Bond Traders Lean Into ‘Sweet Spot’ Amid Doubts on Fed Path

At BlackRock Inc., PGIM and other Wall Street firms, bond-fund managers are sticking to trades that will likely pay off even if the Federal Reserve’s path is again knocked off course by surprising turns in the economy.

The run-up to the Fed’s first interest rate cut in nine months has already supplied solid returns, driving the Treasury market to its biggest annual gains since the pandemic forced the central bank to drive its lending rate to the cusp of zero.

But when Jerome Powell finally delivered the highly anticipated move on Wednesday, he underscored the need to balance cracks in the job market against the risks of rising inflation.

That’s strengthened conviction in what has proved a winning strategy for riding out that sort of uncertainty: buying the middle-maturity Treasuries that throw off interest payments and are more insulated from price swings caused by rapid-fire reversals to the economic outlook.

“The longer term path is for a weaker economy and most likely lower rates to go along with that,” said Christian Hoffmann, portfolio manager at Thornburg Investment Management. But, he said, there’s a lot of uncertainty because it’s “increasingly difficult to draw a straight line from the evolution of the data to the Fed’s reaction.”

Treasuries traded little-changed on Monday, underperforming a small rally in UK and European government bonds. Yields on five-year US notes steadied at 3.68%.

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