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The Mortgage ‘Convexity Beast’ Is Back — and It Could Amplify the Next Bond Market Selloff

by Team Lumida
June 4, 2026
in Real Estate
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China’s Housing Market: Eased Policies Show Promise Amid Economic Struggles
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  • Mortgage convexity hedging — where MBS holders sell Treasuries in selloffs and buy in rallies — is re-emerging as a market force after years of dormancy, adding a new source of amplified volatility to the $31 trillion Treasury market.
  • Goldman Sachs estimates May’s bond selloff increased the interest-rate exposure of active MBS hedgers by the equivalent of buying $40 billion of 10-year Treasuries — a significant, largely invisible flow.
  • Over $2 trillion of mortgage securities now carry 5%-plus coupons (4x the level of three years ago), and roughly a third of all outstanding MBS now trade near par — the zone of peak convexity sensitivity.
  • The Fed’s near-total exit from the MBS market has left hedge funds as dominant holders; unlike the central bank, they hedge their exposure, reintroducing a feedback loop the market hasn’t had to contend with since before the pandemic.

What Happened?

As Treasury yields surged toward 19-year highs during last month’s bond selloff, Morgan Stanley Investment Management’s Vishal Khanduja noticed something: large waves of futures sales hitting the market precisely when mortgage-backed securities were taking their hardest hits. The pattern was unmistakable — convexity hedging was back. Investors holding MBS are forced to sell Treasuries when rates rise (because rising rates reduce refinancing, effectively extending the duration of their securities) and buy Treasuries when rates fall. Barclays analyst Amrut Nashikkar warns this “has been under-appreciated” — the MBS universe today looks radically different from 2023: over $2 trillion in securities carry 5%-plus coupons, and about a third of all outstanding mortgage bonds trade near par, where sensitivity to rate changes is greatest.

Why It Matters?

Convexity hedging was a significant amplifier of bond market volatility in the late 1990s and early 2000s, earning the nickname the “Beast.” It largely disappeared after 2022 because the pandemic-era low-rate mortgages had fallen so far in price that further hedging was unnecessary. But hundreds of billions in higher-rate mortgages originated since then have rebuilt the pipeline. Goldman Sachs estimates the May selloff generated hedging flows equivalent to $40 billion in 10-year Treasury purchases — a large, non-fundamental flow that can deepen selloffs and extend rallies. Harley Bassman, creator of the MOVE bond volatility index, recently titled a client note “Awakening the MBS Convexity Beast” and warned that about a third of outstanding MBS now sit at par, where this dynamic is most powerful: “This is becoming big enough to impact the market.”

What’s Next?

The 10-year Treasury yield is testing a technical level that, if decisively breached, could unleash a fresh round of convexity hedging flows, according to Bloomberg macro strategists. The Fed’s ongoing balance sheet reduction means it won’t act as a shock absorber — private hedge funds, which actively hedge their duration exposure, are now the marginal holders. Combined with existing pressures from the Iran war oil shock, AI-related debt issuance, and new Fed leadership, the return of convexity hedging adds another layer of complexity to an already stressed fixed-income market. “You will see more volatility,” said Bassman. “The last 10, 15 years, it has not been that important. Now, it’s coming back.”

Source: Bloomberg

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© 2025 Lumida Wealth Management LLC is an SEC registered investment adviser. Privacy Policy. Cookies Policy.
Disclaimer Important Information This site is for informational purposes only. Information presented on this site does not constitute as investment advice.

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Lumida's website (referred to herein as the "Website") is limited to the dissemination of general information pertaining to its advisory services, together with access to additional investment-related information, publications, and links. Accordingly, the publication of the Website on the Internet should not be construed by any client and/or prospective client Lumida’s solicitation to effect, or attempt to effect transactions in securities, or the rendering of personalized investment advice for compensation, over the Internet.

Any subsequent, direct communication by Lumida with a prospective client will be conducted by a representative that is either registered or qualifies for an exemption or exclusion from registration in the state where the prospective client resides.

‍Lead Capture Forms: By submitting your contact information in the forms on this site, you are not obligated to invest in Lumida's product or services.
‍Address: Lumida Wealth Management, 25 W 39th Street Suite 700, New York, NY 10018