As risks to the outlook increase, investors are scooping up longer-dated securities on expectations that interest rates will continue to fall
The inverted yield curve looks set to be a global phenomenon, with major Asian debt markets primed to mirror the moves in Treasuries as fears grow that the world economy is teetering on the brink of a recession.
Yields in Singapore, Australia and Japan are tracking the slide in their US and UK peers as investors take stock of the damage wrought by the Sino-American trade war. A poor German GDP print and disappointing China factory output data on Wednesday underscored the weakness that’s engulfing the global economy.
As risks to the outlook increase, investors are scooping up longer-dated securities on expectations that interest rates will continue to fall. The following charts illustrate how some of Asia’s major bond markets are shadowing the moves in Treasuries amid a global flight to safety.
Singapore
The spread between Singapore’s two- and 10-year yields narrowed to one basis point this week, the smallest gap since November 2006. Local interest rates and yields tend to follow those in the US as the Monetary Authority of Singapore uses the currency rather than borrowing costs to set policy.
As one of the world’s most open economies, the city state has felt the chill from the slowdown in global trade. Singapore’s GDP contracted 3.3 per cent last quarter, hurt by softening demand and a slump in the electronics sector.
“This is a global phenomenon,” Winson Phoon, head of fixed-income research at Maybank Kim Eng Securities in the city state, referring to the flattening curve. “It looks like Singapore is heading toward that direction too as the demand for safer assets is prompting investors to be long sovereign bonds and extend duration in anticipation of major economic slowdown risk.”
Australia
Australia’s yield curve, which consists of three- and 10-year notes, has also been flattening. Local yields are under pressure, thanks to the global bond rally and increasing expectations for the Reserve Bank of Australia to keep interest rates lower for longer.
Still, RBA Deputy Governor Guy Debelle on Thursday downplayed the inversion in the Treasury curve, saying he wasn’t sure “how useful that signal is.” The US and Australian curves would be steeper if negative term premia were taken into account, he said.
Debelle’s argument runs counter to the findings of a research paper from the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco, which judged the yield curve to be a “fairly accurate” predictor of a recession.
Japan
In Japan, the curve is also approaching inversion for the first time since the nation’s economic bubble burst in the 1990s. The central bank’s yield-curve-control policy plays a big part in influencing market moves but local bonds aren’t immune to global growth concerns.
“The possibility can’t be ruled out that the two- to 10-year part of Japan’s curve will be inverted,” Katsutoshi Inadome, a senior fixed-income strategist at Mitsubishi UFJ Morgan Stanley Securities Co., wrote in a note on Thursday. “Market participants remain wary of the Bank of Japan’s moves, but global risk aversion is likely to prevail.”
First Published: Fri, August 16 2019. 00:41 IST
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