The bond-market tremors came two weeks and two continents apart.
The first was in mid-June, when French President Emmanuel Macron's decision to call a surprise election
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The previous moves drew little notice beyond financial circles, and they were soon overshadowed as speculation about
Even as the world's economy expands at a solid pace, deficits have piled up thanks to heavy spending in the wake of the pandemic. As a result, the amount of government debt from major nations is seen swelling by $2 trillion this year to a record $56 trillion,
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"Politicians will attempt to further delay the inevitable course correction," said Christoph Rieger, the head of rates research at Commerzbank AG. "Some countries may test how far they can go until their debt ratio reaches a critical point."
The fiscal strains are threatening to test markets' ability to absorb an ever-increasing amount of debt without driving rates higher. As a result, investment firms like BlackRock Inc. have been favoring shorter-term bonds, which are less likely to be dragged down by angst surrounding problems in the years ahead.
There's been no shortage of fiscal alarmists over the years, of course, and the idea that so-called bond vigilantes will punish spendthrift governments has arisen periodically, only to fade into the background again whenever crises failed to materialize. Right now, worries about deficits have largely been swept aside by speculation that borrowing costs are heading lower.
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Yet beneath the surface, there's anxiety about the fiscal path as governments are squeezed by high interest costs and elections cast uncertainty.
Last week, the IMF warned that incoming politicians may orchestrate "significant swings" in policy that "entail fiscal profligacy risks." The Bank for International Settlements has
"In some parts of the world, it's not the level of debt, it's the perception of the framework around it," said Jean Boivin, head of the BlackRock Investment Institute. "The range of political outcomes that can come this year are as wide as it can get."
That was on
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The following week, Macron dissolved France's parliament and
European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde last week
The Trump Trade
In the U.S., where the
While the national debt has swelled under Biden, Trump's plans to extend his tax cuts would almost certainly add to it. Both Vanguard Group Inc. and Fidelity International have said a Republican sweep in November would pose the greatest risk to bonds by expanding Trump's ability to implement his agenda, some of which is
After the assassination attempt gave added momentum to Trump's candidacy, long-term bonds slid early last week as investors plowed into
"The higher the likelihood of Donald Trump becoming the next U.S. president, the higher for longer the U.S. budget deficit will be," said Alex Pelteshki, fixed-income investment manager at Aegon Asset Management.