Fixed income investors are facing a markedly different environment to the one that characterised the decade preceding the Covid-19 pandemic.
Following the Global Financial Crisis (GFC), inflation remained low and stable due to structural forces and policy intervention. Since Covid, we’ve seen surges in inflation, then partial disinflation, but with unexpected shocks – such as Trump’s tariffs this year – adding to volatility, especially in the US and Europe.
For fixed income investors, there’s a sense of ‘returning to the old normal’ – to the decades before the GFC, where shocks were more commonplace and inflation often rose well above the 2% threshold1. Today, we notice higher yields, higher volatility and higher – often positive – correlations with stocks.
And there’s one chart that encapsulates this new paradigm. It shows interest rates across various maturities, emphasising how flat the yield curve has become. What’s highlighted is how the yield curve has become more similar to the environment we were in before the GFC than the one most investors have experienced for well over a decade.