Same Old Trick, New Inflation
Next set of macro-bailouts will swamp bonds...
OF COURSE it was promoted, and heavily, writes Gary Tanashian in his
Notes from the
Rabbit Hole.
But bews of Treasury bonds' death was greatly
exaggerated.
That is because here in the financial markets exists a great big herd eating the headlines every day,
week, month. Succumbing to the
popular news of the day.
Indeed, with my Continuum chart, you could say I was
in the vanguard of anti-bond
sentiment as an indicator I'd used to great effect for keeping cool during phases of inflationary hype
actually did break through in
2022. Bond bull over, new macro engaged.
The big picture monthly chart of the
30yr Treasury bond yield has
guided us well for many years.
In 2022 we were guided to a Treasury bond bear market, at the long end at
least.
With that bear
market we now know that what had been for decades no longer is. My strongly held theory is that both
fiscal (government) and monetary
(Fed) policymakers no longer have the tailwind of disinflationary signaling at their backs as they
attempt to inflate in the
future.
It's the picture of a market saturated with their policy shenanigans
that will be unlikely to comply
as had come to be expected circa 2001-2022.
However, in the interim as an
expected economic slowdown engages
traditional 60-40 portfolio dorks will act as they've always acted, in my opinion. They will buy bonds
(or if they've got the 60-40
set up, depend on that 40% weighting).
But the market for longer-term bonds, at
least, has gone big picture
bearish. So with bullish projections we are talking interim bullishness here and as yet, the long end is
no sure thing to
bull.
For what seems like forever I've held short-term Treasury bonds in the
0-3yr range along with a couple
direct short-term bonds, one of which has already matured and spit out its interest and gains on
principal. Not bad considering that
cash has also been paying income for so long now. The problem with cash is that its income will be
reduced when the Fed starts
cutting. Bonds will increase in value as their interest payments decline.
Anyway, here's a daily chart of 1
through 20+ year bond funds. 1-7 years are trending up, 7-10 years are sideways and 20+ years are
bouncing within a downtrend. This is
well in alignment with a coming recession and continued fade in inflationary macro
signaling.
It's all interim, in my opinion. I expect inflation to return, worse than
before.
But it's not
going to arrive because Trump bombed Iran, driving oil up. It's not going to arrive (meaningfully)
because of tariffs and trade wars.
Certain assets/markets will pop and drop due to supply/demand. But the next real inflation problem will
come when monetary and fiscal
policymakers attempt the next macro bailouts.
Same old parlor trick, much less
forgiving macro. That's my
bet.