A tantrum without tapering – Asia Times

Posted By : Rina Latuperissa
3 Min Read

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Stocks fell sharply in Thursday’s New York session after bond “real,” or inflation-protected component of Treasury yields rose sharply. The inflation component of bond yields actually shrank a bit. The futures market for the US central bank’s overnight (federal funds) rate shows that investors expect that the Federal Reserve won’t raise interest rates until sometime in 2022. But that was enough to boost the yield on 5-year inflation-indexed Treasury notes by about 0.2% (20 basis points) and frighten the stock market.

The tech-heavy NASDAQ Index fell more than 3%, and the broad S&P 500 average fell by 2.6%.

Financial pundits compare the present situation to the “taper tantrum” of 2013, when the Federal Reserve announced that it would reduce, or “taper” its future purchases of government bonds (an attempt at stimulus that involved printing money to buy securities from the market). The S&P 500 fell about 6% during May and June of 2013 in response. 

But in this case, Fed Chair Jerome Powell has tried to reassure the market that he will not taper, at least not any time soon, and that investors can count on the Fed to keep buying $80 billion a month in Treasury securities. But the futures market for federal funds, the Federal Reserve’s overnight rate, shows that investors expect rates to go up in two or three years as the economy crawls out of the Covid-19 hole.

The bogeyman of the bond market, expected inflation, made no appearance in today’s events. So-called breakeven inflation (the difference between the yield on nominal Treasuries and inflation-indexed Treasuries) hasn’t changed at all in the past 10 days. This is a pure “real yield” effect, based on the market’s best guess of where the Federal Reserve will be two or three years from now.

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