Fair Is Fair, And TIPS Are Almost There

 | Sep 30, 2022 05:19PM ET

For a very long time, I have been writing in our Quarterly Inflation Outlook that TIPS were “relatively cheap, but absolutely expensive.” By that, I meant that TIPS real yields at -1%, -2%, etc. were not exciting (implying as they did that a buyer would have long-term real wealth destruction), but that compared with nominal Treasury yields of 1%, 1.5%, or 2% any investor in fixed income should have vastly preferred TIPS.

I have repeatedly said that with breakevens below 1.5%, there wasn’t even a decent strategic case to own nominal bonds rather than inflation-linked bonds (ILBs) except to defease specific nominal liabilities and that, at times, those low breakevens meant that owning nominals instead of ILB amounted to a really big bet. Those are relative concepts.

But 10-year real yields were below zero, and as low as -1.2%, for most of 2020, 2021, and the first half of 2022. And 10-year real yields have been below +1% almost continuously since 2011. When real yields were below zero or just fractionally positive, it meant that TIPS were absolutely expensive. That wasn’t just a TIPS problem, of course: low real yields were the most obvious in TIPS, but you couldn’t avoid them by trafficking in other asset classes because they were a characteristic of the environment we were in. Everything was absolutely expensive, but TIPS were at least relatively cheap.