Mario Draghi is relaxed about the excitement in the bond market. The European Central Bank president simply says higher volatility is here to stay. His press conference comment helped stoke a sharp increase in euro zone sovereign bond yields on Wednesday. But, he was only stating the obvious. These days, the real hazard for bond investors is being part of too big a herd.
The latest bout of volatility actually started on Tuesday. In two days, the yield on 10-year German debt climbed 36 basis points, the biggest rise in that short a time since 1998. The rise for comparable Italian and Spanish yields was 24 and 20 basis points, respectively. But bond volatility is hardly exclusive to the euro zone. On May 11, 10-year U.S. bonds rose by 13 basis points, almost two-thirds more than Italian or Spanish ones climbed that day.
A positive euro zone inflation reading and the prospect of a rate increase from the US Federal Reserve could explain some of the sharp movements. But such developments cannot justify the scale of moves in assets which used to be safe and stolid.
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Volatility breeds more volatility. Scarred by the brutal moves, investors are less and less willing to ride out each new setback, let alone to buy as prices fall. The herd becomes twitchier.
And, it's not only psychology. The common investment strategy of trying to limit the chance of losses pushes up volatility. That's because the way they keep this probability roughly constant is by selling when bond swings have become more amplified.
In such an environment, there is more danger than safety in numbers.