Bond bears reload Fed rate hike wagers on stubborn inflation


Long-dated Treasuries are also under pressure as traders are betting on yields to sustain a move above 5%. — Reuters

NEW YORK: Traders have renewed bearish bets on US Treasuries, lifting expectations that the Federal Reserve (Fed) will raise interest rates as oil prices and inflation push higher. 

The hawkish shift has rippled across maturities. At the short end of the curve, interest-rate swaps have resumed pricing a quarter-point rate hike by the middle of next year.

Long-dated Treasuries are also under pressure as traders are betting on yields to sustain a move above 5%.

Meanwhile, a selloff in Treasury futures Monday sent five-year yields further above 4% and sparked a buildup in short positions, including one of the largest new positions in 10-year notes in over a month. 

The ramp-up in rate hike odds gained momentum Tuesday after consumer price data showed US inflation accelerated in April due to rising gasoline and grocery costs. 

“There’s a decent short base that has been building in the market,” said Kelsey Berro, fixed-income portfolio manager at JPMorgan Asset Management.

“The market has been very efficient in repricing to a reality of higher inflation for longer as a function of the increase in energy prices.”

In the options market tied to the secured overnight financing rate (SOFR), which closely tracks Fed policy expectations, traders are looking to hedge against more rate hikes being priced into SOFR futures over the coming weeks. 

During Monday’s session demand emerged for put options targeting a couple of rate hikes to be priced in by the end of next year.

Interest rate swaps currently show around 85% of a quarter-point hike by the April policy meeting, with traders adding to the bets after the latest consumer price index data. 

“Bearish sentiment is rebuilding into the rise in yields with short risk being added to the front end in SOFR and in the belly of the curves,” Citigroup Inc strategist David Bieber said.

A number of Fed officials have recently pushed back on the presumption that the Fed’s next policy move will be a cut.

After Tuesday’s data, Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago president Austan Goolsbee said inflation readings show pervasive price pressures in the United States economy and may even indicate an overheating. 

“What the market is pricing is a resilient economy and a Fed that is able to stay on hold for a significant period of time,” JPMorgan’s Berro said.

In the cash market, a survey of JPMorgan clients released Tuesday also showed bearish sentiment on the rise, as investor outright short positions rose to the most in 13 weeks. 

In the week up to May 11 investor outright short positions jumped six percentage points and onto the most since Feb. 2.

The shift came out of neutrals, which dropped 6 percentage points with outright long positions unchanged over the week. — Bloomberg

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