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Bonds
Fixed income outlook: How to use bonds in a bumpy recovery
Mike Gitlin
President and Chief Executive Officer
Pramod Atluri
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager
Karl Zeile
Fixed Income Portfolio Manager

Many people will be happy to forget 2020. In some ways, markets have already moved on, boosted by promising news on vaccines and improving economic data around the world. Investors have found their animal spirits, helping fuel rebounds in prices for equities and other risk assets. 


Most fixed income sectors are on track to notch healthy gains for the year. But with low interest rates and relatively modest yields for credit, much of that optimism is already priced into markets. As a result, we expect more moderate returns as we look forward to 2021.


With the tailwind of ultra-low interest rates, accommodative monetary policy and the potential for additional fiscal stimulus, we believe the economy will continue to heal in 2021. And if vaccines and other medical advances prove effective, growth could continue to look better than expected. 


However, COVID-19 has had a huge impact on virtually every part of the global economy. These effects will be felt for years to come. 


Huge swathes of the small business and services sector have been wiped out and will have to be rebuilt. The future of commercial real estate has been fundamentally changed as businesses have adapted to work-from-home arrangements. Residential real estate is undergoing a massive boom as new home building trends, living preferences and Americans leaving cities have reshaped the industry. Travel, hospitality, energy and retail sectors have all been upended. While this has created opportunities for the strong, it has meant distress or bankruptcy for the weak. 


Looking ahead to 2021, we see a vastly different economic and market backdrop compared to the pre-COVID world. Interest rates in many parts of the globe are negative and likely to remain that way for some time. 


In the U.S., the Federal Reserve’s near-zero interest rate policy looks set to continue for years while unemployment remains elevated. Inflation had been low and stable for years, but it fell precipitously in 2020. It looks set to push higher going forward due to massive central bank stimulus, stronger economic growth and other factors. After a decade of dollar strength, surging budget deficits and reduced globalization could trigger a U.S. dollar bear market.


The new year is going to look very different. The shifting tides we see ahead create both risk and opportunity for investors. With valuations fully recovered in many parts of the market, active security selection will be critically important. Portfolio managers need to be poised to take advantage of opportunities and avoid investments that will not fully recover. 


In this challenging environment, investors should consider these four actions:


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1. Do more with cash


In a world where money markets yield almost 0% and inflation is moving higher, holding excess cash is likely to destroy wealth and purchasing power. And with the Fed expected to hold rates down for two years or more, this wealth destruction will be compounded. With an accommodative Fed and an improving economic outlook, excess cash may be a significant drag on returns. 


Fixed income offers alternatives that seek to provide relative safety and liquidity, as well as yields that should better keep pace with expected inflation. Short and intermediate taxable funds offer yields near 1%, while short-intermediate muni funds can offer even greater tax-equivalent yields for investors in high tax brackets. And in an actively managed fund, investors may be able to generate even stronger total returns. 


Holding cash can be costly

A bar chart compares yields for money market funds to those from two bond indexes. Prime money market funds, based on the respective Morningstar category, yielded 0.04%. The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Intermediate Aggregate Bond Index yielded 0.87%. The Bloomberg Barclays Municipal Short Intermediate 1–10 Years Index yielded 0.64%. It also shows the same index yield, on a tax-equivalent basis, of 1.08%. Source: Bloomberg Index Services Ltd. As of November 30, 2020. *Money market fund yield is a seven-day yield as of November 30, 2020. Prime money market funds invest in floating-rate debt and commercial paper of non-Treasury assets, including those issued by corporations. †Taxable-equivalent yield assumptions are based on a federal marginal tax rate of 37%, the top 2020 rate. In addition, we have applied the 3.8% Medicare tax. Yields shown are yield to worst.]

While the relative safety of a bond fund is not quite as strong as cash since a negative return is possible, some can get close. Consider a short-term fund consisting of 100% investment-grade bonds and a track record of capital preservation as an alternative to pursue some investment gain. 


Two such funds in the taxable and tax-exempt buckets include Intermediate Bond Fund of America® and Limited-Term Tax-Exempt Bond Fund of America®. These funds aim to provide modest income while focusing on capital preservation and diversification from equities. Their three-year correlations to the Standard & Poor’s 500 Composite Index — a good measure of diversification if near zero or below — were –0.08 and 0.27, respectively (F-2 share class as of November 30). 


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2. Stay strong at the core


Coming into 2020, some bond bears argued that with most Treasury yields below 2%, fixed income offered little value and might no longer be an effective hedge for a portfolio’s equity investments. Once again, these predictions proved wrong. During the deep equity correction, the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Bond Index, a typical benchmark for core bond funds, did exactly what it was supposed to do. It zigged when stocks zagged, providing both diversification and capital preservation. 


Even as equities have recovered, bonds have held up. The benchmark was up 7.4% as of November 2020. In this challenging market environment, high-quality fixed income has shined. Anyone who held a strong core fixed income allocation should be more convinced than ever of its value — and its role in a balanced portfolio. 


The core bond benchmark held steady as stocks sank

A line chart shows the return of the popular core benchmark, the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Index and the S&P 500 Index, indexed to 100 at January 1, 2020. When stocks entered a bear market earlier this year, down more than 30%, the core benchmark declined only a few percentage points and recovered to a positive return much more quickly than the stock index. Sources: Capital Group, Bloomberg Index Services Ltd., Morningstar. As of November 30, 2020.

Equity indexes recently set new all-time highs in the face of a shifting and uncertain economic backdrop. The resulting equity appreciation creates an excellent opportunity for investors to consider rebalancing portfolios by adding fixed income to restore their desired allocation. This would seek to rebuild the diversification and capital preservation that proved so valuable in 2020.


Of course, not all core and core-plus bond funds are created equal. Some put too much emphasis on yield. Such funds take on the sort of credit risk that should be avoided when pursuing stability. A strong track record of diversification from equities matters. 


Consider the three-year correlations to the S&P 500 Index of The Bond Fund of America®  and American Funds Strategic Bond Fund℠ (our flagship Core and Core-Plus offerings). They were 0.12 and 0.00, respectively (F-2 share class as of November 30), demonstrating strong diversification.


3. Rethink income


Credit is an area where careful security and industry selection should be front and center in 2021. Finding good value in corporate bonds now requires a much more discerning eye. The yield gap between corporate bonds and U.S. Treasuries, known as the spread, has returned to near pre-COVID levels, despite deteriorating prospects and fundamentals. 


In other words, corporates on the whole are not offering a tremendous amount of compensation for the additional risks entailed. High-yield default rates have risen and are still rising. 


In this type of environment, owning the corporate index indiscriminately at a time when it includes nearly $300 billion of BBB bonds (the lowest investment grade rating) with a negative outlook does not seem prudent. Fundamental research is more important than ever to distinguish between companies with the strongest return potential and those with weakening prospects. 


Corporate bond spreads have fallen to near pre-COVID levels

This graphic features a line chart consisting of two U.S. corporate bond spread curves: one for investment grade and one for high yield. A bond spread is the premium in basis points that investors are paid for the credit risk over comparable Treasury securities. It shows this spread having widened during 2020’s volatility but subsequently tightening to near the level seen prior to the pandemic. Source for spreads: Bloomberg Index Services Ltd. As of November 30, 2020. Investment-grade index shown is the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Corporate Investment Grade Index. The high-yield index shown is the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Corporate High-Yield 2% Issuer Capped Index. Sources for defaults: JPMorgan, S&P LCD. As of October 31, 2020. Based on the par-weighted 12-month trailing default rate.

Plenty of opportunities can also provide attractive sources of income beyond investment-grade corporate credit. The coming year is likely to be one where we see significant shifts in sector leadership. A diversified multisector approach can offer particular value here by uncovering additional investment ideas and providing varied sources of potential return. 


American Funds Multi-Sector Income Fund℠  takes such an approach. Its managers pursue income by drawing from different sectors — from corporates to securitized bonds to emerging markets debt. This allows managers to pursue the best income opportunities from a broad set of options. By aiming for a 50/50 split of above/below investment grade, managers also remain mindful of risk. 


4. Look to municipal bonds for attractive tax-exempt yields


At first glance, the municipal bond market appears to have moved on from its March 2020 meltdown. Strong investor demand has helped fuel a recovery. However, municipal valuations have not rebounded to the same degree as other credit markets, and the impact of the economic downturn will likely cast a long shadow into 2021.


Tax revenue lost during the pandemic leaves some state and local governments with critical budget shortfalls. Likewise, a wide range of muni issuers in sectors such as transportation, higher education, health care and various tax-backed parts of the market have struggled with weaker revenues and higher costs.


We expect to see even greater credit differentiation among muni bonds as fundamentals diverge in the months ahead. Given the likely headwinds, a selective investment approach is crucial. Bottom-up research is an essential aspect of assessing the trade-off between risk and return potential.


This challenging outlook does have a silver lining in today’s low-rate world: improved income potential. Lately, the taxable-equivalent yields offered by municipals have surpassed those of taxable bonds. They are especially attractive for investors in the highest tax brackets. 


Some sectors, such as toll roads, have regained much of the ground lost earlier in 2020. However, there are pockets of potential value in other sectors, such as education and health care, across the credit quality spectrum. BBB municipal yields are more than 150 basis points above comparable U.S. Treasuries before the tax exemption — a yield gap well above pre-pandemic levels.


Lower rated investment grade is a sweet spot among munis

This chart compares two points in time, December 31, 2019, and November 30, 2020. It presents the yield advantage of lower rated municipal bonds over triple-A rated bonds for three ratings buckets: AA, B and BBB. It shows bars for each group that indicate the yield advantage for each has increased over the past 11 months. For AA, it has risen to 0.5% from 0.3%. For B, it has risen to 0.9% from 0.4%. For BBB it has risen to 1.5% from 0.6%. The right side of the graphic shows the tax-equivalent yield advantage of municipals over taxable bonds was as much as 0.8%, as of November 30, 2020. Sources: Capital Group, Bloomberg Index Services Ltd. All data as of November 30, 2020. Market proxies: Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Aggregate Index (taxables) and Bloomberg Barclays Municipal Bond Index (munis). *Taxable-equivalent rate assumptions are based on a federal marginal tax rate of 37%, the top 2020 rate. In addition, we have applied the 3.8% Medicare tax.

Actively managed funds such as The Tax-Exempt Bond Fund of America® have the flexibility to emphasize bonds where research indicates an attractive trade-off between risk and return potential. And don’t forget, this is an asset class that has often provided excellent diversification. As of November 30, 2020, this fund’s F-2 share class had a three-year correlation to the S&P 500 of 0.17%.


Higher yields offered by certain bonds appear to compensate investors for the risks entailed. This is especially true if you factor in the possibility of further federal support for states and local government issuers materializing in 2021. But even without federal aid, some pockets of value in municipals will reward investors over the long term.


Looking ahead, it seems likely that the world will soon start to overcome this terrible pandemic. Even so, it seems prudent to prepare for bumps along the road to recovery. In our view, the four actions outlined can help smooth the ride for your portfolio, no matter what comes next.



Mike Gitlin is president and chief executive officer of Capital Group. He is also the chair of the Capital Group Management Committee. Mike has 30 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2023). He holds a bachelor's degree from Colgate University.

Pramod Atluri is a fixed income portfolio manager with 20 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2023). He holds an MBA from Harvard and a bachelor’s degree from the University of Chicago. He is a CFA charterholder.

Karl Zeile is a fixed income portfolio manager who chairs Capital Group’s Fixed Income Management Committee. He has 33 years of investment industry experience (as of 12/31/2023). He holds a master’s degree in public policy from Harvard and a bachelor’s degree from Valparaiso University.


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