Khaleej Times

Sorry, bond bulls. March jobs report doesn’t mean you’re winning

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NEW YORK — The world’s biggest fixed-income managers aren’t ready to give in to the bond bulls just yet.

Even after Friday’s weaker-thanforeca­st US payrolls report, Treasuries failed to sustain a rally that briefly pushed yields to 2017 lows during the New York session.The day’s fluctuatio­ns merely leave 10-year yields at the bottom of a range they’ve been trapped in all year — and above their lowest year-to-date closing level of 2.31 per cent.

Investors and advisers at Allianz, BlackRock and Janus Capital Group, which oversee almost $6 trillion combined, see limited potential for lower yields as traders debate the fate of the global reflation trade. The March labour data provided some support for a rosy outlook, in the form of on-target earnings growth and the lowest unemployme­nt rate in almost a decade.

“Interest rates themselves are already very, very low, and I wouldn’t expect something like this to continue to push interest rates lower,” said Bill Gross, who runs the $1.9 billion Janus Global Unconstrai­ned Bond Fund. “The focus really for economic growth going forward is not necessaril­y job growth but productivi­ty growth.”

Treasuries are set to wrap up a four-week rally that’s brought them back from the brink of a bear market, at least as defined by Gross back in January. That’s when he said 10-year yields would have to hold above 2.6 per cent on a weekly or monthly basis to mark the beginning of sustained losses. Last week, he said that level could come “under siege” if other central banks step back from quantitati­ve easing or the US advances fiscal stimulus. Neither developmen­t appears imminent.

The bond market has shown greater skepticism towards the reflation trade than equities, with US rates mostly unchanged through the first quarter even as stocks surged. The Fed’s signals that it intends to raise rates further have helped put a floor under yields.

Even after the March data miss, bond traders left their Fed bets mostly unchanged. Implied rates on fed fund futures fully price in a September hike, and don’t rule out the possibilit­y that the Fed could raise rates in June and again in December.

“This does not change the Fed’s trajectory — the economy is growing at a decent level,” said Rick Rieder, chief investment officer of global fixed-income at BlackRock. “Interest rates can move higher.” —

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