Factors Affecting Fixed Income Market Performance
Bond market performance is driven by long- and short-term factors that influence economic conditions, financial markets, and investment returns. These forces can be broadly categorised as secular (typically spanning three to five years) or cyclical (typically spanning six to 12 months).
Understanding these two forces and how they interact can help investors take a strategic, long-term view, while adjusting portfolio positioning to reflect near-term risks and opportunities.
What is inflation and why it matters for fixed income investors?
Inflation – an increase in the general price level of goods and services over time – is one of the most important factors affecting bond market performance, given its impact on real returns and investors’ purchasing power.
While most governments and central banks target moderate and stable inflation, several inflationary environments can pose challenges for financial markets:
- Hyperinflation refers to an exceptionally rapid rise in prices that severely erodes purchasing power. It is typically associated with the loss of confidence in a currency and excessive expansion of the money supply. In extreme cases, producers may respond by rapidly increasing prices, contributing to a self-reinforcing spiral of runaway inflation.
- Disinflation refers to a slowdown in the rate of inflation as demand eases relative to supply. It can occur due to slower economic growth or deliberate policy actions aimed at reducing inflation.
- Deflation occurs when there is a sustained decline in prices due to weak demand, which can lead to a recession or, in extreme cases, a depression.
Some of the leading causes of inflationary pressures are:
- Cost-push inflation: Rising input costs – such as higher wages or commodity prices – prompt producers to raise the prices of goods and services.
- Demand-pull inflation: Occurs when aggregate demand grows faster than the production of goods and services. It may arise when a country’s productive capacity fails to keep pace with a sharp increase in demand or the money supply.
Is inflation a threat to fixed income investors?
Inflation can erode the real value of fixed coupon payments because bond income does not automatically adjust with rising prices. In addition, if inflation rises above a certain level, central banks may raise interest rates to curb inflationary pressures. This can lead to a fall in bond prices, negatively impacting total returns, particularly for longer‑duration securities.
Inflation affects asset classes differently. Historically, equities and nominal fixed income have tended to react negatively when inflation has been higher than expected. Conversely, real assets such as commodities and inflation-linked investments have shown a positive sensitivity to inflation.
Protecting against inflation
Several tools may help investors remain invested in bond markets while mitigating inflation risk:
- Floating-rate notes: Coupons rise and fall based on a reference rate. Because interest rates and inflation often move in the same direction, floating-rate instruments may help investors preserve real purchasing power.
- Inflation-linked bonds: Both principal and interest payments may be explicitly indexed to inflation and adjust based on the prevailing rate of inflation.
- Active fixed income strategies: Diversification, sector selection, and regional positioning may provide opportunities for skilled managers to seek returns that outpace inflation over time.
However, inflation cannot be viewed in isolation. Sustained inflationary pressures often shape central bank policy decisions and influence where the economy sits within the broader business cycle.
What goes up must come down
Economies naturally move through cycles of expansion and contraction. A contraction phase – commonly referred to as a recession – is typically characterised by a broad and sustained decline in economic activity that can last for several months or longer.
Recessions may be triggered by a variety of factors, including unexpected shocks that disrupt supply chains and economic activity (such as global pandemics or geopolitical conflicts), sharp increases in energy prices, or periods in which economic growth overheats and imbalances build.
The figure above illustrates how different asset classes have historically performed across the phases of the business cycle.
Following the peak of an expansion, the early stage of a recession is typically characterised by a broad slowdown in economic activity. During this phase, core bonds (i.e., government bonds and investment-grade securities) have historically outperformed, while risk-sensitive assets such as high-yield bonds and equities have typically underperformed.
As a recession progresses into its later stages, financial markets often begin to anticipate an eventual recovery. During this period, riskier assets such as high-yield bonds and equities have historically outperformed as expectations for improving growth and earnings strengthen.
Optimising outcomes through breadth and insight
A clear understanding of the forces that influence bond performance is essential for informed investment decision-making.
The fixed income universe encompasses a broad range of opportunities – including corporate and high-yield bonds, mortgage-backed securities, municipal bonds, emerging-markets debt – each of which can respond differently to changing market conditions.
This diversity highlights the potential advantages of active management, which can dynamically allocate across sectors and regions, identify relative-value opportunities, and manage risks as economic environments evolve.
Regular portfolio rebalancing may help keep asset allocations aligned with long-term investment objectives.