US regime shift leaves bonds with a licence to thrill

Date:

Longer-term Treasuries are increasingly acting like risk assets, shaking investor assumptions and changing widely accepted asset allocation conventions.

There was a time when the safest place for investors to hide was at the far end of the yield curve.

No matter the crisis, no matter the volatility in equity markets, long-term US Treasuries were the ballast — the part of the portfolio that investors never needed to worry about.

But that reflex is now under direct attack and the investment world is still reacting far too slowly.

The sharp selloff of 30-year US government bonds in May, which briefly sent yields surging above 5 per cent, is not just a technical wobble or a seasonal repricing. It is confirmation that one of the most trusted assumptions in modern portfolio theory is losing its grip.

Long bonds — the bedrock of traditional diversification — are behaving more like risk assets…

Read more…

Share post:

Subscribe

spot_imgspot_img

Popular

More like this
Related

Tampa RV giant Lazydays to delist from Nasdaq

Tampa-based Lazydays Holdings Inc., one of Florida’s most recognized...

Granite Geek: New Hampshire might get access to ‘balcony solar’

I had solar panels put on my roof six...

TSX Today: What to Watch for in Stocks on Monday, November 10

Despite firm gold and silver prices, Canadian stocks...

While BNB and DOT Struggle Under Market Pressure, BlockDAG’s Presale Soars Past $435M!

As market-wide fear grips the sector, the Binance Coin...