February 2, 2026
By Matthew Vegari, Head of Research
[To coincide with the FOMC meeting, last week the Research Desk covered short rates and cash exposures across a variety of institutional investors. This week, we’re taking a look at long rates to explore how fixed income portfolios have evolved and where they’re heading in 2026.]
As noted by economists far and wide, a new macroeconomic regime surfaced in the wake of the COVID pandemic and upended paradigms of the 2010s: Inflation flipped from too low to too high; monetary policy shifted from accommodative to restrictive; long rates rose from 1- and 2-handles to 3- and 4-handles. For bondholders especially, this adjustment period stung.
What once looked like a temporary credit environment, termed “higher for longer,” is now here to stay. Yet what does “higher for longer” actually mean for investors? How are they positioning their portfolios?
To gauge how strategies have evolved, the Research Desk leveraged its proprietary database and analyzed the fixed income holdings of a sample of private wealth clients. For these asset owners—chiefly family offices and ultra-high net worth individuals—recent patterns are clear: As the rate regime has matured and filtered through capital markets, investors have reembraced duration and shifted farther out on the yield curve.
The path to higher rates, or, what happened to portfolios mechanically