Global Stock Markets
Yields on U.S. government debt are at their highest in over four years,
and yet they are failing to attract many European investors due to the
uncertain outlook for the dollar and the prohibitive cost of hedging
their currency risks.
Expectations of more rate U.S. interest rate hikes and
President Donald Trump’s ambitious spending program have pushed the gap
between U.S. Treasury yields and their euro zone counterparts to their
widest in years.
With the Federal Reserve already
tightening U.S. monetary policy but the European Central Bank yet to
start, yields on two-year Treasuries are a yawning 275 basis points
above those on the equivalent German government bonds.
But hedging costs are eating up all that difference for euro-based investors.
The
dollar is entering a second year of depreciation against the major
world currencies, and this is starting to deter some existing and
would-be international creditors to the U.S. Treasury. As such, it
illustrates one potential cost of the Trump administration’s presumed
“weak dollar” policy designed to encourage U.S. exports.
Last
week, yields on two-year U.S. Treasuries hit a 9-1/2 year high of 2.27
percent - a 100 basis point increase from five months ago - yet this did
little to boost the struggling dollar, suggesting overseas investors
remained broadly on the sidelines.
The lukewarm attitude
from foreign investors was particularly striking as the Fed is expected
to increase interest rates at least three times this year while its
central bank counterparts in Europe and Japan are still a long way from
raising rates from record lows.
More U.S. rate rises
would only further widen the gap in short-term rates between the United
States and Europe which is already at 30-year highs. However, investors
say rate differentials are only one factor when buying U.S. bonds.
An
equally important consideration is the hedging costs, which have
increased dramatically in recent months and have virtually wiped out the
advantage that U.S. bonds offer - on Tuesday two-year Treasuries
US2YT=RR yielded 2.23 percent compared with a negative 0.52 percent for
two-year Bunds DE2YT=RR.
A Citi analysis showed that the
yield pickup while purchasing U.S. bonds on a currency-hedged basis for
a European investor had disappeared by the end of last year and such a
strategy remained substantially unprofitable in the first two months of
2018.
“Hedging costs are quite considerable so yields
have to rise well in excess than current hedging costs and that is one
reason why Japanese and European investors are not rushing to buy U.S.
bonds despite such attractive yields,” said Shaniel Ramjee, a
multi-asset portfolio manager at Pictet Asset Management in London.
Data
from fund-tracker EPFR Global showed that average weekly purchases of
U.S. bonds by non-U.S. investors have dwindled by nearly a third to $9
billion so far this month, compared with more than $13 billion in 2017.
Peripheral euro zone government bonds, such as those issued by Italy and Spain, offer more attractive yields than German debt.
A
Barclays bond index measuring total returns for U.S. Treasury bonds in
euro terms .BCUSATSY is already down 4 percent this year after falling
10 percent last year, indicating that purchasing U.S. bonds by European
investors is turning out to be a losing proposition.
Equity investors usually leave their international currency exposure
unhedged or hedge only a portion of it. However, debt investors tend to
hedge their currency exposure completely as bonds are far less volatile
than currencies.
While that yield has shrunk in recent months, its continuing
existence perhaps explains why demand for U.S. bonds at primary
auctions has picked up recently. Turmoil on global financial markets
has also boosted the safe-haven appeal of such bonds.
At
the February refunding, foreigners bought the most 10-year Treasuries
since May 2016 and the most 30-year long bonds in three years.

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