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The San Andreas fault of finance has awakened

25 September 2024

The broad market volatility in early August was the start of something, T. Rowe Price argues. The wind has changed and volatility could become the norm.

By Arif Husain,

T. Rowe Price

Thin summer liquidity conditions, coupled with crowded leveraged positions, set the kindling for a potential market shock. In early August, all it took was a spark – the Bank of Japan’s (BoJ) move to tighten monetary policy – to ignite an extraordinary volatility shock.

However, while the yen carry trade certainly played a part, it is more a convenient ex-post narrative to explain the price action than a true driver of the volatility. The scapegoating of the yen carry trade ignores the start of a bigger and deeper trend.

When talking with clients in 2023, I sometimes referred to the BoJ as the San Andreas fault of finance. That was early, but I believe that we have just seen the first shift in that fault, and there is more to come.

 

BoJ loosens yield curve control

The BoJ has started gradually hiking rates and loosened its yield curve control policy, which uses Japanese government bond (JGB) purchases to essentially cap yields. The BoJ moved the upper bound of its benchmark rate to 0.1% in March from -0.1% – where it had been since early 2016 – and raised rates again at the end of July, bringing the upper bound to 0.25%.

At its June policy meeting, the BoJ said it will start to ‘significantly’ scale back its asset purchases from its current ¥6trn monthly pace over the next one to two years. It took a step further in July by saying it would slowly reduce the buying pace, aiming to halve its current monthly amount by early 2026.

But the massive amount of JGB issuance needed to fund the country’s deficit means the central bank likely will not stop its purchases or let its balance sheet run off by not reinvesting the principal from maturing bonds, as the Federal Reserve has been doing since June 2022.

 

Domestic investors could return

Not surprisingly, JGB yields have been rising. In late August, a 30-year JGB hedged to the dollar provided a yield greater than 7%. To put this into context, the 30-year US treasury yield was roughly 4%.

One would need to stretch far down the credit ratings scale to low investment grade or even high yield to match the dollar-hedged JGB yield in the US credit markets. In a world of massive debt issuance, where different issues compete for a limited amount of funds, yield matters.

At some point, higher Japanese yields could attract the country’s huge life insurance and pension investors back into JGBs from other high-quality government bonds, including treasuries and bunds. In effect, this would rearrange demand in the global market. I believe an overweight allocation to JGBs would benefit from this shift.

A corresponding underweight position in treasuries would benefit from upward pressure on treasury yields as Japanese institutional investors move out of the US and back into Japan. Other factors – including the country’s deteriorating fiscal situation and the accompanying elevated levels of new treasury issuance – also lead me to expect higher US yields on the longer-term horizon.

 

Inflation may mean more tightening

This approach is not without risk. Japanese inflation could wind up higher than expected in the second half of the year in the event of continued weakness in the Japanese yen or unexpectedly strong wage growth. This could lead the BoJ to raise rates again at its October meeting and slow its asset purchases further.

Weakness in the Japanese yen could, all else being equal, lead the BoJ toward more rapid tightening. But cuts from other developed market central banks would offset this to some degree.

Earlier in 2024, the yen hit its weakest point against the dollar since the mid-1980s and its lowest versus the euro since the introduction of the eurozone currency in 1998. But with the Fed seemingly eager to lower rates and the ECB having already started to loosen policy, the BoJ will not be under as much pressure to make Japan’s rates more competitive.

 

Astute investors should be aware

Overall, while the yen carry trade was again a convenient explanation, I sense the broad market volatility in early August was the start of something, as opposed to the end. BoJ tightening and the impact it will have on the flow of global capital is far from simple, but it will have a large influence over the next few years.

However, in the context of other megatrends, such as unsustainable fiscal expansion in a number of developed countries, volatility should not be a shock – it should be more the norm. Put a different way, there were several tailwinds that had existed for investors since the global financial crisis.

Like it or not, the wind has changed, and the next few years could be tougher. The shifting global capital flows resulting from the BoJ’s tightening is one of those changes, and astute investors should be aware of the impacts.

Arif Husain is head of fixed income at T. Rowe Price. The views expressed above should not be taken as investment advice.

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