What Higher Inflation Means for Stock and Bond Correlations

The two assets usually move more in tandem during inflationary periods, which makes it harder for investors to build well-diversified portfolios

Amy C. Arnott 14 May, 2024 | 8:04AM
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In our recently published 2024 Diversification Landscape report, Christine Benz, Karen Zaya, and I took a deep dive into how different asset classes performed in the past couple of years, how correlations* have evolved, and what those changes mean for investors and financial advisors trying to build well-diversified portfolios. We also looked at correlation trends during periods of rising interest rates, elevated inflation, and economic recessions.

One key finding: higher inflation usually leads to closer links between stocks and bonds, reducing the benefit of including both in a portfolio.

The resurgence in inflation that started in May 2021 made market conditions much more challenging. Supply chain disruptions, a tight labour market, the war in Ukraine, and strong economic growth all conspired to push up inflation from its previously benign levels. The year-over-year change in consumer prices rose to more than 7% by the end of 2021 and reached as high as 9% by mid-2022. Inflationary pressures eased during 2023, but inflation remained above the Federal Reserve’s stated target of 2%.

Higher inflation marked a sharp reversal from the previous regime. For most of the previous 30 years, conditions were unusually benign from an inflation perspective. Aside from a brief increase in the mid-2000s, inflation had generally been running well below its long-term historical average of about 3.2%.

Cooler-than-average inflation, in turn, created close to ideal conditions for stock/bond correlations. With inflation mostly a nonissue, stocks and bonds moved largely independently; in fact, rolling three-year correlations between stocks and bonds were consistently negative (or barely above zero) from November 2000 through 2020.

A Sharp Increase in Correlation

With those conditions now a distant memory, it shouldn’t come as a surprise that correlations between stocks and bonds have sharply increased. Correlations between stocks and bonds edged into positive territory in 2021 and jumped up to 0.58 for the full year in both 2022 and 2023.

The recent uptrend in correlations has been unusually dramatic but not unprecedented. As I discussed in my previous article, the stock/bond correlation has often been positive over multiyear periods. For example, the trailing three-year correlation coefficients between the two asset classes were consistently above zero from August 1966 through August 1974. Stock/bond correlations were also consistently positive from October 1974 until late 2000.

We also looked at correlations over specific periods of higher inflation, generally defined as periods when year-over-year inflation increased by at least 5% and remained high for at least six months.**

As shown in the table below, correlations between stocks and bonds rose during some but not all periods. In general, correlations increased the most during periods when inflation was both high (in the double digits) and protracted (lasting at least three years). The post-World War II era saw an unusually high spike in inflation (driven by the removal of wartime wage and price controls, combined with large numbers of troops coming home), but the increase in consumer prices lasted only about a year. More recently, surging economic growth in China fuelled rising consumer prices in 2007 and 2008, but inflation remained below 6% and lasted less than a year.

The most dramatic correlation upturns took place in the periods from February 1966 through January 1970 (driven by low unemployment and surging economic growth) and February 1977 through March 1980 (driven by soaring oil prices, the oil embargo and related price shocks, and expansionary monetary policies). Correlations ended up in a similar range (0.26 and 0.28, respectively) in both periods. Thanks to the rapidly shifting landscape for both interest rates and inflation, the recent upturn in stock/bond correlations has been even more pronounced.

Portfolio Implications - Should You Avoid Bonds?

There are a couple of key lessons to draw from these patterns. For one, the environment for both inflation and interest rates has fundamentally changed. As long as the outlook for inflation and interest rates remains uncertain, the correlation between stocks and bonds will probably remain higher than in the past. Indeed, correlations between stocks and intermediate-term government bonds stood at about 0.6 for the trailing 12-month period through April 30, 2024.

That doesn’t necessarily mean investors should avoid bonds, however. Stocks and bonds tend to move more in tandem during inflationary periods, but bonds can still provide significant diversification benefits, as well as play a critical role in providing ballast and reducing risk at the portfolio level.

* Correlation means that asset classes tend to move in the same direction

** Inflationary periods are based on the parameters described in Neville, H., Draaisma, T., Funnell, B., Harvey, C.R., & Van Hemert, O. 2021. “The Best Strategies for Inflationary Times.” ssrn.com/abstract=3813202.

The information contained within is for educational and informational purposes ONLY. It is not intended nor should it be considered an invitation or inducement to buy or sell a security or securities noted within nor should it be viewed as a communication intended to persuade or incite you to buy or sell security or securities noted within. Any commentary provided is the opinion of the author and should not be considered a personalised recommendation. The information contained within should not be a person's sole basis for making an investment decision. Please contact your financial professional before making an investment decision.

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About Author

Amy C. Arnott  Amy C. Arnott, CFA, is director of securities analysis for Morningstar.

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