- Some of the world’s biggest bond managers — including Capital Group ($3T+ AUM), PIMCO ($2.3T), Insight Investment ($836B), and Natixis — are all converging on the same trade: buying the “belly,” or 5-year area of the Treasury curve, as the sweet spot to navigate the early Warsh era.
- The 5-year currently yields 4.15% and appeals because it spans both potential hiking and eventual easing cycles, offers shelter from volatile reactions to near-term data prints, and is relatively cheap — the butterfly spread (5yr vs 2yr/30yr) is near its highest level in more than a year.
- Markets have dialed back their most aggressive rate-hike bets, now pricing one to two increases by mid-2027 as the peak — down from earlier positioning for a series of hikes beginning as soon as next month — as oil prices fall and Treasury yields stabilize after Warsh’s hawkish price-stability pronouncements.
- PIMCO’s base case is the Fed doesn’t hike at all: senior PM Michael Cudzil says the economy should slow in H2 2026, and “it’s very possible that front end and belly yields fall below 4% in the second half of the year” if hike expectations are removed and easing talk returns.
What Happened?
After Treasury yields spiked on Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s hawkish price-stability pronouncements, the bond market stabilized last week as oil prices declined and traders scaled back their most aggressive hike wagers. Into that environment, the world’s largest bond managers have converged on a single positioning theme: the 5-year Treasury “belly.” Capital Group, PIMCO, Insight Investment, and Natixis are all buying twos-through-fives, viewing the belly as a proxy for the full economic cycle — able to capture value whether the Fed hikes once or twice and then cuts in 2027, or skips hikes entirely and goes straight to easing.
Why It Matters?
When investors of this scale all pile into the same trade, it both validates the thesis and introduces crowding risk. The 5-year’s appeal is genuine: it sits at the intersection of Fed policy and inflation expectations, offers more yield than front-end bills, and has underperformed relative to 2- and 30-year maturities — creating a relative value entry point. But the same data dependency that makes the trade attractive introduces binary risk: a hotter-than-expected June non-farm payrolls report (due July 2) or a surprise inflation print next month could reprice the belly sharply. The market will also be watching Warsh’s appearance at the Sintra panel July 1 for any pivot signals.
What’s Next?
Key near-term catalysts: June non-farm payrolls on July 2 (Treasury market closed July 4), Fed Chair Warsh at Sintra on July 1, and inflation prints next month. PGIM expects three hikes in 2026 followed by easing into 2028; PIMCO expects no hikes and sub-4% belly yields by year-end. The resolution between these views will determine whether the belly trade pays off or reverses painfully. As PIMCO’s Cudzil noted, “market narratives can turn pretty quickly and all it takes is a couple pieces of data to see a bit of a wobble.”
Source: Bloomberg













