Bond Traders Shift Focus to Fed as Trump Shadows the Outlook

19 hours ago

Share

(Bloomberg) -- In the bond market, Donald Trump’s first week, at least, turned out far less destabilizing than feared. Traders hope the same goes for the latest shift from the Federal Reserve.

Most Read from Bloomberg

The US central bank is widely expected to hold interest rates steady at the end of its two-day meeting on Wednesday, marking the first pause in the rate-cutting cycle it kicked off in September.

But yields have already jumped sharply since late last year as traders aggressively reset expectations for monetary policy on speculation that Trump’s policies will fan inflation pressures and pour fuel on an already resilient economy. That may prime the market for more relief if Fed Chair Jerome Powell underscores his typical data-dependent approach and leaves the market’s now modest rate-cut expectations intact.

“It’s going to be a year where the Fed can reduce interest rates twice, maybe once,” said Ashok Bhatia, co-chief investment officer for fixed income at Neuberger Berman, on Bloomberg TV. “If you get that from the Fed, plus a little bit of deficit stabilization, that is a pretty strong outcome for the bond market.”

The Treasury market has started to recover from what had been a deep selloff that pushed yields back toward the peaks hit in late 2023 and briefly threatened to stall the stock market’s record-hitting rally.

The turnaround began when the consumer price index release on Jan. 15 eased resurgent worries about inflation by coming in at a slightly slower-than-expected pace.

The gains held through Trump’s first week in office, when he held off on enacting any immediate tariff increases and indicated that he may seek more modest ones on Chinese imports than suggested during the campaign. That dialed back some angst about a sharp jump in import prices that would deliver another inflationary shock or unsettle the economy with a trade war.

“The rates market felt a little precarious about a week ago, and I would argue the CPI report and President Trump’s first week has taken the edge off,” said Priya Misra, portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management. She said Fed officials are “in a wait-and-see mode, and policy uncertainty remains, so I think they keep their options open.”

What Bloomberg strategists say...

“A strong labor market and rising inflation typically indicate climbing bond yields, especially at the longer end of the curve as vigilantes demand more risk premium. It also suggests the Federal Reserve may need to maintain higher rates for longer to combat potential inflationary pressures from a robust economy.”


background

Stay Ahead with StockBurger!

Real-time meme stock trends powered by social media insights. Be the first to know about new market waves.

hand