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Global bond rout puts Australia’s central bank on frontline

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SYDNEY: The bond market rout is starting to test the resolve of global central banks, and nowhere is that clearer than in Australia, where policymake­rs are struggling to defend their yield targets.

The Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) bought A$5bil (Us$4bil) of bonds yesterday, matching the record last March when it began quantitati­ve easing. That hasn’t stopped the targeted three-year bond yield from hitting a twomonth high, while a selloff that began in New Zealand has also widened to Treasuries and Japanese debt.

“The Australian bond market is in many ways caught in the crossfire of what’s happening in US Treasuries,” said Chamath De Silva, a portfolio manager at Betashares Holdings in Sydney and a former fixed-income trader at the central bank. “I don’t see it as the market deliberate­ly testing the RBA so much as global central bank dovishness in general.”

A US$9 trillion rescue mission by central banks to haul the global economy out of its coronaviru­s recession is being tested by inflation bets that are threatenin­g their ability to keep borrowing costs down. The intensifyi­ng bond rout is forcing a rising tally of money managers to scale back market exposures while Wall Street strategist­s pare back their bullish playbooks.

Australia’s 10-year yield is poised for the highest close since 2019, having surged more than 70 basis points this year. The benchmark Treasury yield has hit 1.4%, and is headed for the steepest monthly advance since the November 2016 bond rout set off by President Donald Trump’s election win.

Yields in every major market have jumped. Policymake­rs are trying to push back against the rising tide of yields, from Fed speakers stressing they will look through short-term inflation spikes to European Central Bank president Christine Lagarde “closely monitoring” government debt yields. The Bank of Korea warned it’ll intervene in the market if borrowing costs jump and the Reserve Bank of India is deploying a range of tools in the face of a market revolt.

That’s not enough to stop the growing challenge from bond traders, who are pushing the limits of central banks’ patience while debt auctions are starting to struggle. Investment firms including Blackrock Inc’s research arm and Aberdeen Standard Investment­s are retreating from government bonds.

In Australia, skepticism has grown that the RBA will maintain its guidance to keep borrowing costs steady into 2024. That’s been highlighte­d by the unravellin­g of a popular trade based on selling April 2024 bonds and buying November 2024 notes in anticipati­on that the central bank’s target will shift to the later maturity debt.

Australia’s rapid economic recovery has emboldened traders, as the country suppresses Covid-19 and massive stimulus encourages households to spend and firms to hire. A further boost has come from the price of iron ore, Australia’s largest export, which crashed through US$170 a tonne and is closing in on a record.

Yet, there is wide disconnect with policymake­rs expectatio­ns.

RBA governor Philip Lowe does not anticipate any rapid recovery in inflation. He noted that before the pandemic, when unemployme­nt had a 4 in front of it, it still failed to generate the sort of wage gains that would be needed to return CPI sustainabl­y to the 2%-3% target. Australia’s most recent annual inflation reading was just 0.9% and the jobless rate stands at 6.4%.

The central bank is expected to keep policy settings unchanged when it meets on Tuesday.

New Zealand bonds kicked off the rout in Asia yesterday after the government announced it will require the central bank to take account of house prices when it sets interest rates. The losses accelerate­d as the bid-to-cover ratio at an auction dropped to the lowest since 2012.

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