The rate for borrowing ten-year cash in the replacement market fell to -4% this week, which is very rare. This means that investors are basically paying to borrow ten-year bonds, when it is usually the other way around.
Crowded short bets
But these bets are creating intense demand in the ten-year cash replenishment market that can be reduced.
“This turmoil is being caused by the fluctuation of the bond market as people realign their views on the economy,” said Scott Skyrm, executive vice president of fixed income and replacement at Curvature Securities.
The ten-year Treasury rate rose to 1.6% last week, well above last March’s low of around 0.3%.
“Mouse and cat game”
Wall Street is essentially testing the Fed, pushing to see how far the central bank will raise rates before intervening.
“It’s a cat-and-mouse game,” said Mark Cabana, head of rate strategy at Bank of America. “The market is challenging the Fed. The Fed is being a little bit clever and basically telling the market, ‘Go fix it.’
But the Fed does not want to hurt the recovery or scare Wall Street.
If rates were to rise sharply, it would increase the cost of everything from mortgages and car loans to junk bonds.
“It will reach a turning point where it will have negative consequences in the financial market,” Cabana said.
The overheating debate
However, higher rates would also indicate that the U.S. economy is finally back to normal after more than a decade of slow growth and anemic inflation.
Dudley said 1.6% of Treasury rates are “nothing” and that projected yields will eventually rise to 3% and 4%, or even higher.
“The bond market right now is a little unrealistic about their expectations for the Fed. They certainly want the Fed to stop that,” said Dudley, who was previously a top-tier economist at Goldman Sachs. “And I think the Fed’s view is no. We’re not going to stop it. That’s normal. That’s what happens when the economy looks like it’s really going to recover.”
Cabana said Dudley, whom he regards for his time working together at the New York Fed, may be taking too much of an academic approach.
“The biggest risk to everything the Fed is trying to achieve in terms of stimulating growth and achieving full employment is too high U.S. interest rates,” Cabana said. “That would tilt the apple cart.”
The problem of the California Fed Hotel
The Fed would probably want to take a practical approach this time around as it tries to slowly withdraw from crisis mode.
However, Cabana does not believe this will happen, in part because of the huge federal budget deficits created by the pandemic and efforts to revive the economy.
“The Fed will have to increase its footprint in the markets. That’s how it ends,” Cabana said.
All of this highlights the Fed’s difficulty in developing its emergency policies.
“It’s the problem at the Fed Hotel California,” Cabana said. “You can leave, but you can never leave.”