Global Bond Traders Are Seeking Protection From Inflation Threat

Just as bond traders grow more assured that inflation is finally under control, a camp of investors is quietly building up protection against the risk of a future spike in prices.

These fund managers are amassing positions that would cushion fixed-income returns in the event of an inflation shock. Wall Street strategists are also recommending taking advantage of declines in market-based gauges of future inflation to build up protection on the cheap.

It’s not a consensus trade. After all, a growing batch of data, including benign inflation readings out of the US and UK, suggests that pricing pressures are easing after years of monetary tightening by global central banks. Interest-rate cuts are now in the cards and recession has replaced inflation as the dominant concern. This promising news has sent benchmark bond yields sharply lower — but perhaps too far, say some.

“We think fear of recession is overdone, but that inflation risks are possibly underpriced at current yield levels,” said John Bilton, head of multi-asset strategy at J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Bilton said he remains “broadly neutral” on duration, or exposure to interest-rate risk, given that there are “a handful of forces that could push inflation higher.”

long term inflation expectations lowest since early 2022

While price growth has eased markedly from Covid-era highs, the path lower has been bumpy, and inflation in some areas has proved tenacious. The US economy remains resilient, as seen by strong retail sales figures for July, while an array of threats from US-China trade tensions and shipping disruptions to heavy public spending and turmoil in the Middle East only add to inflation risks.

For all these reasons, some investors see the need for insurance.

“If inflation proves to be stickier or goes up again, that could derail your portfolio if you’ve got exposure to duration,” said Marie-Anne Allier, who runs a €5.6 billion ($6.2 billion) fixed-income portfolio at Carmignac.