Dire Bond Returns Have 60/40 Managers Juicing Portfolios With FX

It was a dinner conversation with former Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke in early 2020 that convinced Cesar Perez Ruiz that the golden age of bond investing was over.

The rate on trillions of dollars in debt had sunk below zero, upending one of the pillars of international finance: that borrowers always pay interest. For Bernanke, it was a deflationary signal that could not be ignored. For Ruiz, chief investment officer at Pictet Wealth Management, it was a sign that he eventually may need to get out of bonds -- and instead turn to FX plays, like wagering on the euro or the yen.

Then the coronavirus crisis hit and sent yields on 10-year Treasuries, the asset underpinning much of the global economic system, to within half of a percentage point of 0%. “That was the click for me,” said Ruiz. “We cannot play this. This is a nice trade that has worked since the ‘90s when I started, but not now. It can’t be the solution.”

Since then, Ruiz’s fixed-income managers have ramped up the share of portfolios dedicated to taking advantage of a resurgence of volatility in currencies. At least a fifth of Pictet’s absolute-return funds are now focused on playing FX, up from next to nothing at this time last year. Sell-side fixed-income strategists like HSBC’s Steven Major are also recommending investors diversify away from bonds, as is tail-risk hedge fund LongTail Alpha, and volumes in the $6.6 trillion-a-day currency market have popped higher.

It’s a sign that opportunity is returning to the world’s biggest market, challenging a low-volatility regime that engulfed foreign exchange in the wake of the financial crisis. Price swings are the lifeblood for traders; without them, profits can’t be made and hedge funds have to close shop. As central banks plowed money into financial markets, investors previously had preferred to seek returns riding a three-decade long bull run in bonds or by chasing the record-breaking stock rally, rather than watch the paint dry in currencies.