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Active Fixed Income Offers Income, Flexibility, Risk Control


Bond investors have watched yields climb to levels not seen in over a decade, transforming fixed income from a low-return necessity into a compelling income source that now competes directly with stocks. The UK 10-year government bond yield, which dipped below 0.1% in 2020, has pushed past 4.5%, while U.S. investment-grade credit yields hover around 5.14%.

Key Takeaways:

  • Bond yields now compete with equity returns while offering lower volatility and steady income.
  • Active fixed income provides tools to navigate different market environments from growth slowdowns to inflation shocks.
  • Diverse bond sectors allow investors to tailor allocations to goals like stability, growth, or inflation protection.

The shift comes as investors navigate heightened geopolitical tensions and inflation concerns that have upended the calm of early 2026, according to Kenneth Orchard, head of international fixed income at T. Rowe Price. In the research report, Orchard outlined three reasons why active fixed income deserves a place in diversified portfolios: attractive income, risk management capabilities, and strategic flexibility across market conditions.

The income case starts with a striking comparison. Global high-yield bonds currently offer yields around 7.3%, while the yield on U.S. sub-investment-grade debt exceeds the S&P 500 Index’s earnings yield by more than two percentage points, Orchard wrote.

That gap highlights how fixed income has reclaimed its role as an income generator after years of rock-bottom rates left bond investors scraping for yield. A consistent income stream becomes especially valuable during volatile periods, providing a cushion against price declines while contributing to total returns.

Beyond income, bonds typically carry less volatility than equities, which helps balance overall portfolio risk. Even higher-risk segments like high yield tend to move less dramatically than stocks, Orchard noted in the report. The different return drivers matter, too: stocks generally thrive on earnings growth during economic expansions, while bonds respond to interest rate movements and often perform better when growth weakens.

Diversification Through Market Cycles

Recent years tested the diversification argument as stocks and bonds fell in tandem during inflationary shocks like the Russia-Ukraine conflict. But Orchard pointed out that investors have tools to navigate those environments, including inflation-linked bonds and absolute return strategies designed to generate positive returns regardless of market direction.

Those absolute return approaches typically allow for short positions, which can help produce gains even when markets decline. The flexibility extends across the broader fixed income universe, where different sectors respond to different drivers.

Government bonds can anchor a portfolio against growth slowdowns, according to the research. Investors comfortable with higher risk might look to sub-investment-grade debt for capital appreciation. The fragmented nature of bond markets means what moves one sector often differs from what drives another, giving investors options to match specific goals.

Positioning for Inflation Pressure

In the current environment of elevated energy prices, T. Rowe Price sees opportunities in inflation-protected securities like U.S. Treasury inflation protected securities (TIPS), which Orchard described as offering attractive value. Bank loans also appeal in higher inflation settings, though they require careful credit selection since rising costs can squeeze corporate margins.

Short-maturity government bonds present another option in markets where rate increase expectations appear overdone, the report noted. The diversity of approaches means investors can adjust positioning as conditions shift rather than simply riding index movements up and down.

Orchard emphasized that tapping into these opportunities requires choosing a manager with deep research capabilities to uncover potential while managing risks. For investors building portfolios amid uncertainty, active fixed income provides both the income that attracted bond buyers for generations and the flexibility to navigate whatever markets deliver next.

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