Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Financial markets are bracing for UK inflation to reach 2% in the second quarter, following comments from Governor Andrew Bailey indicating a significant anticipated decline in April's inflation figures. Bailey attributed this expected drop to the UK's distinctive approach to household energy pricing. Yet, wages and services inflation remain at 6%.
While the Bank of England (BOE) is exploring opportunities to begin reducing interest rates, this week’s MPC meeting will likely show that the rate cut cycle ahead remains uncertain. The data Bailey referenced will not be released until May 22nd, making it risky to pledge to an aggressive rate cut cycle ahead. Therefore, even if the Bank of England pre-commits to a rate cut this summer, it is unlikely to announce further cuts soon, especially given the uncertain monetary policy trajectories of the European Central Bank and the Federal Reserve. This leaves UK monetary policy decisions heavily reliant on upcoming economic data.
At the last Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) meeting, the Bank of England (BOE) members decided by an 8-1 majority to maintain interest rates unchanged. Haskel and Mann shifted their positions from favoring a rate increase to supporting a hold, while Dhingra voted for a cut. As inflation continues to decline, a more dovish stance may emerge. In this meeting, it wouldn’t be surprising if the vote split adjusts to 7-2, with Ramsden potentially aligning with Dhingra to advocate for a rate cut. Notably, although Ramsden is recognized as a hawk, he has recently expressed the belief that inflation risks are more balanced and that inflation could stay around 2% for three years.
Currently, financial markets expect the BOE to cut rates by 56 basis points by year's end, a decrease from the 172 basis points forecasted at the start of January. While the likelihood of two rate cuts now appears greater than that of seven, market sentiment might shift towards expecting further cuts if policymakers continue to express confidence in economic data, hence the potential for cutting rates.
In February, the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) projected that inflation would decrease to 2.3% by 2026, a revision from the November forecast, which anticipated inflation to drop to 1.9% within the same period. Given the recent rise in Gilt yields, which reflects market adjustments pricing out rate cuts for this year, there is now a likelihood that the MPC’s CPI forecasts for 2026 might be revised downward to 2%. This adjustment would invite markets to price more rate cuts for this year.
Uncertainty surrounding monetary policies and the trajectory of inflation is expected to maintain bond and FX markets on edge. This suggests that although the response to Thursday's Bank of England (BOE) meeting may be pronounced, Gilt yields are likely to remain rangebound over the medium term.
1. Hold scenario, no changes to forward guidance, no changes in vote split. That will allow the MPC to keep the options open for the timing of the first-rate cuts. That might put in doubt a June rate cut, resulting in a bear flattening of the Gilt yield curve.
2. Hold scenario, changes to forward guidance and/or changes in vote split. The dovish bias will prompt to a bond rally leading to a steepening of the yield curve.
There is potential for downside for GBP given:
Market pricing for BOE would likely need to shift dovish if the BOE vote split shifts dovish. However, risk for a hawkish repricing may remain limited even if there is no change in BOE tone given that a June rate cut is only priced in with 45% probability. Risk/reward is asymmetric.
Dollar could sustain its resilience into the US CPI release on May 15 as Fed commentaries likely stay balanced until fears of reflation subside.
GBP has also shown a high correlation to equity sentiment. If US equities lose momentum on fears of high-for-longer interest rates or earnings pull dissipating, that can impact high-beta sterling negatively.
As such, GBPUSD could test 61.8% fibo retracement level at 1.2428 or even head towards April lows of 1.23 in the medium-term. It may also be interesting to play the risk of dovish repricing in BOE on GBP crosses, particularly with short GBPAUD given stickier inflation in Australia and expectations that the Reserve Bank of Australia could well be the last of the G10 central banks to cut rates. EURGBP could also have some room to run higher, given an ECB June rate cut is fairly priced in, but watch for the resistance at 0.8650.
Should the Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) adopt a dovish stance, ten-year Gilt yields are poised to continue their decline toward 3.94%-3.91%. However, this level is likely to be rejected as the trajectory of inflation remains unclear, with both wage and service inflation still elevated.
Conversely, if the Bank of England (BOE) takes a more cautious approach, yields are expected to start climbing back toward 4.36%.
Risk-reward proposition for 10-year gilts. For investors considering ten-year Gilts (GB00BPJJKN53), which currently offer a yield of 4.15%, the risk and reward scenario over a one-year holding period is as follows: if yields rise to 5.15%, the position will likely incur a loss of 2.57%. However, if yields fall to 3.15%, potential gains could reach 11.26%.
06-May Insights into this week's US Treasury refunding: 3-, 10-, and 30-year overview
02-May FOMC Meeting Takeaways: Why Inflation Risk Might Come to Bite the Fed
30-Apr FOMC preview: challenging the March dot plot.
29-Apr Bond Markets: the week ahead
25-Apr A tactical guide to the upcoming quarterly refunding announcement for bond and stock markets
22-Apr Analyzing market impacts: insights into the upcoming 5-year and 7-year US Treasury auctions.
18-Apr Italian BTPs are more attractive than German Schatz in today's macroeconomic context
16-Apr QT Tapering Looms Despite Macroeconomic Conditions: Fear of Liquidity Squeeze Drives Policy
08-Apr ECB preview: data-driven until June, Fed-dependent thereafter.
03-Apr Fixed income: Keep calm, seize the moment.
21-Mar FOMC bond takeaway: beware of ultra-long duration.
18-Mar Bank of England Preview: slight dovish shift in the MPC amid disinflationary trends.
18-Mar FOMC Preview: dot plot and quantitative tightening in focus.
12-Mar US Treasury auctions on the back of the US CPI might offer critical insights to investors.
07-Mar The Debt Management Office's Gilts Sales Matter More Than The Spring Budget.
05-Mar "Quantitative Tightening" or "Operation Twist" is coming up. What are the implications for bonds?
01-Mar The bond weekly wrap: slower than expected disinflation creates a floor for bond yields.
29-Feb ECB preview: European sovereign bond yields are likely to remain rangebound until the first rate cut.
27-Feb Defense bonds: risks and opportunities amid an uncertain geopolitical and macroeconomic environment.
23-Feb Two-year US Treasury notes offer an appealing entry point.
21-Feb Four reasons why the ECB keeps calm and cuts later.
14 Feb Higher CPI shows that rates volatility will remain elevated.
12 Feb Ultra-long sovereign issuance draws buy-the-dip demand but stakes are high.
06 Feb Technical Update - US 10-year Treasury yields resuming uptrend? US Treasury and Euro Bund futures testing key supports
05 Feb The upcoming 30-year US Treasury auction might rattle markets
30 Jan BOE preview: BoE hold unlikely to last as inflation plummets
29 Jan FOMC preview: the Fed might be on hold, but easing is inevitable.
26 Jan The ECB holds rates: is the bond rally sustainable?
18 Jan The most infamous bond trade: the Austria century bond.
16 Jan European sovereigns: inflation, stagnation and the bumpy road to rate cuts in 2024.
10 Jan US Treasuries: where do we go from here?
09 Jan Quarterly Outlook: bonds on everybody’s lips.