Real Yields And The Next Fed Chair: How To Trade The Great Conundrum

 | Nov 12, 2021 12:07

George Orwell once said about social hierarchy: “All animals are equal, but some animals are more equal than others.” This is equally true about financial markets, with some markets more important than others.

So what makes a market important?

Size obviously matters, but it's not the only factor. For example, the currency market, by far the biggest market in the world (with daily turnover of $4 trillion), is usually a follower rather than a leader in terms of its relationship with other markets.

As a macro investment strategist, I value information content more than anything else. For me, the most important markets are those that best help me decipher the broader narrative and consensus imbedded in asset prices.

With so much focus at the moment on what the Fed will do about rising inflation, I am following the US inflation-indexed government bond market more closely than any other. All you need to know about this market is that when you buy an inflation-indexed bond, the coupons you get are the product of the so called “real yields” plus the actual inflation at the time of the coupon payment dates.

There are four reasons why real yields of long-term US government bonds are so extremely important to the global financial markets:

  1. The pricing of all financial assets requires a risk-free rate, the return of a risk-free asset.
  2. The pricing of assets with long-term cash-flows needs a long-term risk-free rate.
  3. Because investors are only interested in real (after inflation) returns, they only care about the real risk-free rate.
  4. Given the size of US markets and the dollar’s reserve currency status, the long-term US real risk-free rate is often accepted as the long-term real risk-free rate for the world.

Because monetary policy works through long-term interest rates and real interest rates, real yields on long-term government bonds tell us a lot about whether the market expects future monetary policy to be loose or tight.

Judging by the fact that the 10-year US real yield (the real yield on a 10-year maturity inflation indexed government bond) is currently at minus 1.1%, not far from its all-time low (see below chart), we can safely say that the market thinks the Federal Reserve will maintain a very loose monetary policy for as far as the eye can see.

This is the reason why investors have been buying stocks hand over fist. They are assuming that the punch bowl will not be taken away anytime soon.