Bonds in almost every corner of the $63 trillion global debt market are bouncing back as investors begin to see value once again in fixed-income assets.

Global investment-grade debt has returned almost 1% in May, the first monthly gain since July, while US Treasuries are heading for their best month since November, according to Bloomberg indexes. A gauge of global corporate debt is set for its biggest advance since July, while emerging-market sovereigns from Mexico to Malaysia are also in the green.

Investors point to a bevy of reasons for the recovery. These include signs the global economy is in danger of recession, speculation the rush of central-bank interest-rate hikes are now largely priced in, and the simple fact yields have risen enough to make them attractive.

“I expect global bonds to deliver positive returns for the rest of this year,” said Akira Takei, a global fixed-income money manager at Asset Management One Co. in Tokyo, who has been buying Treasuries. “Yields have fallen from their peaks because more and more investors see value in bonds. The worst of the bond market is behind us.”

Asset managers including pension funds and insurers last week ramped up bullish wagers on Treasuries to the highest levels since April 2020. At the same time, JPMorgan Asset Management, Morgan Stanley and Pacific Investment Management Co. have all gone on record saying the worst of the global debt selloff looks to be over.

The rally in bonds has already pushed U.S. 10-year yields down to 2.80% from a three-year high of 3.20% set in early May. Yields on similar-maturity German bunds have dropped to 1.04% from a peak of 1.19% three weeks ago.

“It’s a good time to increase your allocation to fixed income,” said Tai Hui, chief Asia market strategist in Hong Kong at JPMorgan Asset, which oversees $2.5 trillion. “With the valuation de-rating in fixed income -- if you look at credit spreads, if you look at risk-free rates -- the fixed income world is starting to look attractive again.”

Still, renewed inflation concerns may derail the bond recovery. Record German inflation spurred a selloff in bunds on Monday, while similar-maturity U.S. yields jumped 10 basis points on Tuesday after Federal Reserve Governor Christopher Waller said he wants to keep raising borrowing costs in half point steps until price pressures ease back to target.

There are also laggards in the broader fixed-income market.

Investors remain skittish on Chinese debt as Covid-linked lockdowns and uncertainties over the nation’s troubled property market deter buyers. While returns have generally been picking up, credit spreads have still widened in some areas, including Asian investment-grade bonds, amid skepticism about whether the fixed-income recovery will last.

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