Q1 2022 Putnam Income Fund Q&A
- All major fixed income sectors posted losses amid global market turbulence.
- Mortgage credit holdings and our interest-rate/yield curve strategy added the most value versus the benchmark, while an allocation to investment-grade corporate bonds detracted.
- With broad coronavirus-related restrictions removed, we have a generally positive outlook.
How did the fund perform for the three months ended March 31, 2022?
The fund’s class Y shares returned –4.84%. Despite negative absolute performance, the fund outpaced the –5.93% result of its benchmark, the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index.
What was the market environment like during the first quarter of 2022?
It was a volatile period for bond markets in the U.S. and around the world. Hawkish policy pivots from the U.S. Federal Reserve and the European Central Bank in the face of rapidly rising inflation, combined with Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, fueled a flight from risk.
Within this environment, credit spreads widened and interest rates rose. [Spreads are the yield advantage credit-sensitive bonds offer over comparable-maturity U.S. Treasuries. Bond prices rise as yield spreads tighten and decline as spreads widen.] The yield on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury rose from 1.63% on January 3 to 2.32% on March 31. In anticipation of Fed policy changes, short-term yields rose even more, causing the yield curve to flatten materially.
On March 16, the central bank approved a 0.25% hike, its first increase since December 2018. Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled an aggressive approach going forward, indicating that additional hikes could occur at each of the remaining six policy meetings in 2022.
From a sector perspective, all fixed income categories posted losses. Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities [TIPS] held up better than the broad fixed income market, aided by rising inflation. Investment-grade corporate credit, meanwhile, was among the poorer performers, given its relatively high interest-rate sensitivity.
Outside of fixed income, commodities such as oil, wheat, and metals experienced large price increases during the quarter on expectations of global shortages resulting from Russia’s invasion of Ukraine. U.S. crude oil prices climbed 32%, ending the quarter at $100.28 per barrel. Major stock indexes in the U.S. and overseas suffered their worst quarterly performance in two years.
Which holdings and strategies aided the fund’s performance versus the benchmark?
Mortgage credit holdings added the most value on a relative basis, led by an allocation to commercial mortgage-backed securities [CMBS]. Our investments consisted of cash bonds along with synthetic exposure via CMBX. By way of explanation, CMBX is a group of tradeable indexes that each reference a basket of 25 CMBS issued in a particular year. Despite broader market volatility, the continued reopening of the economy and the success of vaccines aided the recovery of many types of property, which, in turn, boosted our CMBS positions.
Our interest-rate and yield curve strategy also contributed versus the benchmark. The portfolio benefited from an increase in real interest rates during the quarter. [Real interest rates adjust for the effects of inflation by subtracting the actual or expected rate of inflation from nominal interest rates.] Our interest-rate and yield curve strategy is intended to provide a degree of protection against underperformance of risk-based assets. It accomplished that objective this quarter.
Strategies targeting prepayment risk provided a further relative boost, fueled by our mortgage basis positioning. Our strategy received a lift early in the period following the release of the minutes from the Fed’s December policy meeting. The minutes indicated that the central bank might begin to sell its holdings of government-agency mortgage-backed securities [MBS] more rapidly than investors originally anticipated. By way of explanation, our mortgage basis strategy seeks to capitalize on the difference between longer-term U.S. Treasury yields and the interest rates on 30-year home mortgages.
What about relative detractors?
An allocation to investment-grade [IG] corporate bonds was the only notable relative detractor this quarter. IG credit was one of the poorest-performing fixed income sectors, hampered by rising interest rates and widening credit spreads.
What are your current views on the major sectors in which the fund invests?
Now that broad coronavirus-related restrictions have been lifted, we have a generally positive outlook overall. With vaccines widely available and the Omicron surge in the rearview mirror, the downside risks of prolonged lockdowns have been reduced.
Looking first at corporate credit, we have a constructive outlook for IG bonds. That said, we anticipate continued bouts of volatility given the conflict in Ukraine, the pace of Fed rate hikes, and potentially negative effects on energy supplies from sanctions on Russia. We have a positive view of corporate fundamentals, while having a more neutral outlook for the market’s supply-and-demand backdrop and valuation level.
We believe the fundamental environment will continue to improve in the CMBS market as workers return to offices, consumer traffic increases at retailers, and hotels welcome back business and leisure travelers. Our emphasis on investment opportunities in the U.S. broadly isolates us from geopolitical risk. Moreover, with real assets serving as collateral, along with the potential for rent adjustments, CMBS have historically performed well during periods of rising inflation. Consistent with risk markets generally, CMBS spreads widened during the quarter. The increased liquidity premium enhanced the appeal of select market segments.
Within residential mortgage credit, we believe continued high demand and low inventory of available homes is likely to push prices even higher. Given that home prices have already risen substantially and mortgage rates have moved up, we are aware that affordability has become a constraint for many prospective buyers. Consequently, we think the pace of home price appreciation is likely to moderate during 2022. Wider spreads have created better value among mid-tier and lower-rated securities. As a result, we are finding attractive investment opportunities in that area of the market, as well as among higher-rated securities.
We believe the Fed’s shift toward tighter monetary policy may cause it to accelerate sales of MBS that it currently holds. A faster pace of MBS tapering would reduce home price inflation, helping to boost the Fed’s inflation-fighting mandate. Against this backdrop, we believe many prepayment-sensitive securities may offer attractive risk-adjusted returns from current price levels and may offer meaningful upside potential if mortgage prepayment speeds slow. We think the fund’s prepayment-related strategies provide an important source of diversification in the portfolio. In our view, prepayment strategies could benefit from an economic slowdown, a shift to supportive fiscal policies, or a sustained increase in mortgage rates.
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