At the beginning of the year, analysts and economists explained why interest rates would climb significantly. They anticipated a year-end 10-year yield of 3.4%, not 2.4%. Only a few bond fund managers, doom-n-gloomers and contrarians dared to suggest that rates would drop. (For more on the topic, review my January commentary, “Against The Herd: Lower Rates, Not Higher Rates, In 2014.â€)
When I challenged readers to spell out the reason(s) why bonds defied expectations, the answers were as predictable as pizza at a Fantasy Football draft party. Some contributors talked about the enormous demand from pensions and a variety of larger institutions. Others explained how quantitative easing (QE) by the Federal Reserve created a supply shortage. Still others discussed the surge in demand by foreigners, as U.S. Treasuries appear attractive on a relative basis when compared to European sovereign debt.
Institutional demand, QE-created supply issues as well as relative returns over German bunds are plausible explanations. On the other hand, pension demand for bond holdings is an ever-present force. What’s more, the Fed’s balance sheet ownership of 40%-plus of the intermediate-term Treasuries in existence has been well-documented. For that matter, Europe’s battle against deflation and recession through extraordinary monetary policy stimulus was well-known. It follows that all of these excuses fizzle under the brighter lights of scrutiny; analysts and economists knew these factors and “Against The Herd: Lower Rates, Not Higher Rates, In 2014.â€.
Why were they wrong? Logically speaking, if a community of expert voices expected yields to climb, knowing the headwinds that already existed, then they believed in the strength of future economic growth. By extension, since rates have fallen, not risen, the more palpable explanation is that bond market participants doubt the U.S. economy’s ability to sustain itself without Fed stimulus.
Indeed, here is how the bond market is interpreting employment data. Employed adults represented 58.5% of the total adult population at the recession’s lowest ebb. (In 2000, employed adults represent 64.5% of the adult population.) Yet employment in 2014 is still near a remarkable low at 59%. In other words, since June of 2009, U.S. population growth (12.4 million) has as much to do with the increase in jobs (6.3 million) as any notion that unemployed individuals have been getting their jobs back.