Bond traders’ wild ride in 2018 about to kick into overdrive

epa03751580 Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange at the start of the trading day in New York, New York, USA, 19 June 2013. Inflation remained minimal last month in the United States, leaving the rate-setting Federal Reserve flexibility when it issues monetary policy decisions 19 June in Washington. Consumer prices rose a seasonally adjusted 0.1 per cent in May, following declines of 0.4 per cent in April and 0.2 per cent in March. Uncertainty about the Fed's plans has left world bond and equities markets yo-yoing in recent weeks. The Fed is scheduled to end its two-day regular meeting with a monetary policy statement at 2 pm (1800 GMT) Wednesday, followed by a closely watched press conference by bank chief Ben Bernanke.  EPA/JUSTIN LANE

Bloomberg

You’ve traded on inflation data and the prospect of rising sovereign-debt supply. You’ve wagered on Federal Reserve meetings and what the next chairman might do. And you’ve bet on jobs and wage growth that exceed or miss targets.
Now try doing it all in one week.
With yields threatening to leap higher, bond traders will grapple this week with market-moving stimuli coming at breakneck speed. The selloff in Treasuries less than a month into 2018 has already sparked calls of a bear market, including from Ray Dalio, founder of hedge fund Bridgewater Associates.
US domestic events are about to take centre stage, after decisions by the Bank of Japan and European Central Bank left 10-year yields close to the highest since 2014. Traders will have a few things on their minds: Janet Yellen’s final meeting as Fed chair, the Treasury’s plan to cover widening deficits, and, to cap it all off, an update on the U.S. job market.
“It seems almost impossible how much is jammed into one week,” said Michael Lorizio, a senior trader at Manulife Asset Management, which oversees $383 billion.
“The more responsible shorter-term trading rationale is rather than making a major shift in
your investments, being willing to miss the first few basis points to have your longer-term thesis proven or disproven by the new data and information.”

Fed Leanings
This week could wind up bolstering the prevailing view—that yields are finally heading higher. While the Fed is seen standing pat, some Wall Street banks are bracing for a statement on January 31 that comes off as “more hawkish” than last month’s, in part because of climbing inflation expectations.
The 10-year breakeven rate is the highest since 2014, signalling demand for protection against accelerating inflation. Fed funds futures are pricing in more than 2.5 rate hikes by the central bank this year, close to policy makers’ forecast for three. At the end of last week, options activity indicated growing interest in hedging against an extended selloff.
And then there’s supply. The Treasury is expected to unveil bigger note sales this week for the first time since 2009. More issuance just as the Fed is trimming its balance sheet and has a green light from markets to keep raising rates? Sounds like a tough environment for bond investors.
To be fair, not everyone’s buying into the gloom. Dimitri Delis, senior econometric strategist at Piper Jaffray in Chicago, points to the deteriorating US savings rate. As a share of disposable income, it fell to 2.6 percent last quarter, the third-lowest on record. That matters because consumers make up about 70 percent of the economy.
“I don’t know what’s going to keep the consumer on the same pace as the last two years,” he said. Two months ago traders weren’t so sure that 10-year yields could break above 2.4 percent, and they’ve stayed above that level for five weeks. The trend for months has been for yields to climb and consolidate, before breaking even higher.

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