Pimco has become more hesitant to buy long-term American government debt as the $2tn US bond fund manager frets over “sustainability questions” and the prospect of rising inflation under Donald Trump.
The bond giant said in a note on Monday that it was cutting its exposure to long-dated US debt because of what it termed deteriorating deficit dynamics, instead favouring shorter-term notes “where investors can find attractive yields without taking greater interest rate risk”.
Pimco’s chief investment officer of non-traditional strategies Marc Seidner and portfolio manager Pramol Dhawan are expecting US debt levels to keep rising from already high levels.
The US federal budget deficit reached $1.8tn for the fiscal year ending September 30, up 8 per cent from the previous year.
As the world’s biggest active bond fund manager, Pimco’s allocation decisions are scrutinised closely because of their potential to trigger changes in valuations across global financial markets. Investors are also increasingly watching for signs of “bond vigilantism” to emerge as the US government increases its borrowing, referring to a scenario whereby debt-owners push back against new issuance by selling down their positions.
In a sign of worries already seeping through the $27tn US government debt market, the 10-year Treasury yield jumped significantly in October and early November as traders raised bets that Trump would win the US election — predicting the next administration’s plans for trade tariffs and cor…
Seidner and Dhawan pointed specifically to the UK and Australia as examples of “high-quality sovereign issuers with stronger fiscal positions than the US”, while noting that higher economic risks in those countries could also generate stronger yields
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