September 2024
Lyle Sankar
Head of Fixed Income,PSG Asset Management
Elevated interest rates over the past few years have meant that investors have enjoyed attractive returns from cash investments, deposits and fixed income funds. However, your selection of income options is more important now than ever with the South African Reserve Bank (SARB) poised to start a rate cutting cycle. The returns on offer from these investments will soon deviate significantly as rates on lowest risk investments (cash, money market and short-term fixed deposits) will move lower in lockstep with the repo rate. The good news is that investors still have the opportunity to benefit, provided that they position their portfolios to capitalise on the opportunities available in the market.
How investing in longer-dated bonds creates the opportunity to lock in yields
Funds with the ability to access longer-dated fixed income instruments, like income and multi-asset income funds, have the ability to take advantage of higher starting yields in nominal and inflation-linked bonds. South Africa’s fixed income curve is upward sloping: the longer-dated the instrument, the higher the yield. When interest rates come down, nominal bonds are expected to continue to offer greater yields than cash, but also offer the prospect of capital gains, as instruments offering higher returns become more valuable when interest rates decrease. By positioning in these assets ahead of time, fund managers can extend the availability of higher yields for investors in their funds and cushion investors from rapid rate reductions.
Markets however are forward looking, and bond investors have started positioning portfolios to take advantage of repo rate cuts. Analysis of previous rate cutting cycles indicate that the bond curve begins to rally (outperform) about six months in advance, with bond yields typically reducing by 1% to 1.5% across the yield curve. This means that investors who wait for actual rate cuts to progress before moving to fixed income funds with a longer tenor, can potentially miss out on an opportunity to participate in attractive returns.
A reduced political premium and deeper-than-expected rate cuts bode well for investors
Post the outcome of the local election, political concern has subsided somewhat, and we believe this has been a partial driver of some of the repricing we have already seen in bond markets. In addition:
Markets are only pricing in around 1.25% in rate cuts over the next twelve months, remaining tentative on the upside potential for rate cuts. However, considering the repo rate is well above expected inflation next year, the window for the SARB could potentially be wider. This means that substantial scope remains for bond yields to strengthen, and that investors who position early into this asset class could benefit from these positive movements.