Could Bond Markets Finally Be Making Sense Again?

For decades, betting that long-term bond rates would rise was known as the widow-maker trade: It was simultaneously the most sensible and the most consistently money-losing wager an investor could make. Could this be the month the trade finally pays off?

The logic remains sound. As rich countries grow older, they are spending like crazy, and they have no earthly way of paying for all their debt. So it stands to reason that rates will go up eventually. And yet for most of the last 20 years, rates didn’t go up — they went down. This so defied the basic laws of economics that some economists said they no longer applied — and then policy makers believed them, and spent even more.

Rates have finally gone up in the last few years. Now the 30-year bond yield is rising in almost every rich country, except for those relatively prudent Swiss.

BB Rsik Rise graph

Most of the action is on the 30-year bond, which some see as a reassuring sign that a crisis is not imminent. After all, most credit is based on shorter-duration bonds. And while rates of about 5% may seem high, from a historical perspective they are not; the 30-year US yield is about one-third of what it was in the 1980s. Finally, rates have generally been higher since the pandemic, and nothing important has broken. Bond investors have had some good returns in the last year in the US as rates have remained steady, while rising rates in Europe may be less about macro panic and more about pension funds buying shorter-term bonds.