Bond yields in the US and Europe broke above critical resistance levels, entering a fast area that could take them even higher. That’s why the German election, inflation and growth data are going to set market sentiment this week.
German election: a tight race means Bunds are more vulnerable to rising yields in the US until a coalition is formed
Social Democrats (SPD) secured a slim advantage over the Christian Democrats (CDU/CSU), opening up for a period of negotiations in which both parties will try to secure a ruling coalition. Bunds opened flat this morning and will probably struggle to find direction until negotiation discussions become clearer. In an analysis published last week, we have indicated that Bund yields might rise and turn positive by the end of the year regardless of the coalition that will be formed. A Traffic light (SPD + Greens + FDP) or Kenya (CDU/CSU + SPD + Greens) coalitions will probably see Bund yields rising and stabilizing around 0.2%. In contrast, the spread between Italian BPTS and Bunds will tighten to levels previously seen before the European debt crisis, to roughly 75bps.
German Bund yields broke above -0.25% last week, and they are now trading in a fast area which could take them quickly to -0.15% or back down below -0.25%. US Treasury yields are more likely to set direction in the upcoming days rather than the German election. If yields in the US continue to rise, they will also provoke German bund yields higher.
Besides the German election and US Treasury yields, Eurozone CPI figures on Friday can also dictate sentiment within the European sovereign bond market. The CPI Index rose 3% in August from 2.2% in July. The core CPI remained at 1.6%, giving a more accurate picture of inflation in the Eurozone during the past decade. Yet, another high CPI read can spark speculations that hawkish ECB members might push for a PEPP taper without an equal increase of purchases under other ECB’s programs. That would leave the European sovereign space vulnerable to another selloff.
US Treasuries: debt ceiling, GDP and PCE figures in focus.
Ten-year Treasury yields have broken above 1.4% and sustained trading above this level for the first time since June. They happen to be in a fast area which seems to be leading them quickly above 1.5%. Things are moving fast today, with yields rising across the yield curve. Ten-year yields broke briefly above 1.5% following US durable goods orders data, exceeding expectations by more than double. Five-year yields are flirting with their 1% resistance, a level that they haven’t crossed since March 2020. If they break above this level, they enter a fast area that could take them quickly to 1.2%. Lastly, 30-year yields are testing resistance at 2%. Yet, yields have the potential to slow down their rise as economic data might confirm a deceleration in growth on Thursday, putting a cap on yields.
As we enter October, a topic becoming more and more relevant to US Treasuries is the debt ceiling. Congress is struggling to find bipartisan support to raise the debt ceiling. The US Treasury secretary, Janet Yellen, warned that if an agreement is not reached, the country will run the risk of defaulting on its own debt by the end of October. We exclude the government will accept a default, forcing Democrats to extend the debt ceiling under their partisan multi-trillion-dollar tax and spending plan. However, the later such an extension arrives, the more profound implications for the bond market. To refinance existing maturing debt, the US Treasury needs to sell large volumes of T-Bills in a short period, provoking what can be called Quantitative Tightening (QT). Despite the RRP facility continues to hit new records signaling that liquidity in the money market is unusually high, a sudden large increase of T-Bill issuance can be difficult to digest even for a yield-hungry money market, leading to a bear flattening of the yield curve.
However, the long part of the US yield curve is more likely to be volatile than the front end this week as the market will focus on inflation and growth. On Thursday, GDP figures might show that the economic rebound has been slower than expected at the beginning of the year despite four consecutive quarters of expansion. Additionally, the Evergrande fallout poses a threat to global growth. Thus, GPD data might underpin US Treasury yields ahead of Friday’ PCE deflator. Consensus expects prices to have stabilized in August and the PCE Deflator to rise slower than July, keeping the year-over-year figure flat at 4.2%. Investors will be looking at signals of whether inflation might be transitory or not, especially in light of recurrent supply chain disruptions as well as high energy prices. A strong PCE number might lead the Federal Reserve to a more aggressive tapering, especially if there are signs of persistent inflation. At that point, the market will need to consider earlier interest rate hikes leading to a bear steepening of the yield curve.
Bond auctions are also pivotal this week, with the US Treasury issuing 2-year and 5-year notes today and 7-year notes tomorrow. Investors will closely watch tomorrow’s 7-year auction as in February, it sparked a widespread selloff due to lack of demand. We expect demand to be solid; however, it’s critical to understand whether investors’ appetite for US Treasuries is decreasing now that yields are moving higher.
Economic calendar
Monday, September the 27th
- Japan: Leading Economic Index
- Eurozone: Loans to Households, Loans to Companies, M3 Money Supply
- Spain: Producer Price Index
- France: Unemployment Benefit Claims, Jobseekers Total
- United States: Durable Goods Orders, Dallas Manufacturing Index, NY Fed Treasury Purchases 10 to 22.5 years, 2-year and 5-year Note Auction
- Canada: 10-years Bond auction
Tuesday, September the 28th
- Japan: BoJ Monetary Policy Meeting Minutes
- Australia Retail Sales
- Germany: GfK Consumer Confidence
- United Kingdom: 30-year Treasury Gilt Auction
- United States: Goods Trade Balance, Wholesale Inventories, Redbook, S&P/Case-Shiller Home Prices, House Price Index, CB Consumer Confidence, Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index, NY Fed Treasury Purchases 2.25 to 4.5 years, 7-year Note Auction
Wednesday, September the 29th
- Spain: Harmonized Inflation Rate
- Italy: Producer Price Index
- United Kingdom: BoE Consumer Credit, Mortgage Lending, Mortgage Approvals
- Eurozone: Consumer Confidence, Economic Sentiment, Industrial Sentiment, Service Sentiment, Consumer Inflation Expectations
- Germany: 10-year Bund Auction
- Italy: 5-year and 10-year BTP auction
- Spain: Business Confidence
- United States: MBA Mortgage Applications, MBA 30-year Mortgage Rate, Pending Homes Sales
- Canada: Producer Price Index, Raw Materials Prices
Thursday, September the 30th
- Japan: Retail Sales, Industrial Production, Foreign Bond Investment, Stock Investments by Foreigners
- China: Non-manufacturing PMI, Caixin Manufacturing PMI
- Australia: Building Permits, Private Sector Credit
- Germany: Import Prices, Unemployment Rate Harmonized, harmonized Inflation Rate
- United Kingdom: Current Account, GDP Growth Rate, Nationwide Housing Prices, Business Investment
- France: Harmonized Inflation Rate, household Consumption, PPI
- Spain: Retail Sales
- Eurozone: Unemployment Rate
- Italy: Harmonized Inflation Rate
- United States: Corporate Profits, GDP Growth Rate, Initial Jobless Claims, Jobless Claims 4-week Average, Chicago PMI, NY Fed Treasury Purchases TIPSS 1 to 7.5 years, 4-week and 8-week Bill Auction
Friday, October the 1st
- Australia: market Manufacturing PMI, Home Sales, Consumer Confidence
- Japan: Unemployment Rate, Jobs/applications ratio, Tankan Large Manufacturers, BoJ Summary of Opinions, Consumer Confidence
- Germany: Retail Sales, Markit Manufacturing PMI
- France: Budget Balance, Markit Manufacturing PMI, New Car Registrations
- Spain: Markit Manufacturing PMI, New Car Sales
- Italy: IHS Manufacturing PMI
- Eurozone: Markit Manufacturing PMI, Core Inflation Rate, Inflation Rate
- United States: Markit Manufacturing PMI, ISM Manufacturing PMI, Construction Spending, Michigan Current Conditions, Michigan Consumer Expectations and Sentiment, Michigan Inflation Expectations, Michigan 5 year Inflation Expectations, ISM Manufacturing Prices and New Orders, NY Fed Treasury Purchases 2.25 to 4.5 years