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
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Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Hannah Hill on Innovation, Branding & Award-Winning Technology | Executive Interview | AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Recorded live at FMLS:25, this executive interview features Hannah Hill, Head of Brand and Sponsorship at AXI, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following AXI’s win for Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025.
In this wide-ranging discussion, Hannah shares insights on:
🔹What winning the Finance Magnates award means for AXI’s credibility and innovation
🔹How the launch of AXI Select, the capital allocation program, is redefining industry standards
🔹The development and rollout of the AXI trading app across multiple markets
🔹Driving brand evolution alongside technological advancements
🔹Encouraging and recognizing teams behind the scenes
🔹The role of marketing, content, and social media in building product awareness
Hannah explains why standout products, strategic branding, and a focus on innovation are key to growing visibility and staying ahead in a competitive brokerage landscape.
🏆 Award Highlight: Most Innovative Broker of the Year 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #MostInnovativeBroker #TradingTechnology #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview #AXI
Executive Interview | Dor Eligula | Co-Founder & Chief Business Officer, BridgeWise | FMLS:25
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We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
In this session, Jonathan Fine form Ultimate Group speaks with Dor Eligula from Bridgewise, a fast-growing AI-powered research and analytics firm supporting brokers and exchanges worldwide.
We start with Dor’s reaction to the Summit and then move to broker growth and the quick wins brokers often overlook. Dor shares where he sees “blue ocean” growth across Asian markets and how local client behaviour shapes demand.
We also discuss the rollout of AI across investment research. Dor gives real examples of how automation and human judgment meet at Bridgewise — including moments when analysts corrected AI output, and times when AI prevented an error.
We close with a practical question: how retail investors can actually use AI without falling into common traps.
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In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Brendan Callan joined us fresh off the Summit’s most anticipated debate: “Is Prop Trading Good for the Industry?” Brendan argued against the motion — and the audience voted him the winner.
In this interview, Brendan explains the reasoning behind his position. He walks through the message he believes many firms avoid: that the current prop trading model is too dependent on fees, too loose on risk, and too confusing for retail audiences.
We discuss why he thinks the model grew fast, why it may run into walls, and what he believes is needed for a cleaner, more responsible version of prop trading.
This is Brendan at his frankest — sharp, grounded, and very clear about what changes are overdue.
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Elina Pedersen on Growth, Stability & Ultra-Low Latency | Executive Interview | Your Bourse
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
Recorded live at FMLS:25 London, this executive interview features Elina Pedersen, in conversation with Finance Magnates, following her company’s win for Best Connectivity 2025.
🔹In this wide-ranging discussion, Elina shares insights on:
🔹What winning a Finance Magnates award means for credibility and reputation
🔹How broker demand for stability and reliability is driving rapid growth
🔹The launch of a new trade server enabling flexible front-end integrations
🔹Why ultra-low latency must be proven with data, not buzzwords
🔹Common mistakes brokers make when scaling globally
🔹Educating the industry through a newly launched Dealers Academy
🔹Where AI fits into trading infrastructure and where it doesn’t
Elina explains why resilient back-end infrastructure, deep client partnerships, and disciplined focus are critical for brokers looking to scale sustainably in today’s competitive market.
🏆 Award Highlight: Best Connectivity 2025
👉 Subscribe to Finance Magnates for more executive interviews, industry insights, and exclusive coverage from the world’s leading financial events.
#FMLS25 #FinanceMagnates #BestConnectivity #TradingTechnology #UltraLowLatency #FinTech #Brokerage #ExecutiveInterview
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
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#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights
In this video, we take an in-depth look at @BlueberryMarketsForex , a forex and CFD broker operating since 2016, offering access to multiple trading platforms, over 1,000 instruments, and flexible account types for different trading styles.
We break down Blueberry’s regulatory structure, including its Australian Financial Services License (AFSL), as well as its authorisation and registrations in other jurisdictions. The review also covers supported platforms such as MetaTrader 4, MetaTrader 5, cTrader, TradingView, Blueberry.X, and web-based trading.
You’ll learn about available instruments across forex, commodities, indices, share CFDs, and crypto CFDs, along with leverage options, minimum and maximum trade sizes, and how Blueberry structures its Standard and Raw accounts.
We also explain spreads, commissions, swap rates, swap-free account availability, funding and withdrawal methods, processing times, and what traders can expect from customer support and additional services.
Watch the full review to see whether Blueberry’s trading setup aligns with your experience level, strategy, and risk tolerance.
📣 Stay up to date with the latest in finance and trading. Follow Finance Magnates for industry news, insights, and global event coverage.
Connect with us:
🔗 LinkedIn: /financemagnates
👍 Facebook: /financemagnates
📸 Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/financemagnates
🐦 X: https://x.com/financemagnates
🎥 TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/tag/financemagnates
▶️ YouTube: /@financemagnates_official
#Blueberry #BlueberryMarkets #BrokerReview #ForexBroker #CFDTrading #OnlineTrading #FinanceMagnates #TradingPlatforms #MarketInsights