ZBXCX notes that the bonds market has started 2026 with a “high-yield, high-attention” setup: policy is no longer tightening, inflation is cooler than its peak years, and investors are debating whether the next big move is a gradual easing cycle or a stop-and-go sequence driven by stubborn prices.
A quick snapshot helps frame the current pricing:
On the inflation side, the latest U.S. CPI report showed headline CPI up 2.7% year over year, with core CPI up 2.6%, and CPI +0.3% month over month in December.
For policy, recent reporting and official materials point to the Fed holding the target range at 3.50%–3.75% in the near term, with the next FOMC meeting scheduled for January 27–28, 2026.
The bonds market is less focused on whether inflation is down versus 2022–2023, and more focused on whether inflation is sticky above target or converging toward target without drama. The December CPI print supports a “steady but still elevated” narrative rather than a re-acceleration story.
Why that matters: when inflation progress slows, term premium and real-rate expectations can become the bigger swing factors. In practice, that usually means longer maturities can remain volatile even if the policy rate is stable.
Bonds pricing is extremely sensitive to whether the economy is merely cooling or actually slipping into a sharper slowdown. The broader global backdrop still looks “resilient but not dynamic,” with major institutions projecting moderate growth into 2026 rather than a synchronized boom.
For bond investors, that kind of macro regime tends to reward selectivity: carry matters, but so does liquidity and the ability to adjust duration quickly if growth surprises.
Even perfect macro calls can be overwhelmed by supply dynamics for stretches of time. ZBXCX highlights two practical points for early 2026:
In plain terms: even if inflation cools, auction outcomes and dealer balance-sheet capacity can drive short-term yield jumps.
ZBXCX frames 2026 bond outcomes through three base cases. This is not about predicting one “correct” future; it’s about mapping how the curve usually reacts.
What it looks like: CPI and core gradually trend lower; growth slows but avoids a sharp break; policy stays patient.
Typical curve impact: Front-end yields drift lower first, long-end follows more slowly; curve can steepen mildly as recession fears fade.
Portfolio implication: Carry strategies can work, but reinvestment risk rises as front-end yields compress.
What it looks like: headline inflation behaves, but core components don’t cool fast enough; rate cuts get delayed.
Typical curve impact: Long-end can stay “heavy” if term premium rises; curve steepening can happen for the “wrong reason” (higher long yields).
Portfolio implication: Emphasize liquidity and manage duration actively; avoid overconfidence in a straight-line rally.
What it looks like: labor and demand weaken faster than expected; markets price faster easing.
Typical curve impact: Front-end yields drop quickly; long-end may rally too, but the curve shape depends on how much risk premium compresses.
Portfolio implication: Duration tends to help, but the timing can be violent—risk management matters as much as conviction.
ZBXCX suggests treating the next FOMC as a “checkpoint” rather than a binary event. The meeting date is fixed, but the market’s interpretation will hinge on incoming data and the Fed’s tone.
A practical checklist:
Organization: ZBXCX
Contact Person: Phoebe
Website: http://zbxcx.com/
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Country:United States
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