Fund managers have cautioned on shorting US Treasuries despite the Federal Reserve's plans to hike rates and taper its $4.5trn balance sheet, pointing to overcrowding and conditions remaining "a long way off" interest rate normalisation.
A JP Morgan Chase & Co survey on 2 October found 44% of clients had placed short positions in Treasuries against their benchmarks. This is the highest number since 2006, and a jump from 30% the previous week. Since hitting a low for 2017 of 2.05% on 8 September, prior to the Fed's announcement of plans to begin its balance sheet reduction, 10-year Treasury yields have since risen to 2.32% as at 23 November. This is close to the 2.4% yield barrier flagged by veteran bond investor Bill Gross as the threshold for a possible bear market in bonds (see graph below). Furthermore, the yiel...
To continue reading this article...
Join Investment Week for free
- Unlimited access to real-time news, analysis and opinion from the investment industry, including the Sustainable Hub covering fund news from the ESG space
- Get ahead of regulatory and technological changes affecting fund management
- Important and breaking news stories selected by the editors delivered straight to your inbox each day
- Weekly members-only newsletter with exclusive opinion pieces from leading industry experts
- Be the first to hear about our extensive events schedule and awards programmes