Bond Yields Look Set For A Move To The Upside In 2017

 | Dec 14, 2016 09:09

For the last few years central bankers have tried in vain to jumpstart the inflation fairy with little if any degree of success.

For a while in the months after 2009 we did see a sharp rise in commodity prices in the wake of a weaker US dollar, but this proved to be somewhat short-lived, as from 2011 chronic overcapacity saw these gains unwind over a five year period, prompting concern that the world was going to hit a long period of deflation.

Over a period of five years the Reuters CRB Index dropped from highs of 370 in 2011 before finding a base of 155 earlier this year, a decline of 58%, helped in no small part by significant declines in oil prices to multi year lows along with a fall in broader soft commodities as well.

This period of overcapacity in the commodity sector appears to be drawing to a close and the lagging effects of falling prices are now starting to fall out of the inflation numbers. This transition started to manifest itself at the turn of the year, just before commodity prices formed a base in the first part of this year.

Rising debt levels alongside an extended period of government fiscal retrenchment also helped put the brakes on prices, while central bank determination to keep the cost of borrowing low helped fuel a bond market rally that does appear to now be showing some signs of tiredness.

The election of Donald Trump as US President in November could well be the catalyst that prompts the end of this decades long bull market in bonds, and a potential turn in the low interest rate cycle.

While many a bond trader has ended up getting burnt in trying to call a top in the bond market in the last few years this time could well be different, though I’m also sure these words were also uttered on previous occasions where traders were tempted to call the top.

In the last few months there does appear to be some evidence that this may be about to change, though particularly since we are now starting to get the first signs of a turnaround in inflation.

In China we’ve seen producer prices move sharply into positive territory for the first time in over 5 years, while inflation in the US, EU and the UK has been trending higher for the best part of this year.

In the UK we’ve also seen a sharp rise in factory gate prices, and while a lot of that is down to the decline in the pound in the wake of the Brexit vote, inflation was already trending up prior to the vote in any case.

Earlier this month CPI inflation in the EU hit a 31 month high, while UK CPI hit its highest levels since October 2014, while US inflation is even closer to the Federal Reserve’s 2% target level.

This rise in inflationary pressures and the prospect of higher inflation expectations has quickly been reflected in lower bond prices and higher yields, while expectations about a Trump Presidency’s plans for a fiscally expansionist investment policy along with cuts to regulation and tax rates has reinforced that.

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