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Gov Sovereigns/Treasurys

Our Q3 portfolio was defensive, which we believe will be the appropriate stance in the next six-to-twelve months. Data coming out of the US has remained robust which could cause US bond yields to temporarily overshoot. An overshoot in US bond yields will be an opportunity to dial up the portfolio’s defensive tilt. The average decline in 10-year Treasury yields 12 months after the first Fed rate cut is 100 bps. This time should be no different. There are not many changes to this quarter’s portfolio allocation. We have upgraded UK gilts to overweight and downgraded European credit to underweight. Portfolio duration remains the same. In terms of future changes, we are generally watching the trend in inflation given many central banks are delivering jumbo rate cuts. Any pause in the disinflationary trend we have seen will send bond yields soaring. This is a risk to our view. Otherwise, a recession in the first half of 2025 will cement our long duration stance.

This report looks at the likely path for the dollar and bond yields over the next 6-to-12 months.

The bond market priced out a lot of recession risk after this morning’s employment report, and the 10-year Treasury yield has moved back into the Soft Landing Zone. We assess the data and consider whether we need to change our cyclical positioning.

Our Portfolio Allocation Summary for October 2024.

We consider the possibility that lower interest rates could lead to an increase in household borrowing, prolonging the economic recovery.

This insight parses through the RBA’s latest policy decision, and makes recommendations on whether to expect any rate cuts in 2024, and beyond.

In this report, we argue that the Bank of Japan is unlikely to hike interest rates this week, but the relative trajectory of bond yields in Japan is higher. This warrants an underweight position in JGBs and a leveraged bet on a higher yen. The positioning for equity investors is murkier, as progress on corporate reforms is necessary for a rerating in Japanese shares. That is not yet very clear. The bottom line is: Stay long the yen.

We update our bond views following today’s 50 bps rate cut.

Our Portfolio Allocation Summary for September 2024.

The 2Y/10Y segment of the yield curve is flirting with un-inversion. Aggressive rate cut expectations have largely driven its steepening, with the 2-year Treasury yields falling nearly 100 bps over the past couple of months. Our colleagues at the Bank…