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Easing into a compelling outlook for bonds

After a strong finish to 2023, the US bond market resumed its sell-off in the first quarter on the back of hot January and February inflation prints and continued US growth resilience. Is the first quarter sell-off a temporary setback for fixed income investors or an ominous sign pointing to another year of bond market underperformance? We believe that after the recent sell-off, the risk-reward trade-off for bonds is now quite compelling. Ultimately, we believe the last two inflation prints were only temporary setbacks, and the broader disinflation process remains on track. Meanwhile, consensus growth expectations have been revised sharply higher and going forward, it will be more difficult for the US economy to outperform expectations. Finally, valuations and positioning in both equity and credit markets are quite stretched, and bonds could benefit from a potential correction in risky assets.

This quarter’s Macroeconomic update also covers:

  • Watching inflation data
  • Growth is resilient but not inflationary
  • The potential for yield curve normalization
  • UK bonds
  • Strategy implications


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