Seven spooktacular Halloween charts in a scary year for markets

We’re big fans of M&G’s Bond Vigilantes blog, so we asked Andrew Eve, an investment specialist on their fixed income team, if we could have an early run at their regular Halloween round-up of the scariest charts in finance.

With runaway inflation around the world, this has been a spooky year for for bond investors. But 2022 has also made fixed income investing much more interesting, and meant that we had no shortage of unnerving charts either.

After years of low, rangebound bond yields, markets have finally escaped the zero bound — in the case of the German 10-year yield, going from below zero ago at the start of 2022 to close to 2.5 per cent earlier this month. As we wrote last week, after many years of a Halloween ‘treat’ for markets in the form of QE, it will soon be time for the ‘trick’ (QT).

With all this in mind, here are the Bond Vigilantes’ spoooookiest charts for 2022.

1. No sofa to hide behind in 2022

One of the scariest charts for investors this year will be a look at their 2022 portfolio returns. Whether in government bonds, corporate bonds, emerging market bonds, currencies or equities, there really were very few places to hide this year from the spectre of rising interest rates and a ghastly slowdown in growth. The dollar was one of the few assets in our chart to see a positive return so far this year.

2. The waking of the giant anaconda

We have previously compared the long end of the US Treasury market to a giant anaconda: drawing little attention during its long slumber, but making markets shake the moment it wakes and rears its head.

For many years, long-dated Treasury bonds have made investors smile: a multi-decade bull market in yields made financing cheap and gave investors healthy returns. The moves in long-dated Treasury yields can be poisonous though, as they affect mortgage rates and the price of debt around the world. This year, the whole Treasury curve has risen, and the giant anaconda may finally have awoken . ..

 3. Inflation linked bond investors hoping for a treat may have received a trick instead

One place investors may have tried to find shelter is in inflation-linked bonds. These may sound like the perfect place to hide in a year that has seen CPI reach double digits in the UK, and not far off it in Europe and the US. But a quick look at year to date returns of FTSE’s UK Index-Linked Gilts Index makes for scary viewing — it is down over 30 per cent year to date.

What is going on here? It is important to remember that, while inflation-linked bonds do contain a treat, in having their principle and coupons linked to inflation, they also carry a potential trick: they can have a lot of interest rate duration. In inflationary environments, in which central banks tend to hike rates, rising interest rates is bad news for bonds with a lot of duration — as linker investors may have found to their peril this year. One way to mitigate this effect is to invest in much shorter dated linkers.

4. Boo! IG issuers now have to pay HY borrowing costs

Turning now to companies that sell bonds, 2022 had a frightful surprise for investment grade issuers, who are now having to pay what the market recently would have priced as high yield borrowing costs. From as low as 1.6 per cent all-in yields at the start of 2021, BBB-rated investment grade issuers are now having to pay eye-watering borrowing costs of 6.1 per cent — not far off the 6.4 per cent that CCC-rated high yield issuers were being charged that same year.

This chart may send ghostly shivers down the backs of any IG companies with approaching refinancing risks.

5. Leading indicators are looking scary

There are some frightening ghouls hiding behind this chart, which shows the US Conference Board’s leading indicators index. From jobless claims data and production measures, to new orders and consumer expectations, this index is a combination of the most used leading economic indicators and makes for grim viewing.

It recently plunged below zero, which in the past has suggested a recession is coming.

6. Recession forecasts give investors pumpkin to worry about

Perhaps these leading indicators, along with the inflationary pressures being felt around the world, help explain this next alarming chart.

Economists’ forecasts for the probability of a recession coming over the next year have been steadily creeping up in 2022. This chart makes for terrifying viewing, with forecasts now having reached 80 per cent in the UK and eurozone.

7. And finally . . . a sweet treat may not bring investors cheer this year

Finally, for anyone hoping that some sweet treats may cheer them up after seeing these scary charts, the cost of Halloween may be going up.

The US CPI Candy & Chewing Gum Index (!) reveals inflation here at over 13 per cent in the year from September 2021 to September 2022. To put this in perspective, it took around seven years to see the same level of inflation in the candy index in the period up to 2021.

 Happy Halloween!

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