Bond Market Bulls Are $2.8 Trillion Better Off After Rebound

Global bonds rebounded in November, adding a record $2.8 trillion in market value, as investors bet that central banks are getting a grip on inflation. But how long the party lasts is another matter.

Government and investment-grade corporate debt securities have risen to a market value of $59.2 trillion from $56.4 trillion at the end of October, making for the biggest monthly increase in a Bloomberg index stretching back to 1990. The gauge -- which fell into a bear market in September -- rebounded after US inflation cooled more than expected and the Federal Reserve indicated a possible slowdown of aggressive rate hikes, buoying sentiment.

“We are starting to see a number of economic indicators that point to the fact that inflation has peaked or is peaking,” said Omar Slim, a fixed-income portfolio manager at PineBridge Investments in Singapore. While trading in US Treasuries is likely to be volatile amid economic data and Fed rhetoric, the bond market rally “has legs,” he said.

Expectations for a Fed pivot have grown ever since softer inflation data earlier this month spurred a massive relief rally across asset classes, reviving a bond market languishing in its worst rout in a generation. But with the threat of recession looming, a recovery won’t be smooth.

Strategists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. expect US and European corporate bond spreads -- which have recently narrowed -- to widen in the first quarter of 2023 as central banks continue to raise rates, before tightening again as a soft-landing for the US economy becomes clearer. They see US investment-grade corporate bond spreads peaking at 180 basis points and ending the year at 150 basis points.