Bonds And Our Never-Ending Global Health Crisis

Market participants inundated with data and ostensibly meaningful policy banter will get a bit of a breather in the new week.

The data docket stateside is sparse. Housing numbers and claims are the only notables on a lonely-looking calendar, although preliminary PMIs from IHS Markit (Friday) may provide some scope for editorializing. There’s a 20-year sale on Wednesday.

“I don’t know what the next catalyst will be,” TD’s Priya Misra said, in fatalistic-sounding remarks to Bloomberg for a piece documenting the “mystery” bond rally discussed at length on Saturday in “Conniving Oracles.”

“Sharper declines in rates in US hours may be a function of short covering as CFTC data and surveys suggest that the market remains net short,” Misra wrote, in a note, adding that “pension demand and risk-parity demand for Treasurys may have added to the bid.” The tables (below, from TD) show you the breakdown on when bond yields are falling.

“The rally in European hours may be a function of global growth concerns, reach for yield, and Japanese demand (which tends to be seasonally strong in June-September),” the bank added.

If it’s higher yields you’re looking for (or betting on), the problem became readily apparent following the June FOMC. Markets seemingly pulled forward the bulk of the reflation trade into Q1. The Fed’s hawkish turn (last month) was set against what, anecdotally anyway, seems like skepticism around the medium-term growth outlook.

When a positioning squeeze triggered a sharp curve flattener, those already worried about growth viewed falling bond yields as confirmatory. The stage was thus set for macro events to be interpreted through the lens of a Fed on the brink of a policy mistake. The flattener became entrenched.

Although I doubt seriously that the Delta variant problem is finding expression in the bond market on a day-to-day basis, it’s wreaking havoc globally. Indonesia, for example, is in full-on crisis mode. A month ago, daily cases were just over 8,000. Now, they’re near 60,000 (figure below).

Some experts say the official numbers woefully understate the real total, which could be as much as six times higher. Let that sink in. The official daily case count is seven times what it was a month ago, and the actual count may be six times higher than that. Only 6% of the population is fully vaccinated, and the country’s reliance on China’s Sinovac shot looks to be a liability. Some two-dozen doctors in the country inoculated with the Chinese vaccine are dead from the virus.

In the US, the perils of pushing misinformation on an undereducated public continue to manifest in horrific outcomes. Over the weekend, The New York Times ran a piece documenting events in Mountain Home, Arkansas. “Barbara Billigmeier, 74, an avid golfer who retired here from California, believed she did not need [a vaccine] because ‘I never get sick,'” Sharon LaFraniere wrote. Unfortunately, Barbara got sick. So sick, in fact, that by her own account, she couldn’t breathe. And yet, she’s still not inclined to be vaccinated. “It’s just too new,” Billigmeier told LaFraniere. “It is like an experiment.”

No, Mrs. Billigmeier. I’m sorry, but it’s not “like an experiment.” That’s what clinical trials are for. Those are “like experiments,” and there’s a reason we run them prior to injecting 150 million people.

At this juncture, I’m fully comfortable saying that Fox News and any other outlets or portals spreading misinformation about vaccinations should be given one final warning, and then, if the issue persists, be subjected to whatever penalties the federal government can unilaterally impose. Social media outlets are a different animal, but suffice to say Facebook’s aggressive pushback against Joe Biden’s assessment that a failure to police and remove vaccine misinformation is “killing people” was wholly inadequate. Essentially, Facebook argued that because the platform promoted vaccinations and likely encouraged multitudes of Americans to get a shot, their role in perpetuating propaganda and conspiracy theories can be ignored. In an unusually scathing (for a media outlet) assessment, Bloomberg wrote Saturday that,

Social media influencers, legitimized by their sizable follower counts, had a full year to sow doubt about COVID vaccines before Facebook took significant action. They’ve exploited public confusion and mixed messaging from government and health officials on everything from masks to vaccine side effects and safety. Facebook’s official stance was that it doesn’t ban posts unless they “cause imminent harm” — a threshold the social network said vaccine misinformation only crossed months into a global inoculation campaign.

Mark Zuckerberg, for all his genius, still exhibits the mentality of a child at times. And I don’t mean that derisively. I mean it literally. It’s never been obvious, to me anyway, that he understands (let alone takes seriously) the concept of personal responsibility.

Twitter, by contrast, thanked the federal government for its leadership. “As the pandemic evolves around the world, we’ll continue to do our part to elevate authoritative health information,” the company said.

In any event, the newsflow around the pandemic is beginning to skew decisively negative again, and it may well be that what started as a positioning-driven bond rally triggered by a hawkish Fed morphs into an actual growth scare predicated on the realization that the world isn’t rid of COVID. In fact, some parts of the world are just now seeing the worst of it. Indonesia is where India was in May. Thailand logged a record 11,400 new cases on Sunday. South Korea is poised to ban private gatherings of four or more people outside of Seoul starting Monday. At least two Olympians tested positive at Tokyo’s Olympic Village. And in the US, misinformation is spread with impunity — as though we’ve forgotten that not all “speech” is protected. (If you yell fire in a crowded theatre knowing there’s no fire, you’ll be arrested. Never mind that the concept of a “crowded theatre” may no longer make much sense thanks to the pandemic.)

Coming full circle, we may not know what the “next catalyst” is for higher yields, but if the newsflow continues to deteriorate, it’s fairly obvious that at least one catalyst for still lower yields is the pandemic.

That said, I personally doubt the bond rally has much further to run barring some kind of truly dramatic macro shock that forces an across-the-board rethink of the global recovery thesis.

“One of our core tenets for this stage in the cycle is that unless there is a broad-based capitulation of the higher yield thesis, then there is a floor for how far rates can fall,” BMO’s Ian Lyngen and Ben Jeffery wrote. “Said differently, unless investors replace shorts with longs, 10-year yields are going to struggle to get below ~1.10%.”

A few months back, I spoke to my best friend from high school for the first time in… well, in a long time. I mentioned he might come visit once the pandemic was well and truly over. “Are you kidding?,” he said. “This is never going to be over.”


Leave a Reply to fredm421Cancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

10 thoughts on “Bonds And Our Never-Ending Global Health Crisis

  1. I do not know what H policy is on frank speech. Let me find out. The post I really want to post is:

    “Frankly, in the US, for adults with no specific counterindications, at this point, if they refuse to get vaccinated, they should be left to their own devices if they ever do get COVID.

    I’m not an American taxpayer but I’d say the same about French anti-COVID vaxxers – “why is my tax dollars/EUR being wasted on keeping someone like you alive? The only public thing you should get is a Darwin Award”.

    Would TWTR or FB allow me to say that publicly?

    1. Because France has many mandatory vaccines for children, I naively thought we’d have less problems convincing people to get vaccinated here. And, to a degree, in traditional fashion, as soon as it became obvious in March/April/May that vaccines would have to be rationed, quite a few people stop being hesitant and got angry they couldn’t get vaccinated… :rolleyes.

      But we still have our share of nutcases. https://www.euronews.com/2021/07/17/france-tens-of-thousands-protest-against-covid-pass-vaccination

      1. There is a precident. Tobacco smokers and chewers have long been subject to similar sanctions via life insurance rates. Even some health insurance coverage. Heavy drinkers were effectively prohibited from receiving liver transplants.

        So from private sector/profit-driven actors, not just the “nanny state”. In fact, rightwingers have defended such economic discrimination in the name of individual choice and self-determination. As in “why should I have to pay for other people’s stupid choices?”

        Perhaps some sort of “heavy user” fees might be acceptable across the political spectrum.

        But…. I am speaking of the old libertarian wing of the GOP. The current “base” sees things much differently.

        In Maine, the populist right-wing ex-governor Paul LePage suggested banning smokers from receiving any Medicaid payments. He quickly withdrew that proposal due to opposition from his base. He learned that the rules would have harmed many of his most ardent supporters in rural Maine.

        1. The LePage story was an early indication of what was to come. After all, he renamed Medicaid “medical welfare” when he mumbled the proposal. Red meat for the old GOP base. Not any more!

        2. Yes.

          I mean, the idea that a COVID passport would be an infringement of privacy rights in a country (again, talking about France here) where we have a national ID card (and passports too) is bonkers.

          These people will use any ol’ argument just because anything plays better than “I don’t want to, nananana” while stomping your feet and putting your hands over your ears…

  2. Yeah I like the idea of anti-vaxxers on their own no federal government help with the hospital bills for anti-vaxxers. Since most of the anti-vaxxors are Republicans who prefer to the stick over the carrot for our citizens. It would simply be a little sweet Justice for them to get the stick they so ardently sport.

  3. Homo sapiens look more ridiculous with each century. Nature has handed out the latest exams and we are trending toward FAIL.

  4. Employers must step up and require employees to take a vaccination. Recently heard the Medical University of South Carolina required all employees to be vaccinated. 6 or 7 quit out of 1,700. I changed medical doctor because they were not requiring it. Asked the nurse wearing a mask why she did not take the vaccination, she replied it was personal, I left the office. There are some islands of hope in this Trump stronghold.

  5. I think that folks that don’t want shots should be allowed to not get them. But they should not be allowed to frequent most public places without proof of a negative covid test. Want to refuse a vaccine. Fine, but you don’t then have a right to infect folks in public places. Wanna bet most of these folks would get a vaccine then- no football/baseball games, no going to bars and restaurants, no more nascar races or monster truck rallies in person for you!

  6. Mark Zuckerberg, for all his genius, still exhibits the mentality of a child at times. And I don’t mean that derisively. I mean it literally. It’s never been obvious, to me anyway, that he understands (let alone takes seriously) the concept of personal responsibility….. It is pretty much accepted that Mr. Zuckerberg is on the autism spectrum. Many of these types are extremely bright and capable but they have their limitations…..

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints