homemarket Newsbonds NewsThe great bond bubble is 'poof, gone' in worst year since 1949

The great bond bubble is 'poof, gone' in worst year since 1949

The scale of the expected interest-rate hikes will likely only deepen the Treasury market’s losses since in previous monetary-policy tightening cycles yields have tended to crest near the Fed’s target rate.

By Bloomberg  Sept 25, 2022 2:22:50 PM IST (Published)

5 Min Read

Week by week, the bond-market crash just keeps getting worse and there’s no clear end in sight.
With central banks worldwide aggressively ratcheting up interest rates in the face of stubbornly high inflation, prices are tumbling as traders race to catch up. And with that has come a grim parade of superlatives on how bad it has become.
On Friday, the UK’s five-year bonds tumbled by the most since at least 1992 after the government rolled out a massive tax-cut plan that may only strengthen the Bank of England’s hand. Two-year US Treasuries are in the middle of the longest losing streak since at least 1976, dropping for 12 straight days. Worldwide, Bank of America Corp. strategists said government bond markets are on course for the worst year since 1949 when Europe was rebuilding from the ruins of World War Two.