The strength came as a surprise to bears who said the rally was on its last legs after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade in December. At the start of the year, strategists predicted benchmark 10-year Treasury yields would reach 2.45 percent this quarter. Instead, 10-year notes yielded 1.82 percent as of 10:10 a.m. in Tokyo, dropping from 2.27 percent on Dec. 31. Bond prices move in the opposite direction of their yields.
Government debt, the first destination for investors seeking safety, led the gains with a total return of 3.7 percent though March 29. Signs of slowing global economies and turbulence in stocks and currencies helped drive the demand. After their March policy-setting meeting, Fed officials said global economic developments posed a risk to growth, and cut their projected pace of 2016 rate increases to two, from the four they forecast in December.
The Citigroup Surprise Index for the Group of 10 economies, a gauge of how data measure up to economists’ forecasts, fell to its lowest since 2013 in February as oil prices plummeted and stocks entered a bear market. It was just the second time in seven years the MSCI All-Country World Index of shares experienced such a slide.
Other central banks stepped up efforts to stave off deflation. The European Central Bank cut rates further below zero in March, and the Bank of Japan announced negative rates in January. As a result, investors buying some debt in those economies are in essence paying to lend. Even so, demand for sovereign securities has been so great that more than $8 trillion of debt in the Bank of America global index trades with yields below zero.
“The ECB and BOJ are buying a boatload of debt,” said Jack McIntyre, a money manager in Philadelphia at Brandywine Global Investment Management LLC , which oversees $69 billion. “They’re crowding out the private sector, but that private sector is still out there and they have to put money to work.”
Benchmark Treasury yields touched their lowest since 2012 in February. Yields on bonds globally fell to 1.36 percent on Wednesday, from 1.75 percent at the end of December, Bank of America data show.
Of the five countries that performed best -- Germany, the U.K., Denmark, Belgium and Japan -- the two-year debt of all but the U.K. has negative yields. That could pose a problem, Brandywine’s McIntyre said.
“If yields are going to get more negative, then you can make sense of buying negative-yielding bonds,” he said. “But I’m not sure. You don’t want to be the last man standing in that,” especially if “we’re not going into a global recession.”
He’s trimmed Treasury holdings in recent weeks, since any signs that central banks have succeeded in spurring inflation may lead to losses in long-term U.S. debt. He’s adding corporate securities instead, for their higher yields.
The consensus on Wall Street is still for yields to rise. Ten-year Treasury yields will climb to 2.31 percent by the end of this year, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey. That’s down from a projection of 2.78 percent at the end of 2015.
Second Place
Investment-grade corporate bonds delivered the second-best performance across global debt markets, generating an average total return of 3.1 percent.
Bonds of Verizon Communications Inc. logged the highest gain among investment-grade companies, returning about 7.3 percent, Bank of America data show. The rally in global corporate bonds shrank the extra yield they offer over sovereign obligations to 1.47 percentage points on March 29, from 1.75 percentage points in mid-February.
With inflation in check and Fed Chair Janet Yellen saying this week the central bank will take a gradual approach to raising rates, bonds still have their proponents.
“The party continues,” said Michael Arone, the Boston-based chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors’ U.S. intermediary business. The company oversees $2.2 trillion. “The low interest-rate environment continues.”
--With assistance from Oliver Renick and Wes Goodman To contact the reporters on this story: Alexandra Scaggs in New York at ascaggs@bloomberg.net, Claire Boston in New York at cboston6@bloomberg.net, Liz Capo McCormick in New York at emccormick7@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Boris Korby at bkorby1@bloomberg.net, Nicholas Reynolds
By: Alexandra Scaggs, Claire Boston and Liz Capo McCormick
The strength came as a surprise to bears who said the rally was on its last legs after the Federal Reserve raised interest rates for the first time in nearly a decade in December. At the start of the year, strategists predicted benchmark 10-year Treasury yields would reach 2.45 percent this quarter. Instead, 10-year notes yielded 1.82 percent as of 10:10 a.m. in Tokyo, dropping from 2.27 percent on Dec. 31. Bond prices move in the opposite direction of their yields.
Government debt, the first destination for investors seeking safety, led the gains with a total return of 3.7 percent though March 29. Signs of slowing global economies and turbulence in stocks and currencies helped drive the demand. After their March policy-setting meeting, Fed officials said global economic developments posed a risk to growth, and cut their projected pace of 2016 rate increases to two, from the four they forecast in December.
The Citigroup Surprise Index for the Group of 10 economies, a gauge of how data measure up to economists’ forecasts, fell to its lowest since 2013 in February as oil prices plummeted and stocks entered a bear market. It was just the second time in seven years the MSCI All-Country World Index of shares experienced such a slide.
Other central banks stepped up efforts to stave off deflation. The European Central Bank cut rates further below zero in March, and the Bank of Japan announced negative rates in January. As a result, investors buying some debt in those economies are in essence paying to lend. Even so, demand for sovereign securities has been so great that more than $8 trillion of debt in the Bank of America global index trades with yields below zero.
“The ECB and BOJ are buying a boatload of debt,” said Jack McIntyre, a money manager in Philadelphia at Brandywine Global Investment Management LLC , which oversees $69 billion. “They’re crowding out the private sector, but that private sector is still out there and they have to put money to work.”
Benchmark Treasury yields touched their lowest since 2012 in February. Yields on bonds globally fell to 1.36 percent on Wednesday, from 1.75 percent at the end of December, Bank of America data show.
Of the five countries that performed best -- Germany, the U.K., Denmark, Belgium and Japan -- the two-year debt of all but the U.K. has negative yields. That could pose a problem, Brandywine’s McIntyre said.
“If yields are going to get more negative, then you can make sense of buying negative-yielding bonds,” he said. “But I’m not sure. You don’t want to be the last man standing in that,” especially if “we’re not going into a global recession.”
He’s trimmed Treasury holdings in recent weeks, since any signs that central banks have succeeded in spurring inflation may lead to losses in long-term U.S. debt. He’s adding corporate securities instead, for their higher yields.
The consensus on Wall Street is still for yields to rise. Ten-year Treasury yields will climb to 2.31 percent by the end of this year, according to the median forecast in a Bloomberg survey. That’s down from a projection of 2.78 percent at the end of 2015.
Second Place
Investment-grade corporate bonds delivered the second-best performance across global debt markets, generating an average total return of 3.1 percent.
Bonds of Verizon Communications Inc. logged the highest gain among investment-grade companies, returning about 7.3 percent, Bank of America data show. The rally in global corporate bonds shrank the extra yield they offer over sovereign obligations to 1.47 percentage points on March 29, from 1.75 percentage points in mid-February.
With inflation in check and Fed Chair Janet Yellen saying this week the central bank will take a gradual approach to raising rates, bonds still have their proponents.
“The party continues,” said Michael Arone, the Boston-based chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors’ U.S. intermediary business. The company oversees $2.2 trillion. “The low interest-rate environment continues.”
--With assistance from Oliver Renick and Wes Goodman To contact the reporters on this story: Alexandra Scaggs in New York at ascaggs@bloomberg.net, Claire Boston in New York at cboston6@bloomberg.net, Liz Capo McCormick in New York at emccormick7@bloomberg.net. To contact the editors responsible for this story: Boris Korby at bkorby1@bloomberg.net, Nicholas Reynolds
By: Alexandra Scaggs, Claire Boston and Liz Capo McCormick
Clearstream to Settle LCH-Cleared Equity Contracts
Featured Videos
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
Precious Insights: APAC's Bullion Market amid Record Volatility
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
The precious metals rally has challenged how brokers and LPs think about hedging, pricing, and physical delivery. But with regional banks eyeing physical gold retail and bullion brokers across Southeast Asia harnessing new tech, volatility is not only in 'safe havens'.
This session gathers practitioners from across the bullion ecosystem to unpack what the rally means on the ground in APAC.
Attendees will walk away with:
Insight into the physical market dynamics driving retail demand across Southeast Asia, from central bank buying to store-of-value purchases
Understanding of Singapore's distinct role as APAC's bullion gateway, and competition near and far
Perspective on operational challenges unique to APAC: kilogram pricing, local delivery, and bridging CFD and physical bullion infrastructure
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
License to Fill: Market Liquidity amid Global Turmoil
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Asian markets bear unique characteristics, from connectivity to asset preference. The Singapore Summit will connect global executives and local experts across the liquidity chain to discuss volatility fluctuations, diversification vs over-reliance on single assets, and the role of trust and liquidity relationships in an increasingly automated sphere.
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Regional Focus: Thailand, Vietnam
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Bangkok is consolidating as Southeast Asia's broker hub for CLMV access, while Vietnam's trading volumes have made it harder to ignore from any regional headquarters. Most brokers know both exist. Fewer have tested what operating there actually requires.
This session gathers practitioners with on-the-ground experience in both markets to examine what it takes to build and run operations in Thailand and Vietnam.
Attendees will walk away with:
A clear view of setup requirements in both markets: entity structures, timelines, and what first-time operators tend to get wrong
Understanding of the offshore broker model and how compliant operators work within domestic restrictions in each jurisdiction
Insight into talent acquisition, client onboarding, and distribution in markets where language, culture, and acquisition channels don't follow standard APAC assumptions
Perspective on adjacent Southeast Asian markets worth monitoring for the next regional move
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
Join The Club: What Premium Clients Want
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
High-net-worth traders account for an outsized portion of revenues for various retail brokers.
This session will gather heads of premium, acquisition, and product experts to reveal how they build their client base in Asia.
Attendees will walk away with:
Understanding of how brokers view premium clients (beyond deposit size).
Insight into which services, products, and benefits increase trust and LTV.
Examples of offerings that scale without inflating cost or operational burden.
Lessons from leading brokers on growing premium segments and what’s next.
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
Buying The Deep: Digital Asset Adoption in APAC and Beyond
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment
The persisting price drops test the industry's commitment to crypto adoption. While on-chain innovation is making headway across market mechanics, from stablecoins to tokenization, investors remains cautious.
This session brings together market structure experts and institutional investors to explore how a prolonged bear market affects their long-term strategy, and where the opportunities lie ahead of the next cycle.
Attendees will walk away with:
First-hand account of the bear market's impact on various industry players
Understanding of what custody, connectivity, and settlement gaps still hamper growth in APAC
Insight into how client mandates and operational readiness are shaping who moves and who waits
Perspective on what institutional investors need to move toward actual digital asset capital deployment