Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities Continue Rally
Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) gained 3.08 percent during the third quarter as represented by the Barclays Capital U.S. TIPS Index. Real yields declined across most of the maturity spectrum with the exception of the very long end of the yield curve, where real rates rose only modestly. Real coupon and positive inflation accruals, despite cyclical disinflationary pressures, also helped returns. TIPS outperformed comparable maturity nominal bonds overall despite underperformance for long-dated issues.
TIPS yields declined most for intermediate maturities, reflecting a reversal of second quarter’s largest increase in yields for this portion of the real yield curve. Despite cyclical disinflationary pressures, all maturities rallied given market expectations of slower growth amid worsened U.S. unemployment figures. Long-dated real yields declined the least due in part to investors pricing in slower inflation, resulting in their preference for long-dated nominal Treasuries. As a result, TIPS underperformed their long-dated counterparts; however, they outperformed all other maturities.
Breakeven inflation (the level of inflation where a TIPS return “breaks even” with that of a nominal Treasury or more simply, the difference in nominal yields and real yields) ended the period slightly positive for a majority of the curve. The 15-year sector and beyond posted lower breakeven inflation levels as markets priced in lower longer-term inflation expectations.
Economy Continues to Stabilize; Abundant Slack Remains
Financial markets and the broader economy continued to stabilize during the third quarter after the extraordinary events of last year. Policy initiatives - such as the Federal Reserve’s purchase of mortgage and Treasury securities, the government’s support for consumer finance markets and near-zero short term rates - helped revive risk appetites and were the major factors behind enhanced stability. Two key programs were extended during the third quarter.
The Fed committed to complete its $1.25 trillion program to buy mortgage-backed bonds and extended the end date of the program to March 2010 from December 2009. Massive purchases of mortgages from this program, roughly two-thirds complete by quarter-end, helped hold down mortgage rates and supported the still fragile housing market. The Fed and the U.S. Treasury also announced the extension of the Term Asset-backed Securities Loan Facility, or TALF program, which provides financing to investors buying consumer asset-backed securities (ABS). Originally set to expire in December of this year, TALF was extended through March 2010 for consumer ABS.
Manufacturing and housing data showed improvement in the third quarter, suggesting that the recession was close to an end. Even so, substantial slack remained in the economy, leading the Fed to announce that it would keep the federal funds rate near zero “for an extended period.” The unemployment rate moved closer to 10 percent, making any revival in consumer spending highly unlikely. Businesses continued to draw down inventories, albeit at a slower rate than earlier in the year. Industrial capacity utilization hovered near record lows at below 70 percent, discouraging new investment. Policymakers faced with these dismal fundamentals were in no position to contemplate withdrawal of stimulus programs any time soon.
Riskier Assets Extend Gains Despite Fragile Economy
Valuations of corporate bonds, mortgages and asset–backed securities continued to richen in the third quarter. These gains were supported less by fundamentals than by positive technical conditions and government policies that helped push investors out of cash and toward higher yielding, riskier assets. The following summarizes fixed income sector returns:
- Agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) continued their powerful rally during the third quarter, outperforming like-duration Treasuries. The success of the Fed’s MBS Purchase Program compressed mortgage yield premiums to the narrowest levels ever seen when measured versus interest rate swaps. Non-agency mortgages also rallied, helped by the lack of new issuance over the last two years and increased liquidity in the market. Consumer ABS enjoyed strong gains versus like-duration Treasuries, owing to robust demand for TALF assets and the re-emergence of unleveraged cash investors such as pension funds and insurance companies.
- Corporate bonds, especially high yield credits, were among the best performing fixed income assets during the quarter, buoyed by highly favorable market technicals. Credit premiums continued to tighten and approached levels last seen in 2007 as fund flows into corporate credit were very strong and the supply of available bonds began to contract slightly after years of growth. These circumstances benefitted lower-rated credits the most. Performance was strongest in the financial sector, which gained from improved asset valuations, a continued steep yield curve and increased fee-based income as capital markets revived.
- Municipal bonds outperformed Treasuries by a wide margin during the quarter. Municipal yield ratios relative to Treasuries moved closer to historical averages after widening dramatically last year. As with corporate bonds, technical factors were positive in the municipal market. Inflows into municipal funds remained strong amid heightened expectations for future tax increases. Municipal new issue supply was relatively light as issuance was diverted into taxable Build America Bonds.
- The rally in emerging market (EM) bonds continued in the third quarter. These securities outperformed Treasuries against a backdrop of strong fiscal and monetary stimulus by most EM countries to counter the worldwide recession. Credit premiums tightened on most bonds amid the restoration of risk appetites for the sector.
- Yields on government bonds fell modestly in most developed markets during the quarter as concerns about the extent of global economic recovery lingered. Interest rate volatility generally decreased from recent periods. Among developed markets, U.S., U.K. and Eurozone bonds fared the best.
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