ADVERTISEMENT

Global Bonds Add Record $2.8 Trillion in Market Value This Month

Global bonds rebounded in November, adding a record $2.8 trillion in market value, as investors bet that central banks are getting a grip on inflation. But how long the party lasts is another matter.

U.S. one-hundred dollar banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)
U.S. one-hundred dollar banknotes are arranged for a photograph in Hong Kong, China. (Photographer: Paul Yeung/Bloomberg)

Global bonds rebounded in November, adding a record $2.8 trillion in market value, as investors bet that central banks are getting a grip on inflation. But how long the party lasts is another matter.

Government and investment-grade corporate debt securities have risen to a market value of $59.2 trillion from $56.4 trillion at the end of October, making for the biggest monthly increase in a Bloomberg index stretching back to 1990. The gauge -- which fell into a bear market in September -- rebounded after US inflation cooled more than expected and the Federal Reserve indicated a possible slowdown of aggressive rate hikes, buoying sentiment.

Global Bonds Add Record $2.8 Trillion in Market Value This Month

“We are starting to see a number of economic indicators that point to the fact that inflation has peaked or is peaking,” said Omar Slim, a fixed-income portfolio manager at PineBridge Investments in Singapore. While trading in US Treasuries is likely to be volatile amid economic data and Fed rhetoric, the bond market rally “has legs,” he said.

Expectations for a Fed pivot have grown ever since softer inflation data earlier this month spurred a massive relief rally across asset classes, reviving a bond market languishing in its worst rout in a generation. But with the threat of recession looming, a recovery won’t be smooth.

Strategists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. expect US and European corporate bond spreads -- which have recently narrowed -- to widen in the first quarter of 2023 as central banks continue to raise rates, before tightening again as a soft-landing for the US economy becomes clearer. They see US investment-grade corporate bond spreads peaking at 180 basis points and ending the year at 150 basis points.

Global Bonds Add Record $2.8 Trillion in Market Value This Month

For 2023, “we expect low, but positive, excess returns, while total returns will likely feature a far more pronounced improvement in performance” after this year’s historic plunge in bond prices, strategists at the bank including Lotfi Karoui wrote in a note this week.

In Europe, investors are also betting on a better year, with spreads declining sharply of late. Yield premiums for euro-denominated corporate bonds have tightened for six consecutive weeks and are now flirting with their lowest level in six months on optimism that rate hikes will slow and amid a rush by investors to capture some of the highest yields in a decade.

Safer company debt in the common currency has become a top trading idea for next year, with strategists at UBS Group AG predicting better returns from the asset class than for European stocks or German government bonds.

And in Asia, high-grade dollar credit spreads have widened by less than their US peers this year. Some in the region -- including PineBridge’s Slim -- reckon that the region’s better-rated credits such as sovereigns or quasi-sovereign entities like utilities may be an opportunity heading into 2023, given their stable fundamentals.

Stronger growth in Asia, loose central bank policy in China and Japan, and a sizable drop-off in dollar issuance in the region are all supportive of credit, though investors have to be selective, he said.

Global Bonds Add Record $2.8 Trillion in Market Value This Month

But not all investors are convinced that recent gains mark a long-lasting turnaround.

Nicholas Elfner, co-head of research at Breckinridge Capital Advisors, is less optimistic about the US avoiding a recession. He is keeping an eye on the shape of the yield curve and its inverted front end, which suggests investors are anticipating a significant slowdown and that Fed policy is probably a little too tight, he said.

High-grade credit spreads tend to historically peak around 175-200 basis points in a mild recession and between 200-250 basis point in a full-blown recession, said Elfner. While rates volatility may have peaked, credit spreads have not if the economic scenario suggested by the yield curve plays out, he said.  

But even if credit spreads do widen in 2023, an almost-tripling in global investment-grade corporate bond yields in the past 12 months gives investor returns a far bigger cushion to absorb such a move. 

A crucial data point will come in mid-December, with the final Fed announcement of the year. Key payrolls and inflation data will be watched before then for clues about the central bank’s path forward and its implications for the bond market recovery.

Global Bonds Add Record $2.8 Trillion in Market Value This Month

“This hiking cycle is going to extend for longer than people anticipate,” said Steven Boothe, portfolio manager and head of the investment-grade fixed income team at T. Rowe Price Group Inc. 

And as for November’s rebound: “The market was a bit over-hedged so it didn’t really take much in terms of relatively good news in order to get this snapback rally,” Boothe said. “I would not expect this to persist.”

Elsewhere in credit markets: 

Asia 

Dollar bond deals in Asia were scarce on Wednesday, with only one notable issuer from China mandating for a new offering, reflecting broader caution ahead of a key speech by Fed Chair Jerome Powell later in the day.

  • Kasikornbank, a Thai commercial lender, will offer new sustainability-linked bonds denominated in yen and US dollars to domestic institutional investors next month, according to a regulatory filing
  • China’s cash-strapped property developers are set for the first major test of investor demand after policy makers lifted restrictions on local share sales, with builder Shimao Group Holdings Ltd. planing to sell as much as 30% of share capital of a key China-listed unit
  • An Australian court has dismissed a request by two leasing entities of Greylag Goose to wind up PT Garuda Indonesia in insolvency, according to a ruling on Nov. 28
  • Spreads on dollar investment-grade notes in Asia ex-Japan narrowed at least 2 basis points Wednesday, credit traders said. They had already tightened this week to the lowest since early October, a Bloomberg index shows

Americas

Amazon.com Inc. sold $8.25 billion of investment-grade bonds before any potential increase in inflation worries reduces investors’ craving for highly rated debt.

  • El Salvador’s government is again offering to repurchase some of its outstanding dollar bonds, a move that could help soothe investors wary of the nation’s ability to stave off a default in the coming years
  • US junk bonds are poised for a second month of gains this quarter and just the fourth for this year, after easing inflation data earlier in the month and a series of comments by Fed officials that it was time to consider slowing the pace of interest-rate hikes
  • For deal updates, click here for the New Issue Monitor
  • For more, click here for the Credit Daybook Americas

EMEA

Issuers continued to seize the final window for bond issuance in Europe’s primary market this year, with Orsted, Toyota and Vodafone among the borrowers raising new debt. 

  • Vodafone offered the year’s longest pound corporate bond as renewed confidence in the UK’s management of its finances has spurred a November rebound in debt sales in the country’s currency
  • The check for more than a decade of cheap corporate borrowings is coming due: In less than 24 hours, petrol forecourt business EG Group and German landlord Adler Group SA told investors that they are weighing the sale of assets to cut debt, while gaming company 888 Holdings said it may tap the credit markets to manage its liabilities
  • PKN Orlen SA, a petroleum refiner based in Poland, started paying creditors a higher coupon on two local-currency sustainability-linked bonds earlier this year after MSCI Inc. cut its environmental, social and governance rating, according to payment records reviewed by Bloomberg News

--With assistance from and .

More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com

©2022 Bloomberg L.P.