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Bonds
Bond outlook: Opportunities emerge as Fed delays rate cuts
Vince Gonzales
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
Tim Ng
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
Mark Marinella
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager

Many investors turned to bonds in early 2024 in search of that sweet spot between high income opportunities and protection from equity market swings. Although persistent inflation may have dampened the mood, the outlook for bonds remains promising. This is particularly true as markets have slashed their expectations for rate cuts to align more closely to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s forecast.


“Bond investors were too exuberant about rate cuts at the start of the year, but now that markets aren’t aggressively priced for cuts, yields in fixed income are more attractive,” says fixed income portfolio manager Vince Gonzales. Bonds remain critical as economic growth slows and can provide a strong counterweight to stock market volatility.


At the June meeting, Fed officials kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged at a range of 5.25% to 5.50%, not following the trend of rate cuts announced by the Bank of Canada and the European Central Bank. The U.S. central bank guided to a single rate cut by the end of 2024, with borrowing costs expected to decline to 5.1%. Officials plan to make four rate cuts in 2025, up from prior projections of three, with rates anticipated to end 2025 at 4.1%.


The hyperfocus on Fed policy is understandable given its outsized influence on bond returns: History shows that bonds have tended to rally once the Fed stops hiking. “Still, it’s difficult to time markets and investors don’t want to miss the forest for the trees,” Gonzales notes, adding that “the bar for the Fed to hike from here is high, and after decades of low rates income is here.”


Rate cuts are on the horizon in the U.S.

The chart above shows the Federal funds rate from March 31, 2022 to June 12, 2024. Specifically, it reflects the upper bound of the Federal Open Markets Committee's (FOMC) target range for overnight lending among U.S. banks. There is a dotted line that shows the market implied effective rate from June 2024 to December 31, 2025, and two dots that show the median Fed projections. From March 31, 2022 to December 31, 2022, the upper bound went from 0.50% to 4.00%. From there, it increased to 4.50% as of January 31, 2023, and to 5.50% as of July 31, 2023. This is where it stands as of June 12, 2024. The market implied rate for December 31, 2024, is 5.00%, and then down to 4.06% by December 31, 2025. The Fed’s median project for December 31, 2024, is 5.1%, and for December 31, 2025, is 4.1%.

Sources: Capital Group, Bloomberg, Federal Reserve. Fed funds target rate reflects the upper bound of the Federal Open Markets Committee's (FOMC) target range for overnight lending among U.S. banks. Median Fed projections are as of June 12, 2024. Latest data available as of June 12, 2024.

What’s next for interest rates?


Inflation, the Fed’s response, and a remarkably resilient U.S. economy have humbled many investors.


“The economy continues to hum along despite higher rates,” says Tim Ng, portfolio manager for Capital Group Canadian Core Plus Fixed Income FundTM (Canada). “At the same time, there continues to be evidence that demand has softened, particularly in the lower income cohorts. That bears watching.”


The four-quadrant chart show the x-axis labeled as strong growth and weak growth, and the y-axis as decelerating inflation and sticky/accelerating inflation. In scenario A, or the strong growth and decelerating inflation box, the scenario is labeled moderate Fed cuts in late 2024. The yield curve would be unchanged or steeper and Treasury yields range bound. In scenario B, or the strong growth and sticky/accelerating inflation box, the scenario is labeled Fed hikes. The yield curve would invert further and Treasury yields higher. In scenario C, or the weak growth and decelerating inflation box, the scenario is labeled Fed cuts significantly. The yield curve would be steeper and Treasury yields lower. In scenario D, or the weak growth and sticky/accelerating inflation box, the scenario is labeled Fed delays cuts. The yield curve would be unchanged or invert further and Treasury yields higher.

Source: Capital Group.

Preparing bond portfolios for a range of outcomes is vital since ever-changing data will continue to create uncertainty. For example, inflation fell rapidly in 2023, but recently proved to be stickier than expected. Coupled with solid economic data, the higher-for-how-much-longer debate is expected to remain a hot topic.


“The first Fed cut is generally viewed as the start of a series, so policymakers want to be sure conditions are right for them before they embark on that next step,” Ng says.


Investors have revised their outlook on interest rates upwards, with the 10-year U.S. Treasury at 4.50% on May 31, 2024, compared to its level of 3.88% at the start of the year. Ng believes that Treasury yields are likely to remain range bound since Fed officials largely view the current policy rate as restrictive. Assuming inflation continues to fall closer to the Fed’s 2% target, the central bank appears biased toward rate cuts.


Treasury yields could break out of their range if a sharp economic slowdown prompts deeper cuts or, conversely, a dramatic upswing in inflation forces the Fed to shift back to rate hikes. Ng hasn’t ruled out either but considers both unlikely in the near term. Growth slowed in the first quarter with revised U.S. GDP, adjusted for inflation, growing at a 1.3% annual rate compared to 3.4% in the final quarter of 2023, according to the Commerce Department.


Many members of the fixed income team have high conviction around positioning portfolios for a steeper yield curve, meaning they expect long-term Treasury yields to surpass short-term yields. That’s because the curve could steepen if the economy hits a rough patch, or in an environment where rates stay high for an extended period, explains Ng. In the latter, short-term yields would remain anchored while long-term yields rise.


Mortgage bonds offer potential value


As the U.S. economy has chugged along and demand from investors has remained strong, the spread, or yield differential, between credit assets and U.S. Treasuries has narrowed significantly. As such, the greater return potential for bonds with credit risk comes not from possible spread tightening, but a decline in interest rates.


“Given the recent tightening in corporate bond spreads, we are seeing better opportunities in higher quality sectors with attractive yields such as securitized credit and agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS),” Gonzales says. Higher coupon mortgage bonds are particularly attractive. These bonds are unlikely to get refinanced ahead of their maturity given prevailing mortgage rates of roughly 7%.


Supply dynamics also work in their favour. Namely, home sales have slowed as homeowners decline to sell, clinging to pandemic-era mortgage rates.


“Exposure to agency MBS can help investors maintain a balanced portfolio alongside credit opportunities,” Gonzales says. History has shown that credit spreads have stayed at these levels for a long time, especially if the economic outlook points toward continued growth.


Resilient economy has supported tight spreads over Treasuries

The bar chart shows the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield and highlights the yield to worst of fixed income sectors, U.S. investment grade, mortgage-backed securities, asset-backed securities and U.S. high yield, as of May 31, 2024. The bars also show the spread to worst and the duration of the fixed income sectors mentioned. The U.S. 10-year Treasury yielded 4.50%. U.S. investment-grade bonds had a yield to worst of 5.52% and a spread to worst of 0.85%, with a duration of 6.9 years. Mortgage-backed securities had a yield to worst of 5.34%, a spread to worst of 0.50% and duration of 6.1 years. Asset-backed securities had a yield to worst of 5.41%, a spread to worst of 0.54% and duration of 2.7 years. U.S. high yield had a yield to worst of 8.0%, spread to worst of 3.08% and duration of 3.2 years.

Sources: Capital Group, Bloomberg Index Services Ltd. Yield to worst is a measure of the lowest possible yield that can be received on a bond that fully operates within the terms of its contract without defaulting. Spread to worst is the difference between the yield to worst of a bond and yield to worst of its benchmark yield curve. Indices used are the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Investment Grade Index (U.S. investment grade), Bloomberg U.S. Mortgage-Backed Securities (MBS) Index (mortgage-backed securities), Bloomberg U.S. Asset-Backed Securities Index (asset-backed securities) and the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate High Yield 2% Issuer Capped Index (U.S. high yield). As of May 31, 2024. Past results are not predictive of results in future periods.

Healthy fundamentals support corporate bonds


Despite tight credit spreads, steady consumer spending and economic growth translate to solid income potential for corporate investment-grade (BBB/Baa and above) and high-yield bonds in 2024.


Corporate issuers have largely avoided the impact of high financing costs because most refinanced their debt during the pandemic when rates were near zero. A strong consumer also enabled businesses to increase prices for goods and services. Earnings growth is likely to remain positive through 2024 and 2025.


But so long as the yield on 10-year U.S. Treasuries stays near 5%, risks remain that economic cracks could develop. This is especially true if companies are forced to renew their debt at higher costs, a process expected to begin over the next two years.


Risks tied to high rates warrant a cautious approach, especially when it comes to lower rated bonds.


“In high yield, there are attractive opportunities in certain defensive sectors, like energy, that have strong balance sheets and can withstand higher rates and weaker economic growth,” says fixed income portfolio manager David Daigle. On the opposite end of the risk spectrum, there are idiosyncratic investment opportunities among companies finding it more challenging to adapt to higher rates.


Bonds now offer the highest income potential in 23 years, which might explain why spreads remain so narrow. “Starting bond yields are a good indicator of future annualized return, and today’s levels are attractive by long-term standards,” Daigle concludes.


Emerging market yields remain attractive


While headline inflation has ticked up in several emerging markets recently, core inflation remains muted. This is thanks to aggressive actions by central banks early in their inflation cycles.


Many emerging economies shifted toward easier monetary policies when inflation softened, but there are regional differences. While most Asian economies are not yet ready to reduce rates, with Indonesia recently raising rates, several Latin American and Eastern European countries are well into their easing cycles.


That said, sustained U.S. dollar strength and expectations of fewer rate cuts by the Federal Reserve this year have diminished the scope for further monetary easing. On the positive side, an improving global growth outlook is helping offset the impact from higher U.S. Treasury yields.


Economic growth rates for several developing economies continue to outpace their developed market counterparts, with similar fiscal deficits and mostly lower sovereign debt levels. Likewise, commodity prices have supported emerging market external balances and reserves.


We remain largely constructive on emerging markets debt. “Valuations are reasonably attractive in local currency markets with high real rates,” says Kirstie Spence, portfolio manager for Capital Group Multi-Sector Income FundTM (Canada). “In U.S. dollar-denominated debt there are opportunities in higher yielding credits where wider spreads offer a valuation cushion. Select EM corporate bonds add diversification given different geographies and risk structures relative to sovereign bonds.”


Why it’s time to revisit bonds


The crosscurrents of inflation, rising stocks and tight valuations have caused uncertainty in bond markets. But with the Fed likely done with interest rate increases, many investors have returned to bonds. Concerns around consumer spending will continue as growth slows. Whether momentum in stock markets can last is also a valid concern.


“The current environment of slowing growth can be a good backdrop for bond returns,” Gonzales says. “Even if the Fed doesn’t lower rates, investors can generate attractive income in high-quality bonds.”



Vincent J. Gonzales is a fixed income portfolio manager with 16 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2023). He holds an MBA from Harvard and a bachelor’s degree in management science & engineering from Stanford University.

Timothy Ng is a fixed income portfolio manager with 17 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2023). As a fixed income investment analyst, he covers U.S. Treasuries, TIPS and interest rate swaps. He holds a bachelor's degree in computer science from the University of Waterloo, Ontario.

Mark Marinella is a fixed income portfolio manager with 37 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2023). He holds an MBA from Boston College and a bachelor's in economics from the University of Massachusetts. He is also a CFA charterholder.


Bloomberg U.S. Corporate High Yield 2% Issuer Capped Index covers the universe of fixed-rate, non-investment-grade debt. The index limits the maximum exposure of any one issuer to 2%.

 

Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Investment Grade Index represents the universe of investment grade, publicly issued U.S. corporate and specified foreign debentures and secured notes that meet the specified maturity, liquidity and quality requirements.

 

Bloomberg U.S. Mortgage Backed Securities Index is a market value-weighted index that covers the mortgage-backed pass-through securities of Ginnie Mae (GNMA), Fannie Mae (FNMA) and Freddie Mac (FHLMC).

 

Bloomberg U.S. Asset-Backed Securities Index is a broad-based flagship benchmark that measures the investment grade, U.S. dollar-denominated, fixed-rate taxable bond market. The index only includes ABS.

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