Saturday 30 September 2023

Divergence in Volatile Global Bond Yields - vrk100 - 30Sep2023

Divergence in Volatile Global Bond Yields 
 

 

 
(This is for information purposes only. This should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice even though the author is a CFA Charterholder. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.)  


Global bond yields surged in the past one month with market volatility rising globally. The Federal Reserve, central bank of the US, last week hinted that it would continue to raise interest rates to anchor inflationary expectations in the US. After 18 months of increasing rates, the Fed last week held interest rates the same.

This is seen by markets as hawkish prompting bond investors to sell bonds with reverberations touching stocks and precious metals. 
 
When central banks raise interest rates, bond prices fall. When prices fall, bond yields rise. Bond yields and prices have inverse relationship.
 
Even though consumer price inflation (CPI) rates have come down in recent months, major central banks continue to raise benchmark interest rates with a few nations holding them steady.
 
(article continues below)
 
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Real interest rates

Table 1 shows 10-year bond yields, policy interest rates, inflation and real interest rates of 15 major nations. 

Compared to six months ago, more countries have positive real interest rates. The US, Brazil, the Netherlands, Russia, China and Switzerland have positive real interest rates as of now -- this is because central banks continue to hike rates even as inflation rates are down.

Turkey is bizarre here. It decreased interest rates in the first half of this year even as inflation rose to as high as 85 percent. After Erdogan re-elected as president in May2023, Turkey started increasing interest rates to control inflation.



Inflation rates
 
Table 2 delineates changes in consumer price inflation (CPI) rates in the past six months.

Except India and Turkey, major nations have been able to control inflation to some extent. Severe monetary tightening seems to have helped in anchoring inflationary expectations in these nations.
 
In the US, CPI inflation rate is down 234 basis points (100 basis points equal one percentage point), while in the UK it is down by 370 basis points. 

Though inflation seems to be under control for now, central banks are expected to maintain their hawkish monetary policy stance for longer period of time. 




Divergence in bond yields

In the past one month, global bond yields spiked as the US Fed, the UK's Bank of England and Euro area's European Central Bank (ECB) are showing no signs of relenting in rate hikes.


However, there is a divergence when one compares current bond yields with those six months back. Most the the Western economies, except Switzerland, have shown increase in bond yields -- while those in Asia have shown decrease in bond yields.

Table 3 below shows the divergent trend in bond yields between developed markets and emerging economies in the past six months.
 
For example, the 10-year US Treasury yield rose by 111 basis points, with the Fed hiking its federal funds rate by 50 basis points (see Table 4 below) in the six-month period.  

Australia's 10-year bond yield surged by 124 basis points with its central bank increasing its benchmark interest rate by 50 basis points.

Turkey 10-year bond yield rose by 15.21 percentage points, as Turkey seems to be failing in controlling inflation with its queer monetary policy stance (it decreased interest rates when inflation was north of 80 percent at the start of 2023). 
 
However, in recent months, Turkey reversed its policy stance and started increasing its rates.

The divergence in bond yields between developed and developing economies is due to the expectation that major Asian economies may not further increase interest rates, as opposed to developed economies which are expected to continue with their hawkish stance.

One more reason could be the differences in level of government debt. Government debt in China and India, is much lower compared to those in the Western hemisphere.
 
Countries with high debt-GDP ratio tend to dishonour their sovereign debt -- so, to compensate for the higher risk, bond investors tend to demand higher yields.

For example, debt-GDP ratio in the US is more than 125 percent whereas in China and India, it is 77 and 89 percent respectively. The debt-GDP ratio in Euro area and Japan are 91 and 263 percent respectively. The UK, Italy and France have debt-GDP ratios north of 100. 

However, bond investors globally tend to ignore high debt-GDP ratios in the US and Western Europe for other considerations. But nobody knows how long this optimistic situation continues for these nations.





Benchmark interest rates
 
Most countries in the sample had increased their benchmark interest rates in the past six months. While Japan and India held their rates, China and Brazil decreased their rates slightly.

China is battling an economic slowdown in recent quarters. It is unable to provide a boost to global economic growth, as was the trend in the past 20 or 25 years. 
 
China's economic policies seem to be in reverse gear in recent years, with Beijing turning its attention to over-regulation of big technology firms based in China. Its real estate sector is in doldrums -- for example, Chinese property developer Evergrande declared bankruptcy last month.
 
China's population growth too has slowed down with women fertility rates down to 1.2 in 2021 as per World Bank data. (a fertility rate of 2.1 -- that is, 2.1 births per woman -- is considered as replacement rate, below which population will start to shrink).

Table 4 below reveals the changes in central bank interest rates in the past six months:
 

 
 
Summary

Beyond a point, higher bond yields tend to be negative for stock markets -- because higher bond yields entail increased cost of capital for households and businesses.

Major central banks, like, the US Fed, the UK's Bank of England and Euro area's European Central Bank are still hinting at further interest rate hikes in order to bring down the interest rates to their target rates. These nations are still far away from achieving their target inflation rate of 2 percent.

Financial markets seem to be battling between fears of a recession (defined as two back-to-back quarters of negative economic growth) in the US, the UK and the euro area; and the prospect of further interest rate hikes.

However, rising crude oil prices are telling a different story. Some experts are of the opinion that crude oil prices may do well amidst global turmoil -- as Saudi Arabia and Russia announced further output cuts and oil inventories are lower.
 
Maybe, it is time to be cautious on risky assets in the next quarter.

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References:

TE bond yields

TE interest rates

TE CPI inflation rates

TE world data

 

Additional data from Trading Economics (all data as of 30Sep2023):

 





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Global Market Data 30Sep2023
 
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Analysis of Nifty 100 Low Volatility 100 Index
 
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Short Opinion on HDFC Bank
 
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Weblinks and Investing

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Disclosure:  I've vested interested in Indian stocks and other investments. It's safe to assume I've interest in the financial instruments / products discussed, if any.

Disclaimer: The analysis and opinion provided here are only for information purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Investors should consult their own financial advisers before making any investments. The author is a CFA Charterholder with a vested interest in financial markets. 

CFA Charter credentials  - CFA Member Profile

CFA Badge

 

He blogs at:

https://ramakrishnavadlamudi.blogspot.com/

https://www.scribd.com/vrk100

X (Twitter) @vrk100  

Global Market Data 30Sep2023 - vrk100 - 30Sep2023

Global Market Data 30Sep2023

 

 
 
(This is for information purposes only. This should not be construed as a recommendation or investment advice even though the author is a CFA Charterholder. Please consult your financial adviser before taking any investment decision. Safe to assume the author has a vested interest in stocks / investments discussed if any.)  


(please look at the blog dated 16Jan2023  for data from 2012 to 2022)
 
(Please check update 19Nov2023 at the end of the blog)
 


Quarter-to-date global market data, as on 30 September 2023, of stocks, bonds, currencies and commodities is as follows: 
 
Table 1: (please click on the image to view better)

 

For the quarter ending 30Sep2023, global stocks are mild with Nasdaq Composite and S&P 500 indices losing 4.1 and 3.6 percent respectively. European and Asian indices too witnessed falls of between 2.9 and 5.8 percent during the quarter.
 
But the outlier markets are the UK and Indian indices. The benchmark FTSE index is up 1 percent and Nifty 50 and BSE Midcap indices are up by 2.3 and 12.4 percent respectively. The mid- and small-cap stocks have been doing well in India in the past two quarters.
 
(story continues below)

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Related Blogs: 

Global Market Data 2012 to 2022 

Global Market Data 31Mar2023

Global Market Data 31Dec2022

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The steep rise in US bond yields have rattled stock markets globally. The 10-year US Treasury yield rose by 74 basis points during the Jul-Sep2023 quarter, while Indian 10-year yield showed an increase of just 10 basis points in the same period. (100 basis points equal one percentage point)

Crude oil prices have shown massive increase with Nymex rising by 28.8 percent and Brent rising by 26.4 percent -- driven by Saudi Arabia and Russia announcing further output cuts, lower inventories and resilient demand.

Gold and silver are weak during the quarter, while Bitcoin fell by 11.6 percent.

On the currency front, the US dollar has strengthened against major currencies, with the dollar index (DXY) gaining 3.2 percent during the quarter.
 
 
 
Year-to-date (past 9-month returns) global market data as on 30Sep2023 are presented below:

Table 2: (please click on the image to view better) 
 

Year-to-date, Nasdaq Composite and Nikkei 225 have done well with gains of 26.3 and 22.1 percent respectively between 31Dec2022 and 30Sep2023.

Meanwhile, Shanghai Composite barely budged and Hang Seng lost 10 percent of its value. In India, Nifty 50 gained 8.5 percent -- but the biggest gain is for BSE Midcap with a gain of 27.8 percent.

The US 10-year Treasury yield gained 70 basis points, with US bonds losing their value for second year running after the 2022 bond rout

YTD, Nymex (WTI) crude gained 12.7 percent, while gold is muted with a gain of 1.9 percent. Silver lost 7.4 percent, while Bitcoin gained 62.5 percent after its 2022 debacle. 

The US dollar index gained 2.6 percent -- the biggest gain for the USD is against the Japanese Yen with USD gaining 13.9 percent versus the JPY.

The Chinese Yuan (RMB) has suffered currency depreciation versus the US dollar during 2023. China is often accused of currency manipulation.


To Sum Up

One surprising item is the resilience of crypto currencies, like, Bitcoin and Ethereum in 2023. It may be recalled they faced a rout in 2022. Their recovery in 2023 indicates that these crypto assets and currencies still have more room for upside amidst global turmoil with higher and unsustainable government debt in major economies.

The crypto traders and investors believe that crypto assets are likely to work as a hedge against currency debasement by central banks with fiat currencies. But the insane volatility of crypto currencies is still a worry for such investors.
 
The rise of crude oil prices is a setback for oil-importing countries like India, which is highly dependent on oil imports. There are still fears of a US recession with the US Federal Reserve hinting further interest rate hikes in the US. 
 
In the past one month, global bond yields have surged. Rising bond yields may again slow down the stock markets, which have recovered this year after massive fall in 2022.

With the 10-year US Treasury yield at 4.58 percent, bond investors, who want to hold them for at least 12 to 18 months, might lock in at these higher yields despite fears of the US keeping interest rates 'higher for longer.'

However, investors need to watch the developments surrounding the high and unsustainable US government debt and fiscal deficit. On top of that, there is a looming government shutdown once again in the US.

Maybe, global asset markets need to brace for higher volatility in the next three months, with crude oil threatening to reach USD 100 per barrel in the next two or three weeks.

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P.S.: After the writing the blog on 30Sep2023, the following images / info are added for information:


update 19Nov2023: #YTD Year-to-date, the best performing asset is Bitcoin with a growth of 120 percent! Commodities are weak so far in 2023, but gold is up 8.4% YTD. India's Sensex is up only 8.1%; while S&P 500 is up 17.6%; Nasdaq is up 35%.
 
The narrative that India is going to be the best stock market does not stand when you look at the year-to-date data. Even Nikkei 225 and DAX 30 have done far better than Indian stock market so far in 2023.
 


 

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Read more:
 
India's Crude Oil Import Dependency Jumps under Modi
 
Analysis of Nifty 100 Low Volatility 100 Index
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets Aug2023
 
Short Opinion on HDFC Bank
 
Listed companies with no history of bonus shares
 
JP Morgan Guide to Markets Apr2023
 
Nexus Select Trust (Retail REIT) and Office REITs 
 
Listed Companies with Zero Promoter Holding Mar2023
 
Buyback Offers and Weblinks
 
Negative Cash Conversion Cycle and Negative Working Capital
 
Aspects of Shadow Banking System
 
Understanding Floating Rate Savings Bonds 2020 (Taxable)
 
Ipca Labs to Acquire Unichem Labs
 
Negative Impact of Debt Mutual Fund Tax Changes

Why Do Indian Equity Mutual Funds Always Disappoint Investors?
 
Weblinks and Investing

-------------------

 

Disclosure:  I've vested interested in Indian stocks and other investments. It's safe to assume I've interest in the financial instruments / products discussed, if any.

Disclaimer: The analysis and opinion provided here are only for information purposes and should not be construed as investment advice. Investors should consult their own financial advisers before making any investments. The author is a CFA Charterholder with a vested interest in financial markets. 

CFA Charter credentials  - CFA Member Profile

CFA Badge

 

He blogs at:

https://ramakrishnavadlamudi.blogspot.com/

https://www.scribd.com/vrk100

X (Twitter) @vrk100