National Post

Thank record-high stock prices for flat U.S. bond yield curve

- Sid Verma and Liz Capo McCormick

• Bond strategist­s have a new favourite culprit for the relentless flattening of the U. S. yield curve: the stock market.

The gap between shortand l ong- dated Treasury yields fell to a fresh 10- year low this week, extending the trend that has dominated the world’s largest bond market for weeks.

One reason the flattening dynamic has room to run is a shift in asset allocation among money managers in favour of long-dated Treasuries, according to a growing chorus of strategist­s.

With the S& P 500 Index hitting another record, and year- end only weeks away, pension funds and investors committed to a balanced portfolio may want to lock in equity gains and add fixed- income, according to Deutsche Bank. Of course, it’s not exactly an ideal time to be purchasing 30-year Treasuries either — they yield 2.75 per cent, down from as high as 3.21 per cent in March. But the duration at least serves as a hedge if the stock- market rally comes to an end.

“A substantia­l amount of flattening — at least on the back on the back end — is the result of rising value at risk from equities,” says Thomas Tzitzouris, fixed- income research chief at Strategas Research Partners.

“When e quities dri f t higher to new highs, and volatility stays low in the yield space, buying bonds seems to follow.”

The demand for duration lately has moved practicall­y in lockstep with stockmarke­t rallies, according to research from Ian Pollick, global head of rates strategy at Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce.

The correlatio­n is close to 1 between changes in major equity market indexes and the amount of zero- coupon Treasury securities ( known as strips) held by investors, he wrote Wednesday in a note. Pensions and other asset- liability managers are among the biggest buyers of those instrument­s.

“Monetizing equity market gains and moving into fixed income is part of the pension recipe — especially considerin­g U. S.- based pension funds face larger costs for holding unfunded obligation­s,” Pollick wrote.

The largest U. S. pension fund is just one example of the de- risking trend. The California Public Employees’ Retirement System is mulling a reduction in its stock allocation to as little as 34 per cent from 50 per cent in favour of bonds.

To be sure, strategist­s for months have been citing the allocation shift among realmoney funds. That means it may only be one of many reasons for the accelerate­d flattening of the yield curve recently.

And f or all the handwringi­ng about equity valuations, U. S. stocks are in the throes of a spirited bull run, propped up by strong earnings and abundant inflows — a buffer for the stock market if portfolio rebalancin­g gathers steam.

To Steve Feiss at brokerdeal­er Government Perspectiv­es LLC, the shift may pick up heading into the final weeks of 2017, with the total return on the S& P 500 at 18 per cent, versus 6.4 per cent for the Bloomberg Barclays Global Aggregate Index.

“I firmly believe that stocks up so much year to date will be a source of some fixed-income flows as profits continue to be harvested,” said Feiss, an interest- rate strategist in Marlboro, N. J.

“Eventually stock jockeys too have to realize this.”

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