While Chile's inflation rate is dropping quickly, government expenditures are rising. This contrast is creating a divide in the bond market. Short-term yields look set to fall, while long-term yields are climbing.
The Inflation Disconnect
Actual inflation is also easing. Consumer prices rose 3.9% in May from a year earlier, a lower number than any analyst had forecast.
This gives the central bank room to cut its policy rate, which currently stands at 4.5%. Markets now expect the rate to fall to 4.38% within a year, a drop of 30 basis points from a month ago. Portfolio manager Ramón Domínguez of MBI Inversiones said, "The expectation of lower inflationary pressures and a less restrictive monetary policy would favor a decline in nominal rates, particularly at the short and intermediate ends of the curve."
Yet the labor market is weak. Unemployment has risen to 9.1%, the highest level in nearly five years. Economic growth is also slowing.
According to a central bank survey of economists this month, GDP is projected to grow only 1.6% in 2026, a drop from the 2.5% prediction made in March. Domínguez called the projected future policy rate of 4.38% "demanding" given an economy still characterized by spare capacity, a weakened labor market, and growth that remains moderate.
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Fiscal Fears Push Up Long-Term Yields
While short-term rates are poised to fall, long-term yields are rising - and the reason is fiscal. President José Antonio Kast's administration has abandoned its earlier goal of achieving a balanced structural budget within four years. Instead, the Finance Ministry is now targeting a structural deficit of 1.5% of gross domestic product by the end of its four-year term. To cover the gap, it has asked Congress for permission to sell an additional $6.2 billion in bonds this year.
That flood of new supply is worrying investors. Deputy fixed-income manager Marco Gallardo of BICE Inversiones noted that these additional bond issuances are likely to drive up yields on longer-dated nominal paper. Domínguez explained: "The long end would continue to incorporate term premiums as well as premiums for fiscal and external uncertainty, explaining why the consensus expects a steepening of the yield curve over the coming months."
The Fed Factor
Chile does not move in isolation. Over half of the survey respondents indicated that the US Federal Reserve will be the primary influence on Chilean rates in July, the highest share since February. The Fed has recently shifted to a more hawkish tone, and market participants are anticipating a 25-basis-point rate increase by October at the latest.
"Currently, the correlation between Chilean and US nominal rates is particularly high," Domínguez said. "If the Fed maintains a hawkish stance or signals that rates will stay higher for longer, it will be difficult for local rates to decouple from that trend."
On the other hand, any sign that the Fed might ease could help Chilean bonds rally. Gallardo said, "Any news tempering those expectations could trigger a decline in US rates and nominal peso-denominated rates would best reflect that movement."
Investor Considerations
For bond investors, short-term notes may benefit from monetary easing, while long-term bonds are penalized by fiscal uncertainty. The steepening curve signals higher compensation for longer debt, reflecting doubts about deficit control. The strong correlation with US rates means Fed policy shifts will directly affect Chilean yields, amplifying both risks and opportunities.
Worth Noting
The market is betting that Chile's inflation spike is temporary, but the fiscal outlook keeps long-term bond investors cautious. Domínguez put it simply: "The market is pricing in the expectation that the current inflationary episode will be transitory." Whether that bet pays off depends on how falling inflation and rising deficits play out - and on what the Fed does next.
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