A wave of selling sweeping across
bond markets resumed on Monday as investors continued to digest the
impact of a Donald Trump presidency.
US and European bond prices
have sunk in expectation that he will enact inflationary policies that
speed the pace of interest rate rises.
On Monday, some bond yields - which rise as the price falls - hit their highest for more than six months.
Bonds globally lost $1.29tn (£1tn) last week, according to Bank of America.
And
there is no sign that the bond sell-off is easing, depressing the value
of some pension investments and making it more expensive for countries
and companies to borrow money.
On Monday, the 30-year US Treasury
jumped above 3% for the first time since January. In the UK, the 10-year
gilt yields returned to levels not seen since June's Brexit referendum
vote. And German 30-year bunds rose above 1% for the first time since
early May.
Italian bonds have been among the most affected. Rome's
10-year yields rose four basis points to 2.01% on Monday, their highest
in 14 months.
"It is a continuation of this recent trend. There
are still these expectations that inflation could go up if the US takes a
more expansionary fiscal stance," said DZ Bank strategist Daniel Lenz
said.
Jim Cielinski, head of fixed income at Columbia
Threadneedle, said the sell-off trend was not surprising, but the
"ferocity of the reversal" was.
And in a research note for Societe Generale, analyst Daniel Fermon said that rising interest rates may not be a good thing.
"As
central banks are now less active in the bond market and Trump expects
to cut taxes and launch a $1tn infrastructure investment plan,
increasing the deficit, we believe rising US long-term rates remain a
major risk for financial markets," he said.
Dollar strength
Investors
had piled into bonds, seeking a safe - but low - rate of return during
what has been years of sluggish growth in the US, Europe and Japan.
But
since inflation and interest rates are seen as likely to rise,
investors are seeking assets with a more attractive return. With a Trump
administration promising economic stimulus through spending and tax
cuts, investors are worried about putting money into low fixed-payment
assets, such as bonds.
That has fuelled share markets since last Wednesday's election result.
Wall
Street's Dow Jones index closed at another record high on Friday, in
the wake of Mr Trump's unexpected victory. European markets have also
risen, and at midday on Monday, the FTSE 100, Cac-40 and Dax were all
slightly higher. Earlier, Japan's Nikkei index hitting a nine-month
high, closing up 1.7%.
The dollar has also strengthened against
major currencies. The pound fell 1.1% to $1.2464. Currencies in many
emerging markets - from the Mexican peso and Malaysian ringgit, to
Turkey's lira and South African rand - fell on fears that protectionism
and higher US interest could suck investment from these markets.
"Clearly
the market has settled on a 'buy dollar' theme, on the basis there will
be a debt-fuelled US fiscal binge that will push up inflation," said TD
Securities' European head of currency strategy Ned Rumpeltin.
"There
are signs that higher bond yields and the knock of a stronger US dollar
are having a domino impact, taking down the weakest risky assets first,
before moving on to the next," said Deutsche's global co-head of
foreign exchange, Alan Ruskin.
And a senior European Central Bank
(ECB) has warned that the uncertainty caused by sudden swings in the
financial markets threatened economic recovery.
Speaking in
Frankfurt on Monday, ECB vice-president Vitor Constancio said: "We
should be cautious in drawing hasty, positive conclusions from those
market developments, because they may not necessarily indicate that the
world economy will have an accelerating recovery with higher growth."
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