Municipal Bonds Today: Don’t Time The Market

This article was originally published on ETFTrends.com.

By Eric Snyder, Director, Product Management for New York Life Investments

We’ve seen a remarkable u-turn in interest rate expectations over the past 12 months. In November 2018, the yield on the 10-year U.S. Treasury note was as high as 3.24% and by Labor Day 2019 it had dropped all the way to 1.47%. Investment-grade municipal bond yields tracked a similar decline, peaking at 3.08% last November 1 and declining to 1.65% over nearly the same period.

The intensifying U.S/China trade war, slowing economic growth, and even this summer’s 2-year/10-year Treasury yield curve inversion has sparked fears that a recession could be looming. Now some market experts are predicting that long-term rates in the U.S. will continue to decline, potentially even to zero. Here’s the catch: none of the top prognosticators have been consistently correct in predicting the direction of rates or where the fixed income market is headed. What might happen to municipal bonds if they are wrong?

This question may be causing some investors to second-guess entering the municipal market. It can be easy for investors to stray from long-term goals by attempting to time market fluctuations with short-term investment decisions. We don’t view an allocation to municipal bonds as a tactical trade, but rather as a dedicated part of a complete asset allocation meant to be held for the long-term, regardless of interest rate movements. Let’s consider the key reasons why.

Munis Are Not Highly Correlated To Rates

Price movements in the municipal bond market do not move in lockstep with U.S. Treasuries.

Over the trailing 10-year period from 8/31/2009 to 8/31/2019, there were three periods where the 10-year U.S. Treasury rose by 100 bps or more. As noted in the chart below (Figure 1), investment-grade municipal bond returns during these periods were only moderately correlated to U.S. Treasury rate increases.

Figure 1: Bloomberg Barclays Municipal Bond Index correlations to the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury Index during rising rate periods of 100 bps or more 8/31/2009 – 8/31/2019

Bloomberg Barclays Municipal Bond Index correlations to the Bloomberg Barclays U.S. Treasury Index during rising rate periods of 100 bps or more 8/31/2009-8/31/2019. Source: Morningstar, FRED, as of 8/31/2019.

The modest correlation between municipal bond prices and U.S. Treasury yields signals that regardless of the interest rate environment, investors receive diversification benefits from holding municipal bonds over time.

Holding Period Matters