Moneycontrol
HomeNewsBusinessEconomyMoneycontrol Pro Panorama | Why bonds no longer protect against war risk
Trending Topics

Moneycontrol Pro Panorama | Why bonds no longer protect against war risk

In Moneycontrol's Pro Panorama June 18 edition: India’s goods export growth is a casualty of trade uncertainties, Assam could be going the Manipur way, SEO industry needs to reinvent or die at the hands of AI, and more

June 18, 2025 / 14:42 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Funding a war means borrowing from the bond market for any government as defence expenditure shoots up.

Dear Reader,

The Panorama newsletter is sent to Moneycontrol Pro subscribers on market days. It offers easy access to stories published on Moneycontrol Pro and gives a little extra by setting out a context or an event or trend that investors should keep track of. When it comes to courage, a bond investor has more mojo than one who deals with stocks. Not trying to start a war here, but bond investors have exhibited the ability to intimidate everybody: from private investors to policymakers irrespective of geographical boundaries. This requires a special kind of heft which the bond market possesses.

That's because bonds also provide protection from uncertainties and what is more uncertain than a war? After all, the job of a fixed income financial product is to price in every possible risk and provide a steady income to the holder. The US treasury market has been the ultimate hedge against global uncertainties for not just investors across the world, but also central banks and governments. Until now.

Story continues below Advertisement

The US 10-year bond yield edged up about 5 basis points after Israel launched attacks on Iran’s nuclear sites, in contrast to how a hedge product behaves. To be sure, yields have cooled a bit, but are still elevated. The reaction of the treasury market may seem out of sorts, but it has been so for some time now. Recall some weeks ago that bond yields had surged along with equity losses because of US President Donald Trump’s tariff announcements. Since then, the bond market is trying to rein in Trump’s policies on tariffs and the big, beautiful bill, passed by the Senate eventually, that threatens to balloon spending.

It is safe to say that the US bond market was preoccupied in disciplining policymakers for it to think of offering a hedge against war uncertainties to investors. There is also one other factor: monetary policy. The Israel-Iran hostilities have driven up oil prices and Trump’s tariffs are anyway a quagmire of inflationary outcomes for the US Federal Reserve. With the Fed’s committee hobnobbing on rates currently, the bond market is trying to guess which way Jay Powell will tilt. Will stagflationary fears make him hold rates for longer or will it make Powell cut rates to help growth? Robert Armstrong, in June 17 Unhedged newsletter for FT, points out that it all depends on the sequencing of data, but the Fed will probably do nothing this time.