30/2022.
Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
The 2-year/10-year yield curve is still inverted, but has stabilized
Source: Bloomberg. Market Matrix US Sell 2 Year & Buy 10 Year Bond Yield Spread (USYC2Y10 INDEX). Daily data as of 6/6/2023.
This spread is a calculated Bloomberg yield spread that replicates selling the current 2 year U.S. Treasury Note and buying the current 10 year U.S. Treasury Note, then factoring the differences by 100. A basis point is one hundredth of one percent, or 0.01%. Gray shaded bars represent recessions. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Year-to-date returns have been positive so far this year
Source: Bloomberg. Total returns from 12/31/2022 through 6/5/2023.
Total returns assume reinvestment of interest and capital gains. Indexes are unmanaged, do not incur fees or expenses, and cannot be invested in directly. Indexes representing the investment types are: Preferreds =Ā ICE BofA Fixed Rate Preferred Securities Index; HY Corporates = Bloomberg US High Yield Very Liquid (VLI) Index; Bank Loans = Morningstar LSTA US Leveraged Loan 100 Index; Long-term US Agg = Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate 10+ Years Bond Index; IG Floaters = Bloomberg US Floating Rate Note Index; IG Corporates = Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Bond Index; US Aggregate =Ā Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Index; Intermediate-term US Agg = Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate 5-7 Years Bond Index; Municipals = Bloomberg US Municipal Bond Index; Treasuries = Bloomberg U.S. Treasury Index; EM (USD) = Bloomberg Emerging Markets USD Aggregate Bond Index; Securitized = Bloomberg US Securitized Index; Agencies = Bloomberg U.S. Agency Bond Total Return Index; TIPS = Bloomberg US Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) Index; Short-term US Agg = Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate 1-3 Years Bond Index; Int. developed (x-USD) = Bloomberg Global Aggregate ex-USD Bond Index. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
Federal Reserve policy outlook: Suddenly, then gradually
The shift to a more gradual tightening stance reflects growing confidence that policy is succeeding. Economic growth is slowing, and inflation is easing. Gross domestic product (GDP) growth has averaged less than 1.5% over the past four quarters, the manufacturing sector appears to be in recession, and housing activity has fallen sharply. The service sector has proven more resilient, but the pace of growth is easing.
The ISM services report indicates that growth in nearly every segment of the sector is slowing
Source: Bloomberg, Institute for Supply Management. Monthly data as of 5/31/2023.
ISM Services PMI (NAPMNMI Index), ISM Services PMI Business New Orders (NAPMNNO Index), ISM Services PMI Business Prices (NAPMNPRC Index), ISM Services PMI Business Employment (NAPMNEMP Index).
Average hourly earnings have declined
Source: Bloomberg, using monthly data as of 5/31/2023.
US Average Hourly Earnings All Employees Total Private Yearly Percent Change SA (AHE YOY% Index).
Holding is tightening
Real yields haven't been this high in more than a decade
Source: Bloomberg, daily data as of 6/6/2022.
US Generic Govt TII 10 Yr (USGGT10Y INDEX), US Generic Govt TII 5 Yr (USGGT05Y INDEX).Ā Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
The good news is that the "stickiness" in inflation is now confined to a smaller number of categories compared to earlier in the year. In recent months three categories largely accounted for above-average inflationāhousing, financial services and used cars. As the categories of price inflation narrow, the overall trend will likely improve.
The New York Federal Reserve Bank recently published a way to measure the "persistence" of inflation. Its model suggests that inflation pressures may ease later in the year. Of course it's just a model, and the Fed isn't likely to weigh it heavily in their decision making, but it's suggesting the trend is lower.
Persistent inflation appears to be easing
Source: Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). Monthly data as of 4/30/2023.
Headline PCE: PCE is Personal Consumption Expenditures Chain Type Price Index YoY and (PCE DEFY Index) and Core PCE: Core Personal Consumption Expenditures Chain Type Price Index YoY (PCE CYOY Index).
PCE is personal consumption expenditure. The Multivariate Core Trend (MCT) is a dynamic factor model estimated on monthly data for the seventeen major sectors of the PCE price index. It decomposes each sector's inflation as the sum of a common trend, a sector-specific trend, a common transitory shock, and a sector-specific transitory shock. The trend in PCE inflation is constructed as the sum of the common and the sector-specific trends weighted by the expenditure shares.
Rate hikes: Stop, skip, jump?
We look for the Fed to keep its policy stance largely on hold in the second half of the year, although one more rate hike is possible. A shift to easing policy would only likely be seen if the economy were to fall into recession or if financial stability issues were to re-emerge. Overall, we believe the federal funds rate is at or near its peak for this cycle and that intermediate to long-term rates peaked last fall.
Because the economy responds to changes in Fed policy with a lag, the risks to growth and inflation appear skewed to the downside after more than a year of tightening policy. Moreover, fiscal policy has gone from a positive factor for the economy to a negative one. The "fiscal impulse," which measures the contribution of fiscal policy to GDP growth, has shifted to a slight negative after surging during the pandemic.
Fiscal policy is a net negative for the economy as pandemic era stimulus fades
Source: Brookings, The Hutchins Center Fiscal Impact Measure. Bureau of Economic Analysis (historical) and the Congressional Budget Office (projections).
Quarterly data as of Q1 202; projections begin Q2 2023.
The Hutchins Center Fiscal Impact Measure shows how much local, state, and federal tax and spending policy adds to or subtracts from overall economic growth and provides a near-term forecast of fiscal policies' effects on economic activity. When Fiscal Impact is positive, the government is contributing to GDP growth. When fiscal impact is negative, government is subtracting from GDP growth. Gray shading indicates past recessions.
The second half outlook: More of the same
Our guidance for investors is the same as it has been since late last year: Consider adding some intermediate-term or longer-term bonds to portfolios gradually, and stay in higher-credit-quality bonds. While it may be tempting to stay in very short-term investments due to risk-free yields at 5% or higher, that opens investors up to reinvestment riskāthe risk that they will have to reinvest maturing securities when yields are lower.
With current yields in the region of 4% to 5% for high-credit-quality bonds such as Treasuries, other government-backed bonds, and investment-grade corporate and municipal bonds, we think it makes sense to lock in those cash flows with certainty rather than risk reinvesting maturing short-term bonds into lower yields once the Fed begins to cut interest rates.
Moreover, there is also likely potential for capital gains for investors with shorter time horizons. In past cycles, the total return for intermediate-term bonds has been higher than in short-term in the 12 months following the peak of the fed funds rate.
Returns for intermediate-term bonds have outpaced short-term bonds after the peak in the fed funds rate
Source: Bloomberg.
Short-term = Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index 1-3 year Total Return Value Unhedged USD. Intermediate-term = Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index 5-7 year Total Return Value Unhedged USD. Chart shows 12-month total returns for each period from the peak month of the federal funds rate. Past performance is no guarantee of future results.
In sum, we look for returns in the second half of the year to be positive even if Federal Reserve policy stays the same as it has been in the first half. We're just hoping for a lot less volatility along the way.