Just as an all-rally propels records in the S&P 500 and inflates risky assets, the bond market is sending a warning to investors that a rapid economic recovery has its own dangers.
Treasury yields have risen to their highest since the early days of the pandemic as the introduction of the vaccine and the potential for another huge The US stimulus package is reviving animal spirits and the prospect of inflation. But years of near zero rates and one Historical overhanging debt makes both stocks and bonds particularly vulnerable to deep losses if interest rates rise too far in a growth outbreak.
Risk focuses on duration, which is now nearing record highs as debt issuers around the world tend to sell longer maturities and coupon payments fall or evaporate altogether. Trillions of dollars are at stake given high levels of both stocks and bonds – and some fear a repeat of the 2013 tapering when then Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke triggered a hike in interest rates after suggesting the central bank would can start cutting back. purchases.
“There is more duration risk embedded in the markets than many realize,” said Gene Tannuzzo, a portfolio manager at Columbia Threadneedle.

As bond maturity measures flirt with records, investors can expect greater losses from higher yields. It is a risk that has a greater reverberation as many stock viewers warn that stocks are not immune and especially tech darlings are exposed.
There is already some pain to be seen. After two years of gains, the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Treasury Index is down to a loss in 2021, with a duration position just below a record high. Given that level and the roughly $ 35 trillion in bonds the index tracks, each percentage increase in yield would mean roughly $ 3 trillion in losses.
What makes matters worse, says Tannuzzo, is an aspect of the mathematical computation of bonds that is embedded in many securities that dictates that as interest rates go up, the duration will also go higher. This is mainly due to something called negative convexity – which also means that the prices of securities will fall at an increasing rate as interest rates rise.
The duration of the shares is a bit more difficult to understand. Some use dividend yields to calculate how many years it will take to get their capital back without any dividend growth, with more time equating to a higher duration – generally, a lower dividend rate means a higher duration.
Vulnerable techies
Growth stocks, strongly represented by technology companies, are an example of this. Rising returns will take a major hit to the discounted values of their cash flows, much of which is expected in the future. And the weighting of technology stocks in major stock indices is greater than it was during the tech bubble of the late 1990s.
“This crisis and recovery have led to an extension of the duration of most assets, but especially equities,” said Christian Mueller-Glissmann, director of portfolio strategy and asset allocation at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. you will see a shift from decreasing market deflation to pricing in inflation. That means multi-asset portfolios really want duration risk within equities to be managed much more aggressively. “
Reflation bets soared this year after the Democrats took control of Congress and the White House. In addition to yields, small-cap stocks and banks whose fates are most closely intertwined with growth have also risen.
Rising revenues are accompanied by a jump in the premium over time, or the extra compensation that investors need for the risk of holding debt for years. A peak in it measure was a major force in the 2013 taper tantrum episode.

A The next week’s record round of treasury auctions could bring more production to bond bears, which will also focus on the latest consumer price data, released Feb. 10.
Ten years USA. draw rates – a market indicator of the expected annual inflation rate over the next decade – have risen to around 2.2%, the highest level since 2018.
Storm Brewing
For now, the rise in yields hasn’t stopped stocks, with the S&P 500 hitting record highs. The bull market is supported by the easing of pandemic lockdowns, positive corporate earnings and ultra-loose monetary policy. But all bets are off if the proceeds increase from here.
Scott Peng, chief investment officer of Advocate Capital Management, warns clients that there is a “perfect storm for rising rates. He predicts that the yield on 10-year Treasury bonds will end the year at 2.53%, now down from 1.2%.
His forecast is well above the Wall Street consensus, which calls for the 10-year-old to climb to 1.3% in the fourth quarter of this year.
“We have a convergence of massive increases in deficit spending to fund fiscal programs, as well as pent-up consumption along with monetary policy support,” Peng said. “And at some point, rising prices must have an effect on equities. Is it 2% on the 10-year return, or 5%? That part is debatable. “
Still, that prospect alone is enough to spur some money managers into their multi-sensitivity of asset portfolios to changes in returns.
At Dutch-based Robeco, after the duration risk in traditional portfolios that mix stocks with bonds became too high for comfort, fund managers shifted to value stocks with more direct cash flow and credit.
“For the first time in years, it appears that inflationary pressures are increasing,” said Jeroen Blokland, portfolio manager in the company’s global macro team. “If you have a typical portfolio where 60% of the assets are in stocks and 40% in bonds, you’re going to be hit with both feet.”
What to watch
- The economic calendar:
- February 8: CPI revisions; delinquencies on mortgages; MBA Mortgage Decisions
- February 9: NFIB optimism for small businesses; JOLTS vacancies
- February 10: MBA mortgage applications; CPI; real average hourly wage; wholesale / stocks; monthly budget overview
- February 11: applications for unemployment; Bloomberg consumer comfort
- February 12: Bloomberg February, US economic research; Sentiment from the University of Michigan; PPI revisions
- The Fed Calendar:
- February 8: Loretta Mester of Cleveland Fed
- February 9: James Bullard of St. Louis Fed
- February 12: Chairman Jerome Powell talks about the US job market
- The auction calendar:
- Feb 8: 13, 26 week bills
- February 9: 42, 119-day cash management accounts; 3 year notes
- February 10: notes from 10 years
- February 11: 4, 8 week bills; 30-year bonds
– With the help of Yakob Peterseil