We think fixed income will return to its more familiar playbook: attractive income, total return potential, and negative or low correlations with risk assets.
Global fixed income markets navigated their way through another volatile year in 2023. But as 2024 gets underway, this is an opportune moment to take advantage of where rates have moved and the setup of fixed income to provide a high source of income, total return and, most notably, an offset to other expensive asset classes.
The past two years of navigating fixed income markets have come down to what we call the end of low-interest rate alchemy, during which previously low rates and cheap cost of capital helped pull demand forward and prop up asset markets. The Fed’s zero interest rate policy encouraged many consumers, companies and the federal government to borrow and, in the case of the latter two, notably increase their debt loads as a percentage of GDP. In that previous regime, we also observed positive correlations between fixed income and equity market returns as falling interest rates supported a growth boom that could not sustain itself without virtually free money.
The Cost of Capital Normalizes Again (Somewhat)
Source: Bloomberg Global Aggregate Negative Yielding Debt Index Market Value, Bloomberg
But 2022 and most of 2023 saw a sharp reset, with the Fed focusing squarely on taming inflation and sharply raising the cost of capital. This hawkish Fed policy led to the painful fixed income returns of 2022 but set the stage for a rebound in late 2023 that gave investors optimism about the kind of returns the fixed income asset class can deliver going forward.
Though trending down, inflation continues to be the Fed’s primary challenge, and the main question for 2024 is how much the Fed will turn its attention again to growth risks, and to what extent they deliver cuts to promote maximum employment. Those of us who predicted a recession in 2023 have been eating a bit of humble pie as the U.S. and developed economies in the European Union and Japan have so far defied expectations and continued to expand at a reasonably healthy pace.
That said, we believe the current yield levels and the rally we experienced late in the year signal that painful fixed income returns are behind us. The Fed hiking cycle is essentially over, and the question is how many cuts the Fed will deliver in 2024. While the economy is likely to continue to slow, and inflation returns closer to ‘target,’ we believe the Fed will deliver cuts but will not be overly aggressive without a significant pullback in economic activity, causing rates to stay higher than the market currently expects. Given this backdrop, in 2024, we expect fixed income to return to its more familiar past playbook: find ways of generating high income levels, all while protecting from the recession tail. If we experience a recession, fixed income can and should act as a ballast and provide negative or low correlations with risk assets. And that is the basis for our 2024 global fixed income outlook.
So, What Is That Negative Macro Event in 2024?
We believe a recession, albeit a modest one, will likely become the adverse macro event that restores normalcy to the fixed income markets this year. We made this same forecast a year ago, but the Fed’s aggressive tightening since March 2022 should eventually tip the economy into at least a mild contraction. The aggressive rate hiking of the past two years takes time to work through macroeconomic multiplier effects. Still, we are finally seeing that happen in an increasingly alarming fashion across balance sheets.
Consumer Credit: Delinquencies Rising from Post-Pandemic Low
Source: Bloomberg. Data represents U.S. Credit Card Quality Index
We typically see delinquencies and defaults on credit cards and auto loans in a recessionary environment. That’s happening. Home sales would slow dramatically and decline to multi-year lows. That’s happening. Consumer confidence would weaken. That’s happening. Interest coverage ratios would decline. That’s happening. Companies would require increased returns on investment for capital spending projects to cover the additional borrowing costs. That is also happening. Within government, we see sharp increases in the price of servicing debt. At the state and local government levels, we are beginning to see shortfalls in expected revenue growth that, in some cases, are leading to emerging budget shortfalls in current and future fiscal years.
Rising Rates Matter for the U.S. Government Balance Sheet
Source: Bloomberg, Federal Reserve
All these things are finally happening as we expected a year or more ago. But the impact, regardless of the timing, is the same: the increased likelihood of a recession. The delayed timing aspect is primarily due to the strength of the consumer and labor market. But those strengths are fraying, and as that is likely to continue, a recession in 2024 is quite likely.
The Fed’s Reaction Function Will Likely Be to Ease Its Monetary Grip – But Not Aggressively
Our long-anticipated recession is what we expect to force the Fed to cut interest rates and launch a new easing cycle. After December’s Fed meeting, markets priced in a series of rate cuts in anticipation of a dovish Fed next year. However, the Fed believes cuts they may deliver in 2024 do not serve as accommodative policy per se but rather to relieve the economy of rate levels it deems in restrictive territory.
We think the current market reflection of about 125 basis points of easing in 2024 is a bit too aggressive, barring a much deeper-than-expected economic contraction. Inflation is still on the mind of the Fed, and the labor market is showing enough resiliency that the Fed does not need to deliver on sharp rate cuts just yet.
It’s Still All about Inflation
Inflation was the driver behind the Fed’s massive tightening cycle of 2022-2023, and inflation will put the brakes on any aggressive easing cycle in 2024 and into 2025. The Fed has made it clear that its 2% inflation target has not changed, and with core inflation currently running at about twice that level, the central bank has to worry about how long inflation will remain above its target. Unless the expected recession is a genuine shock, we cannot expect the Fed to respond aggressively.
What keeps inflation from slowing to 2% given that it has slowed appreciably from its recent multi-generational peak? It all comes back to the stubbornly strong labor market, wage growth, and the wage pressures already built within the system. Take the United Auto Workers as just one example. Significant wage pressures are now guaranteed for future years, and these wage gains will almost certainly bleed over into other industries and the aggregate economy.
The Fed’s approach to monetary policy suggests it will be comfortable waiting for inflation to slow to target and, to address growth risks, cutting rates to lower levels but still in somewhat restrictive territory. Since we don’t anticipate an actual shock-to-the-system type of recession in 2024, the Fed’s actions should signal to investors that ‘this is the business cycle, not an emergency, and this is what we’ve been trying to accomplish through the normalization of interest rates.’
We Expect Negative or Low Correlations with Risk Assets to Reemerge
As mentioned earlier, fixed income is meant to preserve capital and generate income, providing ballast when equity markets are volatile. In other words, fixed income is supposed to do well when equities sell off.
Recall that during the low-rate era, which goes back to about the year 2000 (during the dot com bust when the Fed pushed its funds rate down as low as roughly 1% in 2003), the correlation between fixed income and equities turned positive and stayed there for about 20 years – nearly a generation.
Bonds performed well because interest rates were declining, and the resulting drop in the cost of capital drove equities higher. Investors fondly remember this period because successive Federal Reserve leaders extended the central bank’s role beyond its traditional mandates to include suppressing excessive equity market volatility and keeping equity investors happy. It was not until 2022 that the Fed finally rid itself of this perceived obligation. Suddenly, correlations spiked back into negative territory with the current tightening cycle (see the illustration below).
Effective Portfolio Construction Depends on Correlations Expectations
Source: Bloomberg
In other words, with the normalization of interest rates, it’s reasonable to expect the recent sharp reversion to negative correlations between fixed income and equity performance to continue even as the economy slips into recession. During the 30 years from 1971 through 2000, the correlation between stocks and bonds was -0.31. That correlation flipped to +0.30 from 2000 through today, even considering that correlations normalized back to about -0.25 in recent months.
Attractive Valuations Still Provide Opportunities in 2024
When we look at valuations heading into 2024, we ask ourselves whether or not we are compensated for risk and an unexpected, perhaps tail, event. As the new year gets underway, we are not. But income generation is the best it’s been in 15 years, and focusing on removing potential volatility from portfolios will be the name of the game. These are interesting returns at current yields, even in an unchanged world. In fact, in the case of high yield corporates, they are equity-like returns, which is remarkable, especially since yields in that space were roughly 4% not so long ago.
Higher Yields Provide Optimism for Fixed Income Market in 2024
Source: Bloomberg
Generally, we like less cyclical credits and, therefore, underexposed to a likely recession. Such acyclically oriented sectors include insurance, healthcare and utilities. As mentioned, although overall yields are attractive in the investment-grade and high yield corporate space, valuations in both sectors give us pause to add further exposure.
We continue to monitor weaker consumer trends. Excess savings have come down, and consumption is beginning to soften. In response, our positioning within securitized credit is in higher-rated senior bonds, which tend to behave with less volatility versus more credit-sensitive securities in the mortgage and asset-backed space. Consistent with this view, we find Agency mortgage-backed securities (MBS) attractive, with the potential to outperform should rates fall and mortgage refinancings pick up.
We continue to be cautious regarding continued global risks within international and emerging market fixed income markets. Like in U.S.-based credit assets, spreads are fairly tight, so we prefer not to add exposure until spreads widen further. However, there continue to be idiosyncratic opportunities across securities and regions guided by strong balance sheet fundamentals. Further, we find select opportunities in quasi-sovereign names where there is underlying fundamental support from the sovereign itself and an attractive spread and yield to be captured.
Outlook
Macro/Rates
Recession risk appear elevated, which may be driving the Fed’s reaction function in balancing growth risks at a time when their focus has been so much on quelling inflation.
U.S. Corporates
Spreads have tightened in both investment-grade and high yield in sympathy with other risk assets. Will need to be selective given our current view on recession and potential spread widening as a result.
Securitized (MBS/ABS/CMBS)
Consumer fundamentals are trending worse, as measured by rising credit card and auto delinquencies. A resilient labor market has been a positive, although the Fed is still looking to dampen demand in the face of above trend inflation.
Emerging Markets
Valuations overall appear stretched, but pockets of value exist. The potential for certain countries to pivot toward cutting cycles, as well as a robust calendar of federal and local elections, will provide both opportunity and risk for the sector.
Positioning
Macro/Rates
Though rates have fallen in recent months, the prospects for easing, and a potentially growth-challenged 2024, keep duration risk reasonably attractive.
U.S. Corporates
Continued focus on defensive, strong cash flow businesses within investment-grade. In high yield, there is good total return potential given the overall level of yields, though spread levels do not compensate investors for growth risks and potential for higher defaults.
Securitized (MBS/ABS/CMBS)
Senior bonds in ABS and non-agency RMBS are well protected and provide good yield. Agency MBS have compelling relative value versus high-grade credit. Investor caution in CMBS allows for select opportunities to buy attractively priced bonds backed by strong properties.
Emerging Markets
EM debt continues to be a place where value can be exploited by individual mis-pricings as opposed to a broadly directional theme. Quasi-sovereigns remain interesting in areas where there is fundamental support yet a sizeable spread to the sovereign.