Business Day

‘Inflation tourism’ rise as shortages fan fears

- Abhinav Ramnarayan and Tommy Wilkes

Britain looks like one place where investors urgently need a hedge against inflation, yet many say trade in domestic bonds designed with that in mind is overstatin­g the price pressure so much that they have become too expensive.

Inflation-linked government bonds come into favour when prices rise because their principal and interest payments go up and down as prices change.

Interest in them in Britain — including from what one securities trader dubbed “inflation tourists”— has soared as labour and goods shortages have fanned inflation fears.

Even in normal times, British linkers enjoy huge demand from local pension funds, especially the defined benefit schemes that promise to account for inflation when they pay out. That drives yields lower and raises breakevens — implied inflation rate.

They pay a return linked to the retail price index (RPI) rather than the consumer price index (CPI) used by the Bank of England (BoE). Because the RPI tends to be 0.8% to 1% above CPI, inflation expectatio­ns must be accordingl­y dialled down.

But even after accounting for that gap, fund managers say they are being forced to seek the same protection overseas as the UK market — with investors positioned for lower inflation also already squeezed out — becomes ever more detached from fundamenta­ls.

One-year indexed linked gilts currently imply a 5.8% inflation rate while five-year linkers show it at 4%.

The BoE expects consumer price inflation to briefly top 4% in late 2021 and then subside.

The poor value for money in the linker market is especially the case, investors say, given recent aggressive repricing of tighter BoE policy in the British government bond market.

Two-year UK yields are up 42 basis points in the past month and a half, while US two-year yields are 14 basis points higher and German equivalent­s just five basis points.

UK two-year forward inflation swaps predict a 4% inflation rate, double the BoE target and up from around 3.83% at the start of September.

The US and eurozone equivalent­s, at 2.77% and 1.78%, have moved remain much closer to their central banks even’ inflation more, but targets. both

According to one inflation securities trader at a major bank, part of the breakeven surge is down to “inflation tourists ”— investors not typically involved in the market but who suddenly want protection.

That has exacerbate­d the demand-supply imbalance in a market where about £1.7-trillion of inflation-linked mostly pension fund liabilitie­s chase products worth less than £500bn.

“That sort of camp adds pressure for breakevens to go higher and that typically means headline inflation will start peaking and then reversing,” the trader added.

Assets in sterling inflationl­inked bond funds domiciled in Europe — a proxy for the wider linker market — reached €16.9bn in August, just shy of the previous month’s record high, Morningsta­r data shows. In the first eight months of 2021, they received €876m of net cash, the biggest haul since 2017.

Fahad Kamal, chief investment officer at Kleinwort Hambros, said inflation expectatio­ns had been “massively above what actually happened” for years.

Slowing growth and demographi­cs “are far bigger forces than the short-term supply issues which markets get excited about.

“Likely, it is overstatin­g inflation by a couple of percentage points, based on historical averages,” said Kamal, who has turned to US securities for a “far better gauge of global inflation pressures”. Others including Savvas Savouri, chief economist at Toscafund Asset Management, say the CPI basket itself needs overhaulin­g as it does not account for the deflationa­ry impact of technology. While linkers imply CPI of 3.2% in five years time, he expects actual readings to be 2%-2.5%. /Reuters

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