Fixed Income: What about inflation?

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kevin-temp2By Kevin Flanagan, Senior Fixed Income Strategist, WisdomTree

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

The last few months have certainly given the money and bond markets a lot of divergent news headlines to digest. Not surprisingly, the focus has been on negative rates abroad, geopolitical events and, a bit more recently, some better-than-expected employment news juxtaposed with a softer-than-expected GDP report. That begs the question: What about inflation? Isn’t that a key ingredient in the bond market mix?

Without a doubt, U.S. inflation data has taken a backseat for fixed income investors, and for good reason; there just haven’t been any fresh developments lately. Certainly, the conversation has shifted from a year ago, when deflation concerns were permeating market psychology. But the latest figures don’t elicit concerns that price pressures will be rearing their ugly head anytime soon, or at least that’s what the collective thinking is in the fixed income markets.

Breakeven inflation ratesvrGP Breakeven-Inflation-Rate

So, what does the inflation backdrop look like? According to the widely followed Consumer Price Index (CPI), the year-over-year inflation rate came in at +1.0% in June (Note 1)—very little changed from the readings posted over the last four months, but definitely higher than the +0.1% for the same month in 2015. The core gauge, which excludes food and energy, rose at a +2.3% annual clip and has been residing in a range last seen in 2012. There continues to be a large dichotomy between core goods (-0.6%) and core services (+3.2%) .(Note 2)

As part of its dual mandate, the Federal Reserve (Fed) addresses inflation trends and its outlook in its FOMC meeting policy statements as well as focusing on expectations. In fact, inflation expectations play a pivotal role in the voting members’ deliberative process, because once a certain sentiment becomes embedded, it can become difficult to reverse.

A primary way to gauge these expectations lies in what is known as “breakeven inflation rate.” This measure is the difference between the yield on a nominal bond (such as the U.S.Treasury 10-Year note) and an inflation-linked or real yield bond with the same maturity (such as the 10-Year U.S. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities, or TIPS). This difference, or spread, is viewed as representing the expected rate of inflation.

Utilizing our graph as a guide, the breakeven rate between the UST 10-Year yield (1.55%) and the UST 10-Year TIPS (0.05%) is 1.50%, not too far removed from the five-year low of 1.20% posted during this year’s peak “risk-off period,” and considerably below the high point of 2.64% registered in September 2012. In other words, expectations are for an inflation rate of roughly 1.5%, another factor that not only provides the Fed with no urgency to raise rates but also gives it time to continue to “closely monitor … global economic and financial developments.” (Note 3)

Conclusion

Looking ahead, it seems more than likely that increasing price pressures are not building on the horizon. The effects of the prior strength in the U.S. dollar tend to lag and could continue to pass through and act as a drag on inflation. General economic slowing abroad, especially in China, may also weigh on prices in the goods sector. The Fed’s preferred gauge, the core PCE price index, has been running at a +1.6% (Note 4) annual rate the prior four months and does not look poised to hit the policy makers’ +2% threshold in 2016.

1  Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of 7/15/2016.
2  Source: Bureau of Labor Statistics, as of 7/15/2016.
3  Source: Federal Reserve as of 7/27/2016.
4  Bureau of Economic Analysis as of 8/2/2016.

Important Risks Related to this Article

Fixed income investments are subject to interest rate risk; their value will normally decline as interest rates rise. In addition, when interest rates fall, income may decline. Fixed income investments are also subject to credit risk, the risk that the issuer of a bond will fail to pay interest and principal in a timely manner or that negative perceptions of the issuer’s ability to make such payments will cause the price of that bond to decline.

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