2025 Treasury Bonds and Fixed Income Outlook

It looks like another bumpy ride is in store for fixed income investors in 2025, with a wide range of potential outcomes. Treasury yields have been on a roller coaster in 2024. For much of the year, the soft-landing scenario of moderate growth and falling inflation amid low unemployment drove bond yields lower, but upward revisions to growth estimates and concerns about policy proposals that could boost inflation in 2025 led to a rebound.

Consequently, we are taking a cautious approach to duration and credit risk. We suggest holding a benchmark duration or lower as we enter the new year. We also continue to favor allocating to higher-credit-quality bonds.

Despite our caution, we also recognize that volatility can translate into opportunities. Higher yields potentially can provide investors with more income and stronger returns in the long run. We expect to find areas in the fixed income markets that can deliver solid returns in 2025.

Inflation risks are tilting higher

The trifecta of proposed policy proposals from the incoming administration—tariffs, limits on immigration, and tax cuts—if enacted, could drive inflation higher and widen the federal budget deficit.

As a result, investors are starting to demand higher yields to compensate for the risk of holding long-term Treasuries. These policies could also limit the Federal Reserve's scope for lowering short-term interest rates. It is too early to know what proposals will be enacted—if any—but they could tilt the risks toward higher inflation and potentially lead to higher yields.

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Inflation is fundamentally an imbalance between supply and demand. It's often referred to as "too much money chasing too few goods." Since the pandemic spike in mid-2022, inflation has been falling and is nearing the Federal Reserve's 2% target. Supply and demand for goods and services have largely stabilized, leaving the deflator for personal consumption expenditures (PCE)—the Federal Reserve's preferred inflation gauge—in the 2.5% region, even as the economy's growth rate has remained solid at a 3% pace. However, the core PCE rate, which excludes volatile food and energy prices, has stalled at a slightly higher level due to the "stickiness" of housing costs.

inflation declined