Thursday, 22 December 2022

Fixed Income End Wrap and Outlook 2023 by Pankaj Pathak , Fund Manager- Fixed income, Quantum AMC

 

The Yield is Real

2022 started with a hope of normalcy after two back-to-back years of dealing with the Covid-19 pandemic. But, by no means this can be characterised as a normal year. Nobody could have imagined inflation ever going up to 7%-10% in the developed world. The US Fed hiking interest rates above 3% was unimaginable until it actually happened this year.

Events, this year, exposed many fault lines in the way systems have been working for years. The war between Russia and Ukraine changed the geo-political and security strategies in many countries with an increased focus on building defence capabilities. Supply shortages in crude oil highlighted the problem of under-investments in the conventional energy sector and constraints in the pace of transition to renewables. Freezing of Russia’s foreign reserves raised alarm across many economies with large foreign exchange reserves and dollar dominance once again came into question.

These cracks will take a long time to fill and will continue to influence the investment climate over the years to come. While from a near-term perspective, inflation and monetary policy will remain the dominant forces and key drivers for the financial markets.

Higher for Longer

This year central banks were in hurry to tighten the monetary policy by hiking rates at the fastest pace possible. The US Fed hiked the fund's rate from 0% to 4.25% in nine months. Most of the other major central banks followed a similar path and tightened monetary policy at a rapid pace.

This seems justified as they started from very low or zero interest rates and inflation surged quickly to an intolerable level.

Chart – I:  Globally Central banks frontloaded Rate Hikes in 2022

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