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January 2022 / U.S. FIXED INCOME

Finding Opportunities Amid Fixed Income Turbulence

Flexible multi-sector approach is essential as markets shift.

Key Insights

  • Flexibility and a collaborative multi‑sector approach, in our view, are particularly important in navigating today’s dynamic market environment.
  • We seek to combine well‑diversified sector allocation with tactical insights to pursue consistent risk‑adjusted returns across different market environments.
  • Seeking to capitalize on bond market inefficiencies and constructing a diversified, risk‑balanced portfolio informs our strategic allocation and positioning.

Flexibility and a collaborative multi‑sector approach, in our view, are essential components of fixed income portfolio management. These are particularly important in navigating the crosscurrents of today’s dynamic market environment. The emergence of the omicron variant of the coronavirus has unsettled markets, with sentiment shifting between alarmist and complacent since late November. At the same time, investors are still digesting the Federal Reserve’s abrupt policy shift in December from dovish to hawkish. In addition, the economy is now facing both monetary and fiscal tightening in 2022.

The simultaneous presence of these risks at a time when Treasury yields are low and credit spreads1 are narrow by historical standards suggest that the first half of 2022 could be increasingly turbulent. Despite this cloudy backdrop, credit fundamentals are still strong and market technicals are supportive. Our flexible, active portfolio management approach should give us opportunities to take advantage of anomalies that are present in this unusual environment—as well as inefficiencies that tend to persist regardless of the macro backdrop—while managing risk in the US Total Return Bond Strategy.

Odds of Fed Policy Error Increasing

In our view, the chances of a Fed policy error, such as over‑tightening policy to tame inflation, are increasing. The current environment has some parallels to the 2017–2018 period, when the market transitioned from tranquil to a higher‑volatility regime as the Fed engaged in quantitative tightening and the global growth outlook dimmed. The central bank eventually relented as markets reacted poorly to the perceived policy error.

Treasuries Have Been Strong Diversifiers

(Fig. 1) Correlation of 10‑year Treasury and credit indexes*

Treasuries Have Been Strong Diversifiers

As of December 31, 2021.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.
Source: Barclays Live/Haver Analytics
*Rolling 12‑month correlation of credit index excess returns. Correlation measures how one asset class, style, or individual group may be related to another. A perfect positive correlation means that the correlation coefficient is exactly 1. This implies that as one security moves, either up or down, the other security moves in lockstep, in the same direction. A perfect negative correlation means that two assets move in opposite directions, while a 0 correlation implies no relationship at all. Excess return is calculated as the index’s total return less the return of a duration-matched U.S. Treasury security. Investment-grade and high yield corporate excess returns are based on the Bloomberg U.S. Corporate Investment Grade and U.S. Corporate High Yield indices.

The path of inflation—and the Fed’s response—will be a key indicator to watch in the coming months. While we acknowledge that there are still upside risks for inflation, we believe that supply chain bottlenecks and labor market tightness will gradually ease. This disinflationary dynamic would help sustain economic growth.

Outlook for Volatility in Rates and Credit

This ongoing uncertainty about the interaction of COVID‑19 trends, inflation and other economic data, and global central banks removing monetary accommodation should create volatility in rates and credit markets. We are likely to keep the portfolio defensively positioned in this environment, keeping risk exposure well balanced and toward the lower end of its historical range in the strategy. At the same time, we have been selectively adding exposure to fixed income sectors that provide relatively attractive valuations. These include some areas of securitized credit2 as well as bank loans, which have floating coupons that would adjust upward as the Fed raises rates.

Relative Value Opportunities Across Sectors

A multi‑sector portfolio management approach allows the freedom for relative value comparisons across fixed income sectors. An investment‑grade corporate bond and a similarly rated municipal bond or asset‑backed security (ABS) often trade differently. To a larger extent than equity markets, fixed income markets are fragmented and tend to have investors that are narrowly focused on a sector or asset class niche. This can lead to technical pressure where some dedicated funds receiving inflows will buy because they have to put cash to work, resulting in disparate cross‑sector relative value. More diversified portfolios that employ a multi‑sector approach can capitalize on these relative value dislocations.

A multi‑sector portfolio management approach allows the freedom for relative value comparisons across fixed income sectors.

Along with building portfolios that diversify credit risk across sectors, we can also make tactical allocation adjustments when we identify possible relative value opportunities. These dislocations can also occur within credit sectors when our internal credit analyst teams have a meaningfully different view of the credit quality of an issuer, subsector, or industry compared with external research.

As an example, the US Total Return Bond Strategy can have impactful out‑of‑benchmark allocations to high yield bonds and bank loans, where we rely heavily on the work of our high yield credit analysts. The team uses extensive proprietary fundamental research to expose and exploit value dislocations in these markets.

Flexibility to Tactically Adjust Duration

A key part of our active portfolio management approach, the flexibility to adjust duration3 in the strategy is essential in this volatile environment. At the end of 2021, overall duration was close to the benchmark with a slight bias toward a short relative duration position, in keeping with our defensive posture in the portfolio. When U.S. economic growth was still accelerating in early 2021, we maintained a meaningfully shorter‑than‑benchmark duration position, which helped dull the negative price effects of increasing yields.

Shorter-Term Corporates Outperformed

(Fig. 2) Information ratio on excess return by maturity and credit rating*

Shorter-Term Corporates Outperformed

March 31, 1998, through December 31, 2021.
Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance.
Source: Bloomberg Index Services Limited (see Additional Disclosure). Calculations by T. Rowe Price.
*The information ratio measures returns beyond the returns of the broad index
compared with the volatility of those returns. The broad index is the Bloomberg
U.S. Corporate Investment Grade Index.

Because high‑quality government debt tends to rally in periods of deteriorating risk sentiment, duration can also serve as a hedge against credit risk. Some observers have questioned the effectiveness of duration as a hedge for credit risk with Treasury yields at levels that are low by historical standards, reasoning that Treasuries have limited room to rally. We think that Treasuries will continue to be useful as a hedge against a steep sell‑off in credit and other riskier assets, such as equities. As a result, adding duration can allow investors to have more exposure to credit risk, with all else equal.

Exploiting Persistent Inefficiencies

Fixed income markets also feature some long‑lasting inefficiencies that persist despite being well understood by many market participants. Most of these inefficiencies result from imbalances between supply and demand or from investor constraints. There are also market participants with objectives other than maximizing total return, such as institutions constrained by tax considerations and those that have yield‑driven performance targets.

Most of these inefficiencies result from imbalances between supply and demand or from investor constraints.

Our quantitative research team has identified some of these anomalies and tested their robustness in various macro scenarios. As long as we have a relatively high degree of confidence that these inefficiencies will persist in the longer term and that they are appropriate for our investor base, we try to take advantage of them. Capitalizing on these inefficiencies while constructing a diversified, risk‑balanced portfolio forms the basis of our strategic asset allocation and portfolio positioning. At the same time, we are aware that there are certain transient environments where positioning to exploit these anomalies could weigh on performance, and we strive to anticipate these shorter‑term shifts and tactically adjust exposures appropriately.

Areas of Structural Inefficiency

  • Shorter‑maturity investment‑grade corporate bonds historically have exhibited much higher risk‑adjusted returns than longer‑term corporates. Portfolios can hold a credit curve steepener—overweights to shorter‑duration corporate credit and underweights to longer‑duration corporates—to try to capitalize on this structural inefficiency.
  • We have also observed that credit derivatives tend to perform better in credit sell‑offs than cash bonds, and it can be advantageous to replace some cash bond exposure with credit derivatives when the “basis”—the difference in spread between cash bonds and derivatives—is especially tight.
  • In another example, credit quality constraints prevent some investors from holding non‑investment‑grade securities. When a bond is downgraded from investment grade into the high yield universe, forced selling from these investors can push prices lower than what the bond’s fundamentals would dictate. We try to capitalize on the relative value that can often be found in these fallen angels.
  • Securitized credit is another area of structural inefficiency. Some investors were restricted from owning securitized debt after the global financial crisis, and some lack the ability to analyze the often‑complex cash flow structures of the securities. T. Rowe Price’s team of securitized credit analysts have the capability to value these bonds, allowing us to locate attractive securities and segments that other investors may overlook.

Flexible Multi‑Sector Approach

On a broader level, the income and relatively low volatility of a fixed income allocation make it an important part of a broader portfolio’s asset allocation. In the US Total Return Bond Strategy, we seek to combine well‑diversified sector allocation with tactical insights to pursue strong, consistent risk‑adjusted returns across different types of market environments. Our flexible multi‑sector approach to managing the portfolio allows us to actively manage relative duration and try to take advantage of relative value among sectors.

It must be mentioned that having the platform at hand that we do at T. Rowe Price is invaluable when facing challenging market conditions. As a firm, we have tremendous expertise across the globe, reaching across the capital structure from investment-grade debt to equity, across all sectors, across macro and micro, and across fundamental and quantitative. In our view, these resources are an advantage in managing a multi‑sector fixed income portfolio when it comes to everything from navigating changing market dynamics to constructing durable portfolios to just plain old fundamental security selection.

What we’re watching next

Environmental, social, and governance (ESG) analysis is an integral part of our fundamental credit research process. T. Rowe Price’s proprietary ESG research tools identify credits with potential ESG-related issues, which our analysts and portfolio managers incorporate, as appropriate to their strategy, into investment theses, internal credit ratings, price targets, and position sizing.

IMPORTANT INFORMATION

This material is being furnished for general informational purposes only. The material does not constitute or undertake to give advice of any nature, including fiduciary investment advice, and prospective investors are recommended to seek independent legal, financial and tax advice before making any investment decision. T. Rowe Price group of companies including T. Rowe Price Associates, Inc. and/or its affiliates receive revenue from T. Rowe Price investment products and services. Past performance is not a reliable indicator of future performance. The value of an investment and any income from it can go down as well as up. Investors may get back less than the amount invested.

The material does not constitute a distribution, an offer, an invitation, a personal or general recommendation or solicitation to sell or buy any securities in any jurisdiction or to conduct any particular investment activity. The material has not been reviewed by any regulatory authority in any jurisdiction.

Information and opinions presented have been obtained or derived from sources believed to be reliable and current; however, we cannot guarantee the sources' accuracy or completeness. There is no guarantee that any forecasts made will come to pass. The views contained herein are as of the date noted on the material and are subject to change without notice; these views may differ from those of other T. Rowe Price group companies and/or associates. Under no circumstances should the material, in whole or in part, be copied or redistributed without consent from T. Rowe Price.

The material is not intended for use by persons in jurisdictions which prohibit or restrict the distribution of the material and in certain countries the material is provided upon specific request.  

It is not intended for distribution to retail investors in any jurisdiction.

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