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Treasuries May Really Get Going If Mortgage Supercharge Turns Up

A rally in Treasuries that’s driven 10-year yields toward record lows could have more room to run.

Treasuries May Really Get Going If Mortgage Supercharge Turns Up
50 subject one dollar note sheets sit in a stack before 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) -- A rally in Treasuries that’s driven 10-year yields close to record lows could get an extra shot of adrenaline if mortgage-bond investors are forced to adjust their hedging amid the global shift in interest rates.

The abrupt slide in yields, which came as the coronavirus outbreak spurred a flight to haven assets, may deepen if the market witnesses a resurgence of so-called convexity hedging that helped weigh on rates last year. Such hedging stems from mortgage-debt holders having to adjust their exposure to interest-rate risk as lower borrowing costs spur refinancing. And while that dynamic hasn’t been a significant force in the latest bond-market rally, it may be just over the horizon if yields keep tumbling.

Treasuries May Really Get Going If Mortgage Supercharge Turns Up

Investors’ response to the shrinking duration of mortgage-backed debt has “clearly not been the dominant driver of the recent rally in rates,” but “likely amplified the more fundamental forces pushing the yield curve downward,” strategists at Goldman Sachs Group Inc. wrote in a note Monday.

“Adverse data” could still translate into a further 20 basis point decline in nominal yields, or even a 35 basis point slide if it combines with a large negative hit to risk sentiment, the strategists wrote. A further decline in mortgage durations would also be likely in such a scenario.

Read more about the recent decoupling of MBS duration and dollar swap spreads

An uptick in expected home-loan refinance rates has already reduced the duration of mortgage-bond indexes, removing about $1.6 trillion worth of 10-year Treasuries in interest-rate risk for MBS investors, Goldman calculates.

A bigger wave of hedging now stands ready to support a deeper Treasuries rally, and traders aren’t taking any risks.

The market moves Monday were matched with compressed dollar swap spreads, suggesting convexity hedging demands are starting to come into play. Long-end swap spreads dropped during the New York session.

Meanwhile, investors spent millions of dollars on options to hedge the 10-year yield dropping as low as 1.10% by the end of the week. Other trades included a $11.7 million bet on yields falling to 1.25% by late March.

The benchmark 10-year note fell as much as 12 basis points Monday to 1.35%, a level unseen since 2016, as markets were roiled globally and countries from Italy to South Korea grappled with how to contain the coronavirus outbreak. The yield’s record low, of about 1.32%, came in July 2016. The market was more settled Tuesday, with bond yields in Europe edging lower.

“We’re having the start of a violent and climactic move to lower rates as short positions are covered, which is probably going to get more climactic as we learn about the coronavirus in China and other parts of Asia, ” said Tom di Galoma, managing director of government trading and strategy at Seaport Global.

--With assistance from Vivien Lou Chen and John Ainger.

To contact the reporter on this story: Edward Bolingbroke in New York at ebolingbrok1@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Benjamin Purvis at bpurvis@bloomberg.net, Rachel Evans, Anil Varma

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.