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Analysis-Fed's bumper rate cut revives 'reflation specter' in US bond market

By Davide Barbuscia

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Federal Reserve's aggressive start of the easing cycle has rekindled inflation worries in the U.S. bond market, as some investors fear looser financial conditions could re-ignite price pressures.

Yields on longer-dated Treasuries that are most sensitive to the inflation outlook have risen to the highest since early September, with some investors worried that the Fed's shift in focus from beating back inflation to protecting the job market could allow for a rebound in price pressures.

"I think there are questions around how quickly inflation will be able to get to the Fed's target if we're in a cutting environment, and if we're in an environment where the Fed is saying we want to support the labor market before the labor market gets weak," said Cayla Seder, macro multi-asset strategist at State Street Global Markets. She expects long-term yields, which rise when prices fall, to climb further as the market bets on stronger growth and inflation.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said last week the 50 basis point interest rate cut that kick-started the U.S. central bank's descent was a "recalibration" of rates aimed at maintaining strength in the labor market while inflation moves sustainably to the Fed's 2% goal.

The Fed's emphasis on economic resilience fueled concerns that the path to lower rates could be slow and bumpy. Fed officials' forecasts on interest rates also suggested a more gradual pace in cuts than what the market anticipated.

Expectations for inflation over the next decade as measured by Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) increased after the Fed's announcement on Wednesday, with the 10-year breakeven inflation rate rising to 2.16% on Thursday, its highest since early August. It hit a new high of 2.167% on Monday.

An auction of 10-year TIPS on Thursday, after the Fed's rate-setting meeting, was lapped up by investors, with non-dealers absorbing 93.4% of the $17 billion Treasury debt sale, the highest share since January. Flows into U.S. dollar inflation-linked bonds, however, were negative in the week ending on Monday, according to LSEG data.

"Investors are once again concerned with the specter of reflation," BMO Capital Markets rates strategists said in a note last week. Matt Smith, fund manager at Ruffer, said he has been adding inflation protection to his portfolio over the last few days and weeks.

Many in the market have fresh memories of the selloff that happened when a dovish pivot by the Fed in December was followed by months of upside surprises on inflation and employment.

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