BoFA's fund managers can't find a soft landing — and the bond market agrees
Forty percent of $540 billion in surveyed institutional capital now sees no soft landing. The bond market priced that conclusion months ago — and Washington still hasn't.

Forty percent of the institutional capital that Bank of America's June fund-manager survey polled can no longer identify a soft-landing path for the United States economy. That is the headline finding from a sample of 198 managers overseeing roughly $540 billion in assets, captured in the survey circulated through the Unusual Whales news desk on 26 June 2026 at 23:31 UTC. It is the sharpest no-landing concentration in the survey's recent run, and it lands on a Treasury market that stopped waiting for the Federal Reserve to declare victory some time ago.
The story isn't that professional investors have suddenly lost confidence. It is that they have finally admitted, in a survey instrument, what the front end of the yield curve has been pricing since the spring.
What the survey actually says
The June reading captures a manager cohort that, on the whole, still leans toward some form of soft-ish outcome. Roughly six in ten respondents can still map a path to disinflation without a recession — a combination of steady growth, easing price pressures, and enough of a labour-market cool-down to give the Fed room to cut. The remaining 40 percent cannot. That is a one-in-three-shot of the dominant Wall Street narrative failing, expressed by the people whose jobs depend on calling that narrative correctly.
The split matters because fund-manager surveys are, at their best, a thermometer on whether the consensus narrative still feels livable from inside the trade. The dominant narrative through 2025 was that the United States had engineered a clean disinflationary glide — the long-feared recession never arrived, services inflation finally bent, the labour market slowed but didn't crack, and the Fed could deliver insurance cuts without ever admitting it had been too tight for too long. Forty percent of $540 billion in professional capital is now telling you that story has frayed.
What the bond market has been saying for months
The five-year Treasury yield did not need a survey to reach this conclusion. Front-end pricing has carried a no-landing premium for most of the second quarter: yields that imply sticky services inflation, a Fed that cuts slowly and reluctantly, and growth that grinds just fast enough to keep corporate default risk contained but just slow enough to keep risk-asset multiples uncomfortable. The July 2026 fed-funds futures curve is now consistent with two cuts or fewer before year-end — half of what the consensus expected at the start of the spring.
The market's read is more useful than the survey's, because the market is also pricing the path. The survey, by contrast, gives you a static distribution of opinion. Translating it: the bond complex has been treating the no-landing scenario as the base case for at least a quarter. The survey simply ratifies that with a percentage.
The structural frame
This is what a late-cycle regime looks like when the dominant economy has spent two years convincing itself that the business cycle has been repealed. It has not. The disinflation came from goods, from energy, and from a labour force that grew faster than the working-age population implied it should. None of those tailwinds repeats. Tariff passthrough is still arriving in input prices. The fiscal impulse running through fiscal year 2026 has not yet fully fed into private-sector demand. And the AI capex boom that saved 2024 and 2025 has a half-life: at some point, the hyperscalers stop front-loading, and the question is whether the rest of the economy has accreted enough demand to absorb that.
The structural concern is not that the United States tips into recession in the next two quarters. It is that the no-landing scenario — growth and inflation both running hot enough to keep the Fed on hold, with term premium quietly rebuilding — is the path of maximum political pain. Soft landings give the Fed political cover. Hard landings get blamed on someone and then end. No-landing regimes erode central-bank credibility by increments, because the central bank is forced to keep policy tight while the executive branch demands cuts for reasons unrelated to the data.
The counter-narrative, taken seriously
The honest version of the other side: labour markets are still adding jobs. Real disposable income has held up. Productivity growth from AI deployment has not shown up in the official data yet, but the corporate earnings revisions for the second quarter are pointing the right way. The 40 percent who see no soft landing may simply be overweight traders running defensive books through a volatile summer — a sentiment reading, not a forecast.
That is a fair read. It is also the read that produces the worst policy error, because it lets policymakers conclude that a soft landing is the central scenario and treat the no-landing tail as a tail. A tail that four in ten professionals cannot rule out is no longer a tail. It is a coin flip.
What remains uncertain
The survey does not break out the regional or sectoral composition of the no-landing cohort. The Unusual Whales writeup does not specify how the responses split by mandate type — long-only, macro, multi-asset, pension — which matters, because macro funds have a structural incentive to flag tail risk in surveys even when their central forecast is benign. The bond market's pricing gives a tighter read on the consensus than the survey does, but it cannot tell you whether the current curve reflects a no-landing base case or simply a market that has been conditioned to price uncertainty at higher levels after two years of surprises.
What the sources do agree on is that the share of professional capital unwilling to underwrite a clean soft landing has reached its highest level of this cycle. That is a story worth watching. The Fed is not.
This publication reads the June 2026 BoFA fund-manager survey less as a forecast than as a permission slip for a bond market that stopped believing in soft landings weeks ago and stopped waiting for Jerome Powell to agree.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://t.me/TSN_ua