Turmoil In Government Bonds Reflects Deep Uncertainty About Economic Growth

 | Nov 09, 2021 11:45

The big story last week was how hedge funds, which amplify their gains and losses with leverage, got burned as long-term Treasury yields declined and shorter-term yields rose, flattening the yield curve and upsetting their bets.

The biggest swing came on the long end as bond investors—in one of those good news is bad news developments—took a better-than-expected US jobs report to mean continued economic growth that would entail rising inflation and increases in interest rates. Which in turn would drive lower growth, pushing investors back into the longer-term bonds, raising prices and lowering yields.

At the same time, the move by the Federal Reserve to start tapering its bond purchases weighed on short-term prices, boosting yields. The combination narrowed the gap in yields.

The picture was further clouded by the Bank of England holding back from an interest-rate hike after its messaging had convinced investors there would be an increase, signaling a wave of monetary tightening by central banks around the world.

Yield on the UK 10-year bond plunged after the surprise Thursday decision by the Monetary Policy Committee.