Corporate Bonds
The tailwind of better-than-expected global growth and highly supportive monetary policy has the potential to push global spread product into overshoot territory.
The combination of strengthening global growth and more accommodative monetary policy means that spread product can continue to outperform in the coming months. Despite lingering concerns about credit quality in the corporate sector, we recommend moderately increasing exposure to high-quality spread product.
Eventually the easing of financial conditions will strengthen the Fed's resolve to lift rates. Rate hike probabilities will rise and risk assets will struggle to cope with higher Treasury yields.
The odds of an inflation "mini-scare" are rising, although deflationary tail risks from abroad cannot be dismissed.
A collection of 10 important charts to monitor closely through the summer months.
The 35-year bond bull market is coming to an end and the downward sloping trend channel for yields is changing to flat. Asset allocators should trim duration and fixed income exposure.
The 35-year bond bull market is coming to an end and the downward sloping trend channel for yields is changing to flat. Asset allocators should trim duration and fixed income exposure.
The ongoing stampede into EM bonds is unsustainable. Running away from G7 bonds does not necessarily entail buying EM bonds. These are two separate investment decisions. Lower commodities prices, weaker EM currencies and higher G7 bond yields will undermine EM bond returns going forward. A new relative bond trade: long Polish and Hungarian 5-year / short South African and Turkish 5-year local bonds, currency unhedged.
This week, we are sending a <i>Special Report</i> written by BCA's Chief Global Strategist Peter Berezin, discussing the end of the 35-year global bond bull market. In addition, we are also sending you a joint <i>U.S. Bond Strategy/Global Fixed Income Strategy Weekly Report</i> which discusses the end of the secular bond bull market and the implications for global bond strategy.
Our newly-developed European bottom-up Corporate Health Monitor is signaling that European corporate balance sheets, in aggregate, are steadily improving.