Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Key points:
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The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events.
Equities: US equities traded within a narrow band as they awaited this morning's economic updates. US data continues weakening with unit labour cost coming in at 4%, below estimates of 4.7% and initial jobless claims ticking higher at 229K. US futures traded a muted start, with a minor drift toward losses by mid-morning—small caps lagging notably, as signaled by the 0.5% dip in the Russell 2000 Index. Communications, Health Care, and Consumer Staples took the lead, with Utilities, Industrials, and Materials trailing behind—a sign of investor hesitancy about the market's trajectory. Both the ECB and BOC have now cut rates while the Fed is unlikely to cut until September 2024.
FX: The dollar saw some upside earlier on Thursday but it reversed back later and ended the day lower again. Safe havens outperformed, signaling some growth weakness concerns may be setting in and focus is on the US non-farm payrolls data out today. USDJPY wobbled around 156 while USDCHF took a look below 0.89. Mexico’s lawmakers raised reform alarm, which could likely spook carry trades and provide a further floor on low-yielding currencies. MXNJPY dropped to 8.65 from highs of 8.95 yesterday. EURUSD was choppy on the ECB decision but stayed below 1.09 while EURGBP was higher at 0.8515.
Commodities: Oil is poised for a weekly drop after OPEC+ unexpectedly signaled a supply boost this year, leading some member countries to affirm their commitment to market stability.West Texas Intermediate crude remained near $76 a barrel, stabilizing after a 2% increase on Thursday, buoyed by reassurances from OPEC+ members, including Saudi Arabia. Brent settled just shy of $80. OPEC+ officials emphasized the group's readiness to respond to market fluctuations with supply adjustments. Amid concerns about the demand forecast, oil prices have been on a downward trend since the start of April. Yet, regional tensions in the Middle East, particularly Israel's intensified warnings to Hezbollah in Lebanon, suggest potential disruptions that could reignite price increases, as fears of conflict with the Iranian-supported faction grow. Gold advanced as traders looked past fresh US data and the European Central Bank’s widely expected interest rate cut to focus on Friday’s key nonfarm payrolls report for clues on the Federal Reserve’s rate path.
Fixed income: Market participants have ramped up wagers on interest rate reductions over the last week, encouraged by a series of U.S. economic figures falling short of expectations, the Bank of Canada's recent policy easing, and anticipation of a European Central Bank (ECB) rate cut—a move that materialized on Thursday. U.S. Treasury 10-year yields hovered around 4.29%, with swap markets increasingly factoring in a Fed rate cut beginning in November and another likely in December. Conversely, yields on 10-year German bunds climbed by four basis points as the ECB lifted its inflation projections, and policymakers largely dismissed the possibility of an additional cut in July. ECB President Christine Lagarde emphasized that despite a significantly brighter inflation outlook, the central bank intends to maintain "sufficiently restrictive" policy rates for as long as necessary.
In Asia, over half of the analysts tracking the Bank of Japan expect a reduction in the central bank's government bond purchases at the upcoming meeting, with an increasing contingent also predicting a potential interest rate increase come July.
Macro:
Macro events: CBR Announcement, RBI Announcement, German Industrial Production (Apr), EZ GDP Revised (Q1), US Jobs Report (May), Canadian Jobs Report (May), Chinese Trade Balance (May).
Earnings: Graham, J.Jill
News:
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