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Treasury Market Absorbs the Most Punishing January Since 2009

The U.S. Treasury market is delivering investors a loss of historic proportions to start 2018.

Treasury Market Absorbs the Most Punishing January Since 2009
Stacks of 50 subject one dollar note sheets pass through a KBA-NotaSys SA large examining printing equipment machine after receiving a serial number and the U.S. Treasury and U.S. Federal Reserve seals at the U.S. Bureau of Engraving and Printing in Washington, D.C., U.S. (Photographer: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The U.S. Treasury market is delivering investors a loss of historic proportions to start 2018.

The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury Index is down 1.42 percent this month through Jan. 30. It’s on track for the worst start to a year since January 2009, when traders were bracing for a ramp-up in government borrowing to combat the recession. It would also be the biggest setback for any month since November 2016.

Ten-year yields have surged about 33 basis points in January, reaching 2.74 percent, the highest level since 2014. Part of the spike came as traders anticipated more supply to accommodate a growing budget deficit and the Federal Reserve’s move to shrink its balance sheet. The Treasury fulfilled those expectations Wednesday, announcing plans to boost auction sizes. A Fed decision at 2 p.m. is projected to acknowledge the economic forces driving the move in yields.

Treasury Market Absorbs the Most Punishing January Since 2009

“What we’ve been witnessing is a melt-up of Treasury yields,” said Charles Ripley, investment strategist and fixed-income portfolio manager at Allianz Life Insurance Co. “It’s a supply story supported by fundamentals at home and abroad, at a time when the largest buyer is pulling back,” he said, referring to the Fed.

The U.S. central bank isn’t alone in removing accommodation. The European Central Bank has reduced its monthly asset-purchase target and hasn’t decided whether to extend buying after September.

The selloff has been driven primarily by expectations and sentiment rather than evidence of above-trend economic growth or higher inflation, said Kevin Flanagan, senior fixed-income strategist at WisdomTree Asset Management.

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“You’re still not looking at any groundbreaking, fresh news developments” on the economic front, he said.

And it remains to be seen whether the forces that have kept yields low -- buyers of the spread between Treasury and euro-zone yields and pension-fund appetite for duration -- will re-emerge as the 10-year approaches 3 percent, he said.

In the view of Bank of America Corp., bigger deficits and increased spending by companies will drive the next phase of the selloff. For Goldman Sachs Group Inc., the impetus for higher yields will come from global growth dynamics.

The Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury Index lost 2.67 percent in November 2016 after Donald Trump’s election victory unleashed a surge in inflation expectations. It tumbled 2.92 percent in January 2009, when yields were rebounding from their then-record lows set during the financial crisis.

U.S. investment-grade corporate bonds have also suffered this month, a Bloomberg Barclays index of high-quality company bonds falling 1.12 percent. U.S. junk bonds have done better, gaining 0.55 percent, while the S&P 500 returned 5.67 percent in the month through Jan. 30, once dividends are factored in.

--With assistance from Brian Chappatta

To contact the reporter on this story: Elizabeth Stanton in New York at estanton@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Benjamin Purvis at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Mark Tannenbaum

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.