https://wallstreetonparade.com/2024/12/the-head-of-fixed-income-at-t-rowe-price-makes-the-scary-case-for-the-10-year-treasury-to-spike-to-6-percent/


By Pam Martens and Russ Martens: December 17, 2024 ~

Arif Husain, Chief Investment Officer, Fixed Income, T. Rowe Price
Arif Husain, Chief Investment Officer, Fixed Income, T. Rowe Price

Arif Husain is the head of Global Fixed Income and Chief Investment Officer
(CIO) of the Fixed Income Division of T. Rowe Price. He is also a member of
the firm’s Management Committee. Husain holds a B.Sc. (honors) in banking
and international finance from the City University London, Cass Business
School. When Husain speaks, Wall Street listens.

What Husain has been saying since October is that the U.S. is on a
collision course with higher interest rates.

In October, Husain released his interest rate outlook for the next six
months, writing the following about the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury
note, whose yield impacts mortgage rates and a wide swath of debt
instruments:

“I think that the 10-year Treasury yield will test the 5.0% threshold in
the next six months, steepening the yield curve. There are three dynamics
at play: 1. Fed rate cuts could limit yield increases on short-maturity
Treasury bills. 2. Ongoing issuance by the Treasury to fund the
government’s deficit spending is flooding the market with new supply. 3.
The Fed’s quantitative tightening has taken a large, reliable buyer of
Treasuries out of the market, further skewing the balance of supply and
demand in favor of higher yields.”

Husain’s analysis in October had yet to factor in the outcome of the U.S.
presidential election. Now that there is no longer any doubt that
President-elect Donald Trump and his promised tariffs and tax cuts must be
factored into any interest rate forecast, Husain had this to say on a
November 22 Global Market Webinar at T. Rowe Price when queried by his
colleague, Investment Specialist Ritu Vohora:

Vohora: So coming to you now, Arif. You know, Blerina talked there about
one of the key risks is around fiscal policy. The U.S. deficit is on track
to be 7% of GDP at the end of the year. I think the interest expense alone
is going to be higher than the defense budget, which is mind-boggling. When
should we start worrying about the debt burden? I feel like we talk about
it, but when do we actually start worrying?

Husain: You should be worried right now. I think, certainly, the initial
reaction in the bond market post-the-election was to go after some of the
fiscal laggards. So, the European peripheral market got hit. The UK bond
market got hit, and so did the U.S. Now there’s been plenty of volatility.

So I think you got to be worried about the bond market. I’m on record of
saying I think the U.S. 10-year will get to 5%. I said that before the
election.

There’s only more evidence, new information, to think, to believe that and
frankly, I said 5%, because 5% you need to go through 5 to get to 6.

So for me, what will create fiscal austerity? What will create a little bit
more discipline around the deficit? Can’t see it. I really can’t see it.
And really, I think the real thing that most people miss when they’re just
looking at the U.S. fiscal deficit is a really simple point, which is the
U.S. are not the only people who need to sell a lot of debt. A huge, huge
amount of debt.

You know, Justin was talking about Chinese stimulus a moment ago. Guess
what that is: debt issuance. And every country with the exception of
Germany, actually, the German debt break is one of their structural, one of
the structural issues holding them back a little bit, but from a bond
holder’s perspective it’s a positive, right, but other than that, everyone
is selling lots and lots and lots of debt in a time when central banks are
no longer buying it. And so from a global perspective, I think we really
need to worry about deficits and the lack of plan to address them. And the
U.S. is at the front of the queue there. You know, every week, every second
week, they’ve got to, they come with massive bond issuance and really to my
mind, bond yields need to be a lot higher to be competitive. And you’ve got
to see a much steeper yield curve to make that longer duration debt a lot
more attractive.

At this point in the webinar, another colleague asks Husain, “Arif, did
you, did you just call for 6% U.S. 10-year as a possibility?” Husain
responds: “I think we’ll see 5 before 6, that’s for sure.”

This morning, Husain’s outlook for rising interest rates in the U.S. is
getting a lot more attention. Bloomberg News has put excerpts from a new
report by Husain in a headlined article on its digital front page. The
article is apparently syndicated, because it is being picked up by other
news outlets, including Yahoo! Finance.

If Husain is correct and the 10-year Treasury yield blows past 5 percent on
its way to 6 percent, there are going to be a lot more than bond holders
licking their wounds. (As yields on bonds rise in the secondary market,
their market price declines in order to bring their yield to the going rate
on new bonds of the same maturity.)

Because the yield on the benchmark 10-year Treasury impacts mortgage
interest rates, a rise in its yield could price more home buyers out of the
market because they would be unable to afford the higher monthly mortgage
cost. This could lead to a slump in home prices and potentially negatively
impact consumer sentiment.

A yield of 5 percent or higher on the 10-year Treasury note could also lure
money out of stocks and into Treasuries. Should a stock exodus become a
stampede, a handful of tech stocks trading at nosebleed valuations might
plunge, leading to more selloffs.

Since Donald Trump’s ego is bound up in the stock market only rising when
he’s in the driver’s seat, this could lead to Trump making imprudent
demands on the Fed Chair, Jerome Powell, or firing him as a scapegoat.
Since Powell has said he will serve out his term as Fed Chair, irrespective
of Trump’s threats to fire him, a Trump-Powell debacle could unnerve
foreign investors, leading to capital flight out of the U.S.

In fact, we’re shocked we haven’t seen that already, given the chaos Trump
has outlined for his first 100 days in office.

Reply via email to