Inflation higher, bond yields lower. Why?

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The November inflation numbers came in hotter as expected.

CPI inflation:
+0.8% m/m vs. +0.7% est. & +0.9% in prior month;
y/y at +6.8% vs. +6.8% est. & +6.2% in prior year …
Core CPI:
+4.9% y/y vs. +4.9% est. & +4.6% in prior year

This shows that inflation grew at fastest rate since the 1980s.

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For bond traders, the initial reaction led to lower yields across the board. The expected reaction to higher inflation was higher short duration bond yields. However, this has not materialized.

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Any narrative why yields are not higher?

Every time the FED signaled asset purchases tapering in the past, yields have historically gone lower.

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With the US economy at full employment (JP Morgan), and inflation above the AIT set last year, investors are expecting a faster taper of asset purchases. BoA has mentioned that inflation needs to be reigned in and a growing number of traders agree that the FED is behind the inflation curve. This will prompt the Central Bank to react faster.

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Therefore, the most credible narrative shows that yields will head lower as the FED starts to prepare for rates liftoff. Consensus within different banks & Institutions shows traders are betting the first 25bps hike could be as early as June 2022




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