Morgan Stanley says bonds set to surge in 2016

The famous bull sculpture stands near Wall Street in New York, U.S., on Friday, Feb. 12, 2016. U.S. stocks halted a five-day slide that dragged global equities into a bear market, as oil rebounded from a 12-year low and bank shares surged. Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg

NEW YORK / Bloomberg

Morgan Stanley, one of the Wall Street banks that deals directly with the Federal Reserve, cut its bond yield forecasts for 2016 and said the US central bank will wait until December before raising interest rates.
“The global backdrop for rates markets looks so supportive that 2016 may become known as the ‘Year of the Bull,’” according to a report the company issued by analysts including Matthew Hornbach, head of global interest-rate strategy in New York.
Most major economies will do worse in 2016 than 2015, the report said. Central banks in Europe and Japan will keep easing monetary policy, while the Fed and the Bank of England will delay raising rates, according to the firm. Treasury 10-year yields will fall to 1.45 percent by the end of September, the analysts wrote, approaching the record low of 1.38 percent set in 2012. The Fed and the Bank of Japan will refrain from taking any action in meetings this week, based on Bloomberg surveys of economists.
A 2016 rally in Treasuries, the world’s biggest bond market, ran contrary to the selloff projected by Bloomberg’s surveys of economists as plunging stock and oil prices sent investors to the safety of government debt. Borrowing costs fell in almost every industrialized nation, with av erage yields on $23 trillion of bonds falling to 0.69 percent in February, the lowest on record based on Bloomberg indexes that go back to 2010.
Benchmark Treasuries were little changed Monday, with the 10-year note yield at 1.97 percent as of 6:33 a.m. in London, according to Bloomberg Bond Trader data. The price of the 1.625 percent security due in February 2026 was 96 7/8.
The 2016 bond rally is being driven by the unprecedented monetary easing that central bankers in Europe and Japan have undertaken to revive their economies. The ECB surprised investors last week by lowering its deposit rate to minus 0.4 percent, increasing its bond buying and incorporating company debt as part of its purchases. In February, the BOJ added negative rates to its quantitative-easing program.
US yields will probably diverge from those in Europe and Japan, said Peter Jolly, the Sydney-based head of market research at National Australia Bank Ltd., the nation’s biggest lender by assets.

‘No Upside Pressure’
“In Europe and Japan, there’s no upside pressure on yields,” Jolly said. “In the case of the United States, we do see upside pressure. We think that the Federal Reserve will come back and raise interest rates a couple times this year.”
The probability the Fed will
increase its benchmark at last
once this year is about 77 percent, futures prices compiled by Bloomberg
indicate.
Morgan Stanley, one of the 22 primary dealers that trade with the Fed and underwrite the US debt, has been advising investors to buy bonds this year, saying in a January report that “the bull market is here.”
Morgan Stanley is an American multinational financial services corporation headquartered in the Morgan Stanley Building, Midtown Manhattan, New York City. Stanley operates in 42 countries and has more than 1300 offices and 60,000 employees.

Leave a Reply

Send this to a friend