Bond Bears Miss Out on $2 Trillion Windfall in Record Debt Rally
Wednesday,30/03/2016|23:30GMTby
Bloomberg News
So much for the end of the bull market in bonds.Recession worries and central-bank stimulus in Europe and Japan...
So much for the end of the bull market in bonds.
Recession worries and central-bank stimulus in Europe and Japan have given fresh life to a three-decade-long rally in global debt. Bonds worldwide are off to the best annual start since at least 1996. They’ve earned about 3.2 percent this quarter and added $2.1 trillion of market value, according to a Bank of America Merrill Lynch index that tracks securities ranging from corporate and government Obligations to mortgage-backed debt.
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.
“The lower yields have gotten, the more reasons have piled up that yields have to stay low,” said Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist in Newark, New Jersey, for Prudential Financial Inc.’s fixed-income division, which manages $575 billion. He expects the 10-year Treasury Yield will end the year at 1.9 percent.
Sovereigns Shine
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
Recession worries and central-bank stimulus in Europe and Japan have given fresh life to a three-decade-long rally in global debt. Bonds worldwide are off to the best annual start since at least 1996. They’ve earned about 3.2 percent this quarter and added $2.1 trillion of market value, according to a Bank of America Merrill Lynch index that tracks securities ranging from corporate and government Obligations to mortgage-backed debt.
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.
“The lower yields have gotten, the more reasons have piled up that yields have to stay low,” said Robert Tipp, chief investment strategist in Newark, New Jersey, for Prudential Financial Inc.’s fixed-income division, which manages $575 billion. He expects the 10-year Treasury Yield will end the year at 1.9 percent.
Sovereigns Shine
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
Marketing in 2026 Audiences, Costs, and Smarter AI
Marketing in 2026 Audiences, Costs, and Smarter AI
As brokers eye B2B business and compete with fintechs and crypto exchanges alike, marketers need to act wisely with often limited budgets. AI can offer scalable solutions, but only if used properly.
Join seasoned marketing executives and specialists as they discuss the main challenges they identify in financial services in 2026 and how they address them.
Attendees of this session will walk away with:
- A nuts-and-bolts account of acquisition costs across platforms and geos
- Analysis of today’s multi-layered audience segments and differences in behaviour
- First-hand account of how global brokers balance consistency and local flavour
- Notes from the field about intelligently using AI and automation in marketing
Speakers:
-Yam Yehoshua, Editor-In-Chief at Finance Magnates
-Federico Paderni, Managing Director for Growth Markets in Europe at X
-Jo Benton, Chief Marketing Officer, Consulting | Fractional CMO
-Itai Levitan, Head of Strategy at investingLive
-Roberto Napolitano, CMO at Innovate Finance
-Tony Cross, Director at Monk Communications
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #FintechMarketing #AI #DigitalStrategy #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
As brokers eye B2B business and compete with fintechs and crypto exchanges alike, marketers need to act wisely with often limited budgets. AI can offer scalable solutions, but only if used properly.
Join seasoned marketing executives and specialists as they discuss the main challenges they identify in financial services in 2026 and how they address them.
Attendees of this session will walk away with:
- A nuts-and-bolts account of acquisition costs across platforms and geos
- Analysis of today’s multi-layered audience segments and differences in behaviour
- First-hand account of how global brokers balance consistency and local flavour
- Notes from the field about intelligently using AI and automation in marketing
Speakers:
-Yam Yehoshua, Editor-In-Chief at Finance Magnates
-Federico Paderni, Managing Director for Growth Markets in Europe at X
-Jo Benton, Chief Marketing Officer, Consulting | Fractional CMO
-Itai Levitan, Head of Strategy at investingLive
-Roberto Napolitano, CMO at Innovate Finance
-Tony Cross, Director at Monk Communications
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #FintechMarketing #AI #DigitalStrategy #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
Much like their traders in the market, brokers must diversify to manage risk and stay resilient. But that can get costly, clunky, and lengthy.
This candid panel brings together builders across the trading infrastructure space to uncover the shifting dynamics behind tools, interfaces, and full-stack ambitions.
Attendees will hear:
-Why platform dependency has become one of the most overlooked risks in the trading business?
-Buy vs. build: What do hybrid models look like, and why are industry graveyards filled with failed ‘killer apps’?
-How AI is already changing execution, risk, and reporting—and what’s next?
-Which features, assets, and tools gain the most traction, and where brokers should look for tech-driven retention?
Speakers:
-Stephen Miles, Chief Revenue Officer at FYNXT
-John Morris, Co-Founder at FXBlue
-Matthew Smith, Group Chair & CEO at EC Markets
-Tom Higgins, Founder & CEO at Gold-i
-Gil Ben Hur, Founder at 5% Group
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #Trading #Fintech #FintechInnovation #TradingTechnology #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
Much like their traders in the market, brokers must diversify to manage risk and stay resilient. But that can get costly, clunky, and lengthy.
This candid panel brings together builders across the trading infrastructure space to uncover the shifting dynamics behind tools, interfaces, and full-stack ambitions.
Attendees will hear:
-Why platform dependency has become one of the most overlooked risks in the trading business?
-Buy vs. build: What do hybrid models look like, and why are industry graveyards filled with failed ‘killer apps’?
-How AI is already changing execution, risk, and reporting—and what’s next?
-Which features, assets, and tools gain the most traction, and where brokers should look for tech-driven retention?
Speakers:
-Stephen Miles, Chief Revenue Officer at FYNXT
-John Morris, Co-Founder at FXBlue
-Matthew Smith, Group Chair & CEO at EC Markets
-Tom Higgins, Founder & CEO at Gold-i
-Gil Ben Hur, Founder at 5% Group
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #Trading #Fintech #FintechInnovation #TradingTechnology #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
Educators, IBs, And Other Regional Growth Drivers
Educators, IBs, And Other Regional Growth Drivers
When acquisition costs rise and AI generated reviews are exactly as useful as they sound, performing and fair partners can make or break brokers.
This session looks at how these players are shaping access, trust and user engagement, and what the most effective partnership models look like in 2025.
Key Themes:
- Building trader communities through education and local expertise
- Aligning broker incentives with long-term regional strategies
- Regional regulation and the realities of compliant acquisition
- What’s next for performance-driven partnerships in online trading
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Zander Van Der Merwe, Key Individual & Head of Sales at TD Markets
-Brunno Huertas, Regional Manager – Latin America at Tickmill
-Paul Chalmers, CEO at UK Trading Academy
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #BrokerGrowth #FintechPartnerships #RegionalMarkets
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
When acquisition costs rise and AI generated reviews are exactly as useful as they sound, performing and fair partners can make or break brokers.
This session looks at how these players are shaping access, trust and user engagement, and what the most effective partnership models look like in 2025.
Key Themes:
- Building trader communities through education and local expertise
- Aligning broker incentives with long-term regional strategies
- Regional regulation and the realities of compliant acquisition
- What’s next for performance-driven partnerships in online trading
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Zander Van Der Merwe, Key Individual & Head of Sales at TD Markets
-Brunno Huertas, Regional Manager – Latin America at Tickmill
-Paul Chalmers, CEO at UK Trading Academy
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #BrokerGrowth #FintechPartnerships #RegionalMarkets
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
The Leap to Everything App: Are Brokers There Yet?
The Leap to Everything App: Are Brokers There Yet?
As the arms race to bundle investing, personal finance, and wallets under super apps grows fiercer, brokers are caught between a rock and a hard place.
This session explores unexpected ways for industry players to collaborate as consumer habits evolve, competitors eye the traffic, and regulation becomes more nuanced.
Speakers:
-Laura McCracken,CEO | Advisory Board Member at Blackheath Advisors | The Payments Association
-Slobodan Manojlović,Vice President | Lead Software Engineer at JP Morgan Chase & Co.
-Jordan Sinclair, President at Robinhood UK
-Simon Pelletier, Head of Product at Yuh
Gerald Perez, CEO at Interactive Brokers UK
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
As the arms race to bundle investing, personal finance, and wallets under super apps grows fiercer, brokers are caught between a rock and a hard place.
This session explores unexpected ways for industry players to collaborate as consumer habits evolve, competitors eye the traffic, and regulation becomes more nuanced.
Speakers:
-Laura McCracken,CEO | Advisory Board Member at Blackheath Advisors | The Payments Association
-Slobodan Manojlović,Vice President | Lead Software Engineer at JP Morgan Chase & Co.
-Jordan Sinclair, President at Robinhood UK
-Simon Pelletier, Head of Product at Yuh
Gerald Perez, CEO at Interactive Brokers UK
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #Innovation
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
Mind The Gap: Can Retail Investors Save the UK Stock Market?
Mind The Gap: Can Retail Investors Save the UK Stock Market?
As the dire state of listing and investment in the UK goes from a financial services problem to a national challenge, the retail investing industry is taken to task.
Join a host of executives and experts for a candid conversation about the future of millions of Brits, as seen from a financial services standpoint:
-Are they happy with the Leeds Reform, in principle and in practice?
-Is it the government’s job to affect the ‘saver’ mentality? Is it doing well?
-What can brokers and fintechs do to spur UK investment?
-How can the FCA balance greater flexibility with consumer protection?
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Nicola Higgs, Partner at Latham & Watkins
-Dan Lane, Investment Content Lead at Robinhood UK
-Jack Crone, PR & Public Affairs Lead at IG
-David Belle, Founder at Fink Money
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #RetailInvesting #UKFinance
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official
As the dire state of listing and investment in the UK goes from a financial services problem to a national challenge, the retail investing industry is taken to task.
Join a host of executives and experts for a candid conversation about the future of millions of Brits, as seen from a financial services standpoint:
-Are they happy with the Leeds Reform, in principle and in practice?
-Is it the government’s job to affect the ‘saver’ mentality? Is it doing well?
-What can brokers and fintechs do to spur UK investment?
-How can the FCA balance greater flexibility with consumer protection?
Speakers:
-Adam Button, Chief Currency Analyst at investingLive
-Nicola Higgs, Partner at Latham & Watkins
-Dan Lane, Investment Content Lead at Robinhood UK
-Jack Crone, PR & Public Affairs Lead at IG
-David Belle, Founder at Fink Money
#fmls #fmls25 #fmevents #Brokers #FinanceLeadership #Trading #Fintech #RetailInvesting #UKFinance
Connect with us at:
🔗 LinkedIn: / financemagnates-events
👍 Facebook: / financemagnatesevents
📸 Instagram: / fmevents_official
🐦 Twitter: / f_m_events
🎥 TikTok: / fmevents_official