Weekly Fixed Income Update
Interest rates, inflation, central bank action—all these and more can impact fixed income. Stay on top of the market with our weekly update.
April 29, 2025
Macro update
Headlines from Washington DC continue to roil markets. Recent examples from The Wall Street Journal include “Trump is Laying the Groundwork to Blame Powell for Any Downturn” (4/22), “Why Trump Decided Against Trying to Fire Fed Chair,” “White House Is Considering Slashing China Tariffs” and “Huge Stock Swings Are the New Normal for Frazzled Investors” (4/23).
Meanwhile, US Treasury bond yields moved higher last week by five to 10 basis points (bps) but continue to ebb and flow as news breaks. Equities sold off last Monday on concerns about Fed independence but rebounded after the White House walked back related rhetoric.
Trade concerns remain front and center, as evidenced by the equity market’s rebound on an apparent de-escalation of Chinese tariffs. Uncertainty and volatility remain elevated across markets, as policy changes occur seemingly every day.
Economic data was light last week. Idiosyncratic data continues to suggest weakness we’ve yet to see in the hard economic data. Earnings season has begun, with investors trying to glean information from management teams on how they plan to navigate the prevailing trade uncertainty.
The highlight of this week’s economic data will likely be the payroll situation report scheduled for release on Friday, May 2. The consensus street expectation is for a gain of 134,000 jobs in non-farm payrolls. The unemployment rate is expected to remain unchanged, at 4.2% (Bloomberg, 4/25/2025).
April 25, 2025
Fixed income portfolio manager Kevin Lynyak shares his insights into the current bond market. Listen now:
Municipal bond update
Benchmark AAA municipal yields declined minimally last week amid less volatility than prior weeks. Two-year maturity yields decreased two bps, five-year yields dipped three bps and 10- and 30-year yields were unchanged.
Benchmark tax-exempt yields remain solidly higher since the start of the year, with five- and 10-year maturities up by 25 and 38 bps, respectively. Benchmark 10-year yields remain at 3.44% (Refinitiv MMD, 4/25/2025).
The Bloomberg Municipal Bond Index gained 0.07% last week, cutting the negative year-to-date (YTD) total return to -1.62% YTD. Treasurys had a stronger week and added 0.52%, bringing that YTD total to 2.95% (Bloomberg, 4/25/2025).
Muni relative value compared with the 10-year Treasury remained elevated at 81% by Friday’s close, sharply above the two-year average of 66% (Refinitiv MMD, 4/25/2025).
Five- to 15-year A-rated municipal yields ranged from 3.32% to 4.24%, with related taxable-equivalent yields ranging from 5.61% to 7.16%, assuming a combined federal tax rate of 40.8% (Refinitiv MMD, Parametric, 4/25/2025).
Mutual funds experienced a seventh consecutive week of net outflows, with open-end funds losing $793 million and overwhelming ETF inflows of $396 million (LSEG Lipper, JP Morgan 4/23/2025).
This week’s municipal new-issue calendar brings a second week of more than $12 billion scheduled, which may rise again because of postponed deals re-entering the market. Seasonally-heavy supply has been a primary factor behind March and April muni underperformance, which continues (Ipreo, 4/25/2025).
Corporate bond update
US investment-grade (IG) corporate yields fell across the curve last week. Two-, five- and 10-year yields decreased nine, 10 and 11 bps, respectively. Corporate yields are lower across the curve YTD. Two-, five- and 10- year yields are down 20, 21, and 10 bps, respectively (Bloomberg, 4/25/2025).
The ICE BofA 1–10 Year US Corporate Index returned 0.65% for the week and 0.1% month to date (MTD). The index outperformed like-duration Treasurys by 0.34% during the week and have underperformed by -0.32% MTD (Bloomberg, 4/25/2025).
IG mutual funds and ETFs experienced outflows of $4.1 billion, an increase in flows from the previous week’s outflows of $7.1 billion. Corporate-only funds experienced outflows of $1.9 billion, following the previous week’s outflows of $695 million (JPMorgan, 4/25/2025).
Corporate one- to 10-year IG bond yields have decreased 21 bps YTD and ended last week at 4.9% (Bloomberg, 4/25/2025).
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