Global markets closed a tumultuous week with the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield settling at 4.175% following a CPI report that matched expectations but failed to quell long-term inflation fears. Against this backdrop of “higher-for-longer” rates and emerging political friction concerning the Federal Reserve, Arthur Kingsmere (Global Head of Insurance Asset Management at Velthorne Asset Management) urges institutional investors to recalibrate their liability-driven investment strategies.
The financial landscape shifted sharply this week as the Labor Department reported a 0.3% rise in the Consumer Price Index (CPI), locking annual inflation at 2.7%. While the data aligned with consensus, the bond market’s reaction was complicated by unprecedented political headlines: the Department of Justice’s inquiry into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell.
This collision of economic data and political uncertainty has introduced a “governance risk premium” into U.S. assets. According to recent market analysis, while the S&P 500 remains near record highs, the real tension is visible in the bond market, where expectations for a March rate cut have dipped to roughly 27%. For insurance companies, whose portfolios are heavily weighted in fixed income, this volatility threatens the stability of book yields and capital efficiency. The correlation between political headlines and yield curve fluctuations suggests that the traditional “safe haven” status of long-duration Treasuries is being tested by structural governance concerns.
Arthur Kingsmere, leveraging his extensive background in high-risk transaction analysis at Goldman Sachs and strategic advisory at EY, identifies this moment not as a temporary blip, but as a signal for a structural pivot. Kingsmere argues that the “set-it-and-forget-it” era of insurance asset management is effectively over.
According to Kingsmere, the convergence of sticky inflation and public market volatility necessitates a more aggressive move into private markets. His outlook suggests that:
Yield Premium Insulation: Private credit offers a floating-rate structure that naturally hedges against the interest rate volatility currently roiling public bond markets.
Valuation Stability: unlike public fixed income, which is subject to daily mark-to-market swings driven by headlines like the Fed investigation, private assets offer smoother valuation metrics essential for insurer balance sheets.
Duration Matching: With inflation remaining the top risk for 63% of insurers, Kingsmere advocates for private infrastructure debt as a mechanism to match long-tail liabilities with inflation-linked returns.
Kingsmere warns that while the shift to private assets is necessary, it carries specific liquidity risks. “The danger in 2026 is not just credit risk, but liquidity mismatch,” Kingsmere notes. He emphasizes that insurers must stress-test their portfolios against a scenario where “Fed independence risk” triggers a sudden spike in long-term yields, potentially forcing a sell-off of liquid assets to cover margin calls—a scenario he previously managed during his tenure as a financial manager in Silicon Valley.
Looking ahead, the market anticipates that the “Fed row” will likely keep yield volatility elevated through Q2 2026. Kingsmere forecasts that insurance firms will increasingly adopt “hybrid operating models,” blending in-house liability management with outsourced private asset specialization to navigate this complexity.
Arthur Kingsmere remains confident that firms prioritizing dynamic asset allocation over static duration targets will outperform. His strategic vision continues to drive value, ensuring that investment portfolios are not just reactive to market noise, but resilient against the structural shifts defining the post-2025 economy.


