JPMorgan Asset Management warns that an increase in inflation could disrupt the typical bond rally even if the Federal Reserve reduces interest rates. This scenario could also weaken the US dollar.
Should inflation increase, the Federal Reserve’s ability to cut rates aggressively would be restricted. As a result, policy easing could be cautious and less effective in stimulating growth-sensitive assets.
Persistent Inflation And Bond Market Risks
Persistent inflation may affect the bond market by reducing real returns on fixed-income assets. Even with interest rate cuts, long-duration Treasury bonds might not provide large capital gains as yields could remain stable if inflation persists.
Currency implications include higher inflation without adequate policy tightening, which could diminish real interest rate differentials favouring the US. This situation may render the dollar less appealing, especially if the Federal Reserve appears to be lagging in its response.
In essence, JPMorgan highlights the risk of a scenario akin to stagflation, involving stubbornly high inflation, slower growth, limited bond gains, and a gradual weakening of the US dollar.
The inflation temperature looks like it is about to rise again, creating a difficult environment. The latest July 2025 Consumer Price Index report showed a concerning jump to 3.4%, reversing the cooling trend we had seen earlier in the year. This persistent price pressure limits how much the Federal Reserve can really help the economy.
This puts the Fed in a bind, especially after it made a small 25-basis-point rate cut back in June 2025 to support a slowing economy. With inflation ticking up and Q2 GDP growth revised down to a weak 0.8%, the Fed’s room to cut more is now very limited. As a result, rate derivative markets are quickly pricing out the odds of further cuts this year.
Implications For The Bond Market And US Dollar
For the bond market, this means the big gains from falling yields are likely capped. We shouldn’t expect long-duration Treasury yields to drop much further, which makes buying call options on bond futures a risky bet. Instead, strategies that benefit from interest rate volatility, like straddles, could be more appropriate for the uncertain weeks ahead.
This environment could also put downward pressure on the U.S. dollar over time. If inflation stays high without the Fed raising rates to match it, the dollar becomes less attractive to hold. We are already seeing the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) drift below 104, and traders may want to consider buying puts on the dollar or calls on currencies like the euro or Swiss franc.
This stagflation-lite risk is also a major headwind for stocks, as slower growth hurts corporate earnings. Given the uncertainty, we believe buying protective puts on major indices like the S&P 500 is a sensible move. Volatility, as measured by the VIX, has been creeping up from its lows and could continue to rise.
We saw a similar dynamic back in 2022, when sticky inflation forced the Fed to be more aggressive than markets first expected. That period taught us that betting on a smooth and easy Fed pivot can be a painful trade. This time, being prepared for stubborn inflation and limited policy support is the key.