What does inflation mean for the Australian bond market?

Australia’s inflation rate has been stubbornly below the RBA’s target band of 2–3% for several years now, but the 0.9% rate realised in 2020 was, even in this paradigm, exceptionally poor. However, economists are projecting an increase in inflation this year, driven by increased expenditure from households.

The reasoning behind these expectations is households looking to spend the savings they built up over the last year, as the household savings rate grew from 5.3% in the December 2019 Quarter to 12% in the December 2020 quarter. However, this inflationary spike is expected to be short-lived and over the next 2 to 3 years inflation is expected to remain below the RBA’s target.

Turning to the labour market, Australia’s unemployment rate sits at 5.6% in March 2021, down 0.2 points from February and continuing its downward trajectory since October 2020. The overall unemployment rate for the nation is now only 0.5 points higher than in pre-COVID February 2020.

This suggests that there is significant demand for labour that could continue to drive the downward trend in the unemployment rate. Vacancies are up for all sectors of the economy, except for Retail Trade, and Arts and Recreation Services, both of which were hit hard by COVID lockdowns. However, with the expiry of fiscal stimulus such as JobKeeper and the Coronavirus supplement for JobSeeker, it remains to be seen whether the downward trend in unemployment will continue.

The impact of the economic recovery and the uptick in inflation has been evident in the bond market. The Australian sovereign yield curve has steepened since the end of 2020, reflected in the spread between the 10-year and 2-year government bond yields, which has risen from 90 basis points at the end of December to 158 basis points at the end of April.

The Australian yield curve’s steepening has been driven by a multitude of factors. The rise in the 10-year yield has been recently buoyed by expectations of an increase in the cash rate prior to the RBA’s stated 2024 target, as measured by interest rate futures, which can be used to deduce probabilities of future rate hikes or cuts and the respective implied policy rate.

However, the rise in the 10-year yield is also partially explained by continued growth in inflation expectations, commonly referred to as ‘breakeven inflation’. The Australian 10-year breakeven rate, which is measured as the difference between the nominal yield of the Australian 10-year bond and the real yield of the Australian 10-year inflation linked bond. This measure peaked at 222 bps in early March and ended the quarter at 210.7 bps, an increase of 35 bps.

More importantly, when considering the overall changes in both the steepness and level of the curve, both have risen over the quarter due to significant moves in longer-dated government bonds. Given the RBA’s explicit 3-year government bond yield target of 10 bps, the short end of the curve has effectively been pinned to the floor in a bid at reducing short-term funding costs for institutions.

While the RBA notes the rise of the long end of the yield curve, its announcements have indicated a firm stance in relation to the official cash rate remaining at its current level until a sustained rise in inflation. The RBA has briefly acknowledged a temporary rise in inflation “due to reversals in some COVID-19 related price reductions”, however they note that “underlying inflation is expected to remain below 2 percent over the next few years”. Considering the latter, the market continues to price rosier times ahead (more than what the RBA contends).

A rise in yields is potentially a welcome sign for economic conditions ahead, but the inverse is that they also represent higher borrowing costs for market participants such as corporations and governments. For investors, the rise in yields has represented significant losses considering the magnitude of the shift across the curve, especially when considering the duration (interest rate risk) attached to longer-dated bonds. Typically, duration is one of the more difficult risks to trade for bond managers. Furthermore, as yields rise, so do their attractiveness relative to other asset classes such as equities and hybrids.

Lonsec’s base case is that we may see a modest rise in inflation over the next 12 months, but that over the medium term inflation will remain under control as broader structural deflationary pressures such as the continual impact of technology in society and the aging population continue to weigh down on most developed economies. However, even a modest rise in inflation will have consequences for financial markets, and the bond market is where the action will be.

Source: Lonsec May 2021

Reproduced with the permission of Lonsesc. This article by Ron Mehmet was originally published at https://www.lonsec.com.au/2021/05/19/what-does-inflation-mean-for-the-australian-bond-market/

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