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    1. Are bonds attractive?

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    Are bonds attractive?

    25/05/2022

    Jordan Jackson

    As recession risks remain elevated amidst an uncertain outlook, stepping back into bonds as a portfolio hedge against an economic downturn seems appropriate.

    Jordan Jackson

    Global Market Strategist

    Listen to On the Minds of Investors

    25/05/2022

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    Jordan Jackson:                 

    Hi, my name is Jordan Jackson, Global Market Strategist at JP Morgan Asset Management, and welcome to On the Minds of Investors. Today's post asked the question, "Are bonds attractive?" The spike in yields to the first five months of this year has led to some very ugly returns in fixed income. The Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index is down 9.5% year to date.

    You'd have to go back to 1980 when the Federal Reserve lifted rates from 14% to 19% for a drawdown of this magnitude. Generally, these painful periods in bond markets have historically been in years when the Federal Reserve is or communicating it will tighten policy. 1980, 1994, 1999, 2013, and 2018 are all years that Central Bank was raising rates, with the outlier being the 2013 temper tantrum.

    The silver lining? Bad years tend to be followed by really good years in bonds, as the Fed eases up and rate volatility comes down. For bond investors, the move higher in treasury rates and the widening in credit spreads has led to some of the most attractive yield levels in recent history. As shown, current yields across a host of different fixed income sectors are at the highest level relative to recent history.

    And given the very tight relationship between current yield and subsequent performance, bond investors can expect decent returns from the income coupon these assets will generate over the next few years. Moreover, the move in yields now suggests bonds can provide a buffer in a market correction or an economic downturn. Consider this: The current yield on the nominal US 10-year treasury yield is around 2.8% while the pandemic low was 0.5% on March 9th, 2020. If the yield were to drop back to 0.5%, the US 10-year would post a price and total return of roughly 22% and 25% respectively.

    To be clear, we are not calling for a recession. However, as recession risks remain elevated amidst an uncertain outlook, stepping back into bonds as a portfolio hedge against an economic downturn seems appropriate.

    The spike in yields through the first five months of this year has led to some very ugly returns in fixed income. The Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond index is down -9.5% year-to-date; you’d have to go back to 1980 when the Federal Reserve (the Fed) lifted rates from 14% to 19%, for a drawdown of this magnitude. Generally, these painful periods in bonds markets have historically been in years when the Federal Reserve is, or communicating it will, tighten policy; 1980, 1994, 1999, 2013, and 2018 are all years the central bank was raising rates with the outlier being the 2013 taper tantrum. The silver lining? Bad years tend to be followed by really good years in bonds, as the Fed eases up and rate volatility comes down.

    For bond investors, the move higher in Treasury rates and the widening in credit spreads has led to some of the most attractive yield levels in recent history. As shown, current yields across a host of different fixed income sectors are at the highest level relative to recent history and given the very tight relationship between current yields and subsequent performance, bond investors can expect decent returns from the income/coupon these assets will generate over the next few years.

    Moreover, the move in yields now suggests bonds can provide a buffer in a market correction or an economic downturn. Consider this, the current yield on the nominal U.S. 10-year Treasury yield is around 2.80% while the pandemic low was 0.50% on March 9, 2020. If the yield were to drop back to 0.50%, the U.S. 10-year would post a price and total return of roughly 22% and 25%, respectively. To be clear, we are not calling for a recession, however, as recession risks remain elevated amidst an uncertain outlook, stepping back into bonds as a portfolio hedge against an economic downturn seems appropriate.   

    Yield-to-worst across fixed income sectors
    Basis points, past 10 years

    A chart showing yield to worst across fixed income sectors.

    Source: Bloomberg, FactSet, J.P. Morgan Credit Research, J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Indices used are Bloomberg except for emerging market debt and leveraged loans: EMD ($): J.P. Morgan EMIGLOBAL Diversified Index; EMD (LCL): J.P. Morgan GBI-EM Global Diversified Index; EM Corp.: J.P. Morgan CEMBI Broad Diversified; Leveraged loans: JPM Leveraged Loan Index; Euro IG: Bloomberg Euro Aggregate Corporate Index; Euro HY: Bloomberg Pan-European High Yield Index. All sectors shown are yield-to-worst except for Municipals, which is based on the tax-equivalent yield-to-worst, and Leveraged loans, which are based on spread to 3Y takeout. EM (LCL) spread-to-worst is calculated using the index yield less the YTM on the 5-year U.S. Treasury bellwether index. 

    Guide to the Markets – U.S. Data are as of May 24, 2022.


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