Interest Rate Ups and Downs

Good Morning Ladies and Gentlemen

 

„If term premiums rise, they could do some of the work of cooling the economy for us, leaving less need for additional monetary policy tightening.“

 Lorie K. Logan, president and chief executive officer
of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas

 

What is happening?

Although it seems that the inflation momentum has been broken, there has been a massive sell-off in the bond markets over the past few weeks and interest rates have risen. The term premium shot up, even though inflation was mainly in line with expectations. Many market participants were surprised by this interest rate tsunami and lost money on their long bond exposure.

A question of demand and supply

Monetary authorities are shrinking or trying to shrink their respective balance sheets, i.e. they are increasingly dropping out as buyers of government bonds. The Fed, for example, is cutting its mountain of Treasuries by USD 50 bn per month. This means that high sovereign issuance is meeting less and less demand, and finally, investors are asking for ever higher compensation for the risk of investing in long-term bonds. The yield on ten-year U.S. Treasuries briefly scratched the 5% mark last Friday.

The war in the Middle East’s influence

However, an external event has broken the interest rate trend since last weekend. The war in the Middle East has led to a flight to safe havens, and government bond yields have thus returned somewhat from their highs.

The difficulty

Ladies and Gentlemen, the difficulty for global monetary authorities will be taming inflation without risking economic calamities. That is quite a task, and as we have learned in last week’s „Stefan’s Weekly“, in an ideal world and theory, rising interest rates should tame inflation, while government spending on infrastructure projects and the like should prevent the economy from stalling and yet, unfortunately, the theory is not always ideal.

Possible Conclusion

If we go back to Lorie K. Logan’s quote, „If term premiums rise, they could do some of the work of cooling the economy for us, leaving less need for additional monetary policy tightening“ at the beginning of today’s „Stefan’s Weekly“ we may conclude that the market is effectively doing the Fed’s work. The Fed would need to tighten less or tighten no more; in other words, I believe there is a fair chance that no more rate hikes are coming. Interesting, no?

Your point of view

Ladies and Gentlemen, please share your opinion with me, but please remember (instead of hitting the reply button) to send your messages to: smk@incrementum.li.

Many thanks, indeed!

I wish you an excellent start to the day and a wonderful weekend!

Yours truly,

Stefan M. Kremeth
CEO & Head of Wealth Management
Incrementum AG – we love managing assets

Tel.: +423 237 26 60
Cell: +41 79 303 48 39
Im alten Riet 102
9494 Schaan/Liechtenstein
Mail: smk@incrementum.li