Close Menu
Fund Focus News
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Trending
    • Inside Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund: What it bought and sold in April 2026; top 10 holdings revealed
    • Mutual Fund investors alert! CBDT circular clarifies how TDS will be applied on dividend after DDT removal
    • NFO Alert: Kotak and Groww launch new factor based funds. Should investors consider them?
    • Spot Bitcoin ETFs See Record 10-Day Outflow Streak, Analyst Calls It ‘Contrarian Indicator’
    • XRP news: Ripple-linked ETFs drew inflows last week as bitcoin, ether funds lost $2 billion
    • Mutual fund portfolio for young investors: Is a 4-fund mix sufficient? – Money News
    • Direxion files for 92 ETFs in a single shot, potentially setting a world record
    • Direxion files for 92 ETFs in a single batch, potentially setting a world record
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Fund Focus News
    • Home
    • Bonds
    • ETFs
    • Funds
    • Investments
    • Mutual Funds
    • Property Investments
    • SIP
    Fund Focus News
    Home»Bonds»Don’t be beguiled by the apparent calm reigning in US bond markets
    Bonds

    Don’t be beguiled by the apparent calm reigning in US bond markets

    October 25, 2024


    Unlock the US Election Countdown newsletter for free

    The stories that matter on money and politics in the race for the White House

    Right now the world is watching America’s elections with bated breath. For while a new FT survey implies that Republican contender Donald Trump has a slim lead over vice-president Kamala Harris, the race seems set to remain on a knife edge until election day. But as pundits parse the polls, Paul Tudor Jones, the hedge fund luminary who first rose to fame by predicting the 1987 equity crash, thinks that investors would do better to watch something else — American bonds.

    He insists that neither candidate is “suited for the job ahead of them”, in terms of crafting policies that are credible to markets. Citing the economist Hyman Minsky’s observation that investors can ignore risks for ages until confidence suddenly cracks, he told CNBC this week that the “question is after this election will we have a Minsky moment here in the United States and US debt markets?” He added: “What they’re [both] talking about is fiscally impossible, financially impossible.” Indeed, he is now so alarmed that he has dumped all US fixed income products and is shorting long-dated Treasuries too.

    Should other investors follow Tudor Jones? At first glance it might seem not. Overall market conditions, after all, appear calm. So much so that the IMF noted on its blog this week that its “standardised measure of [market] volatility has drifted far below geopolitical risk measures”.

    Meanwhile the bid-to-cover ratio in Treasury auctions (the total amount of bids divided by the total amount of Treasury debt offered for sale) “hasn’t moved very much in the past several years”, as a Brookings report notes. And while US long market rates have risen, creating a steeper yield curve, neither the rate levels or term premium look extreme.

    Some content could not load. Check your internet connection or browser settings.

    But there are at least three factors that threaten this calm. The first, as Torsten Slok of Apollo notes, is that America’s government deficits are now so big that the ratio of debt to GDP is about to smash through the 100 per cent level, and could soon hit 200 per cent. This means the US government will have to roll over $9tn of debt (or a third of the total) in the next year, expanding auction sizes by some 30 per cent.

    Second, debt issuance is exploding just as the footprint of price-sensitive investors is swelling. That is partly because the Federal Reserve has stopped quantitative easing, and is no longer gobbling up bonds. But the other issue, the IMF notes, is that hedge funds are buying so many bonds that they now own 11 per cent of the market, up from 3 per cent in 2021.

    Dealer banks’ holdings have also risen in this period, the IMF adds, from 2 to 5 per cent. That is moderately reassuring since it suggests that dealers can still act as market makers, in a crunch. But that dealers’ footprint is far smaller than before 2008 — and half that of those potentially flighty funds. And while foreign Treasury holdings recently hit a record high of $8.3tn (which seems reassuring), the third, fourth and fifth-largest source of demand came from the UK, Luxembourg and the Cayman Islands. This is less reassuring, since it is probably driven by hedge funds too.

    The third issue is policy uncertainty. If Harris becomes president, we can expect her to unleash more so-called Bidenomics, a mix of social spending and investment. The Penn Wharton business school estimates this would add another $2tn to the debt. But if Trump wins, all bets are off. According to Penn Wharton, his administration will aim to unleash a fiscal package that will add at least $4tn to the primary deficit, while also weakening the dollar, undermining the independence of the Federal Reserve and introduce tariff and immigration measures that could be highly inflationary.

    That would be risky for bonds in any circumstances. But it looks doubly explosive at a time of expanding auctions.

    But some of Trump’s advisers, such as Scott Bessent or Kevin Hassett, have told the FT that Trump would actually pursue entirely prudent measures. And his pledged trillion-dollar fiscal packages will be a pipe dream unless the Republicans win the House and Senate.

    The key point, then, is that it is hard to use any past economic model to predict what a Trump victory might do to Treasuries. And what makes predictions even more difficult is that recent technical “changes to the yield curve are fairly unique and could lead to indeterminacy in investors’ asset allocation and more volatile markets”, as the IMF says.

    In plain English this means that the US election is not just tossing us into uncharted waters for the political economy and legal system — it is pushing us into unfathomable territory for Treasuries too. Maybe America’s reserve currency status means it can keep defying financial gravity. But I think it would be deeply foolish to ignore Tudor Jones. After all, it takes a hedgie to know what a herd of hedgies might do if the outcome of the election does indeed lead to a new crisis of American confidence.

    gillian.tett@ft.com

    Video: America divided: the women who vote for Trump | FT Film



    Source link

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Posts

    The debt machine of Inter Milan: Bonds and financial engineering

    May 28, 2026

    Premium Bonds provider NS&I sending letters to 37,500 households from this week

    May 28, 2026

    Banco Santander and NatWest sell record AT1 bonds with 10-year calls, locking in cheap capital

    May 28, 2026
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    The Shifting Landscape of Art Investment and the Rise of Accessibility: The London Art Exchange

    September 11, 2023

    Charlie Cobham: The Art Broker Extraordinaire Maximizing Returns for High Net Worth Clients

    February 12, 2024

    The Unyielding Resilience of the Art Market: A Historical and Contemporary Perspective

    November 19, 2023

    Inside Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund: What it bought and sold in April 2026; top 10 holdings revealed

    May 31, 2026
    Don't Miss
    Mutual Funds

    Inside Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund: What it bought and sold in April 2026; top 10 holdings revealed

    May 31, 2026

    India’s largest open-ended equity mutual fund, the Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund, manages assets worth…

    Mutual Fund investors alert! CBDT circular clarifies how TDS will be applied on dividend after DDT removal

    May 30, 2026

    NFO Alert: Kotak and Groww launch new factor based funds. Should investors consider them?

    May 30, 2026

    Spot Bitcoin ETFs See Record 10-Day Outflow Streak, Analyst Calls It ‘Contrarian Indicator’

    May 30, 2026
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo
    EDITOR'S PICK

    SIKA STRENGTHENS GLOBAL PRESENCE WITH STRATEGIC INVESTMENTS ACROSS ALL REGIONS

    June 17, 2025

    XRP, Dogecoin (DOGE) Exchange-Traded funds (ETFs) Debut in U.S.

    September 18, 2025

    Regulators are holding back digital bond adoption

    August 6, 2024
    Our Picks

    Inside Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund: What it bought and sold in April 2026; top 10 holdings revealed

    May 31, 2026

    Mutual Fund investors alert! CBDT circular clarifies how TDS will be applied on dividend after DDT removal

    May 30, 2026

    NFO Alert: Kotak and Groww launch new factor based funds. Should investors consider them?

    May 30, 2026
    Most Popular

    🔥Juve target Chukwuemeka, Inter raise funds, Elmas bid in play 🤑

    August 20, 2025

    💵 Libra responds after Flamengo takes legal action and ‘freezes’ funds

    September 26, 2025

    ₹9000 monthly SIP can help you retire at 45 with ₹2 lakh monthly pension

    May 5, 2026
    © 2026 Fund Focus News
    • Get In Touch
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.