The Most Viewed Videos of all Time
Welcome
Login / Register

Municipal bond market is irrational right now: Portfolio manager

Thanks! Share it with your friends!

URL

You disliked this video. Thanks for the feedback!

Sorry, only registred users can create playlists.
URL


Added by in Top 10
40 Views

Description

David Albrycht of Newfleet Asset Management and Liz Young, director of market strategy at BNY Mellon Investment Management, join "Squawk Box" to discuss what they are watching in the markets ahead amid the volatility.

The coronavirus outbreak has pushed the yield on the 10-year Treasury bond to historic lows, marking the latest milestone in what has been a decades-long decline.

The moves have put the daily rate at levels not seen since at least the 1960s. According to data from the European Central Bank, it might be an even more historic fall.

The rate hit 1.116% on Friday, more than 30 basis points below where it closed the week before. Before this week’s tumble, the recent low point for the 10-year yield had come at 1.37% in July 2016.

Monthly averages of the 10-year show that the yield has never been this low for a sustained amount of time. It is possible that a move on a given day was lower than 1.18%, but it hasn’t held.

This latest drop has come as the coronavirus outbreak has muddled the outlook for the global economy and rattled equity markets. Bond yields move in the opposite direction of prices, so they fall when investors buy safer bonds and sell riskier assets. With major U.S. stock indexes plunging more than 10% this week, money has crowded into bonds.

The 10-year yield is a key measure throughout the economy because it used to anchor interest rates for other debt. For example, a falling 10-year rate often leads to lower mortgage rates.

Low rates on governments are not just an American phenomenon. Aggressive easing by central banks around the world since the financial crisis has pushed many benchmark interest rates into negative territory, making U.S. government debt one of the few ultra-safe assets that still has a positive yield.

Guggenheim’s Scott Minerd said that a continued environment of loose monetary policy from Central Banks could send U.S. interest rates down even further.

“We have everything on the yield curve now comfortably below 2% yield, making historic new lows. In all likelihood, if central banks keep the printing presses running, that’s just going to force bond yields down further, which will help support speculative assets elsewhere, including junk bonds,” Minerd said on Wednesday’s “Closing Bell.”

For access to live and exclusive video from CNBC subscribe to CNBC PRO: https://www.cnbc.com/pro/?__source=youtube

» Subscribe to CNBC TV: https://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBCtelevision
» Subscribe to CNBC: https://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBC
» Subscribe to CNBC Classic: https://cnb.cx/SubscribeCNBCclassic

Turn to CNBC TV for the latest stock market news and analysis. From market futures to live price updates CNBC is the leader in business news worldwide.

Connect with CNBC News Online
Get the latest news: http://www.cnbc.com/
Follow CNBC on LinkedIn: https://cnb.cx/LinkedInCNBC
Follow CNBC News on Facebook: https://cnb.cx/LikeCNBC
Follow CNBC News on Twitter: https://cnb.cx/FollowCNBC
Follow CNBC News on Instagram: https://cnb.cx/InstagramCNBC

#CNBC
#CNBC TV

Post your comment

Comments

Be the first to comment
RSS