2. If you haven’t yet moved out of cash, it’s not too late to benefit from fixed income.
Amid persistent volatility and uncertainty, not all investors have embraced a shift out of cash. The ones that have already moved out of cash into bonds have likely captured better returns relative to those they would have received in cash, especially if they invested before the first rate cut.
However, even if investors haven’t yet moved out of cash, it’s still not too late to benefit from fixed income. Now that the tide has turned on rates, we see an additional impetus to invest in fixed income, with core fixed income, and particularly credit, looking increasingly attractive from both an income and capital protection perspective.
As the chart below shows, a fixed income allocation has historically outperformed cash following the end of the rate-hiking cycle. One reason for this is that staying in cash exposes investors to duration risk: when interest rates come down, investors could lose out on the additional return they could receive from holding some duration in their portfolios. Rate cuts also expose cash investors to reinvestment risk. As yields start to drop, cash investors will receive progressively lower short-term rates, faring worse than a bond investor who had managed to lock in higher yields for longer.