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Interest Rate Evaluation. Logan Miller and James Bello. Outline. Yield Curve Normal, flat, inverted History of the yield c urve European Crisis, Quantitative Easing Current Environment Fed action, outflow of bonds Duration Strategy, Sector Strategy Great Rotation/Outlook.
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Interest Rate Evaluation Logan Miller and James Bello
Outline • Yield Curve • Normal, flat, inverted • History of the yield curve • European Crisis, Quantitative Easing • Current Environment • Fed action, outflow of bonds • Duration Strategy, Sector Strategy • Great Rotation/Outlook
Flat Yield Curve • Last seen 2006 - 2007 • Prior to this the economy was growing rapidly • Fed increase interest rates • Sign of transition and uncertainty
Inverted Yield Curve • Last seen 2006 – 2007 • Seen as an accurate predictor of recessions • Suggests a market belief that inflation will remain low • The lower bond yields are offset by lower expected inflation
European Debt Crisis • 2009 investors begin to worry • 2010 • Greece requests bailout in April • Ireland bailed out in November • 2011 • Portuguese bailout • US debt downgraded to AA+ in August • 2012 • Spanish bailout in September
Quantitative Easing • QE1 • Nov. 2008 Fed agrees to buy 600B MBS • March 2009 Fed announces more MBS purchases and 300B of treasuries • QE2 • Nov 2010 Fed begins buying 75B/month long term paper • Sept 2011 buy 400B of bonds with 6 – 30 yr maturity while selling bonds with < 3yr maturity • Program lasted through 2012 • QE3 • Sept 2012 Fed announces it will buy 40B of AMBS per month until labor market improves substantially • Dec 2012 Fed voted to continue AMBS buying plus 45B of treasuries per month
Logan Miller and James Bello Current Environment
Logan Miller and James Bello Duration Plays • Bonds with lower duration will outperform bonds with higher duration in a rising rate environment • Higher coupon bonds • Lower maturity bonds • The opposite is typically true when rates are decreasing, as they have for the past few years
Logan Miller and James Bello FRNs Becoming Attractive • Bonds with coupons linked to Libor do well in a rising-rate environment • Coupons increase as rates go up; better for the investor • Short-term (FRNs) investments become attractive because they are considered less risky and have very low duration
Logan Miller and James Bello Sector Plays
The Great Rotation • Investors switching from fixed income to equities • Idea that fixed income is all risk and no return • Is it a real threat? • European debt crisis better • Fed eventually has to stop QE
The Great Rotation • Past several years cash has essentially yielded 0% • 1.3T has been moved out of money markets as a result • Investors moved into fixed income • Flight to quality • Interest keeps up with inflation • $810B retail dollars have flowed into fixed income since January 2008
Great Rotation • Rates are beginning to rise • Rates rise, Prices fall • Investors focus on not losing money • Investors have begun moving their cash back into money markets at the higher rates • Investors also have the option of moving cash to the front end of the curve • IG bonds are a proxy for cash • It is unlikely that people will move into stocks because it is a different risk bucket
Logan Miller and James Bello Outlook • Rates will continue to be volatile • Potential tightening until the Fed acts • Volatility may cause higher risk premiums • Long-term rates will widen as the economy gets better • Demand for shorter maturity bonds will be strong • The Fed will continue to buy assets longer than the market expect; unpredictable • The good is bad for bondholders