Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
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The Saxo Quick Take is a short, distilled opinion on financial markets with references to key news and events.
In the news:
Macro:
Macro events: Swiss Unemployment (Aug), German Industrial Orders (Jul), EZ/UK Construction PMIs (Aug), EZ Retail Sales (Jul), US Challenger Layoffs (Aug), ADP (Aug), Initial Jobless Claims (w/e 31st Aug), ISM Services PMI (Aug), Final Composite/Services PMIs (Aug)
Earnings: NIO, FuelCell, SAIC, Broadcom, UIPath, DocuSign
Equities: US stocks ended mixed on Wednesday following their worst day since early August in the previous session. The S&P 500 dipped by 0.1%, the tech-heavy Nasdaq 100 dropped 0.3%, while the Dow Jones gained 37 points. Investors were assessing the JOLTS report, which showed a decline in July job openings, leading to a fall in bond yields and increasing speculation that the Federal Reserve might implement a 50 basis point interest rate cut in September. Energy stocks were among the biggest decliners, with Exxon Mobil and Chevron falling 1.2% and 1.7%, respectively. Tech stocks also underperformed, with Nvidia dropping 1.6% due to AI concerns, and Intel losing 3.3% after reports of failed silicon wafer tests by Broadcom. Conversely, GitLab surged 21.6% after raising its fiscal 2025 sales outlook to $742-$744 million, exceeding the prior estimate of $733-$737 million.
Fixed income: Treasury futures surged, driven by softer-than-expected July JOLTS job openings and sustained US afternoon trading momentum. Swaps priced in additional Fed easing, steepening the yield curve and briefly disinverting the 2s10s spread. Front-end yields had dropped 10 basis points, while long-end yields were richer by around 6 basis points. This steepened the 2s10s and 5s30s spreads by about 3 and 2 basis points, respectively. The 10-year yield ended at 3.76%, its lowest since August 21. Options tied to the Secured Overnight Financing Rate saw a surge in open interest for call contracts expiring on September 13. The Bank of Canada cut rates by 25 basis points, slightly reducing gains for Canadian bonds; the impact on Treasuries was limited. Over $43 billion of new high-grade bonds were sold, the third-busiest day on record. Spreads on most tightened in the secondary market on Wednesday, with Mastercard Inc.’s $3 billion deal trading 11 basis points tighter. An additional $29 billion of investment-grade notes were priced on Wednesday.
Commodities: Oil prices exhibited significant volatility, with Brent Crude futures closing at $72.70 per barrel, a decline of 1.42%, and WTI U.S. crude oil futures settling at $69.20 per barrel, down 1.62%. This movement comes amid increasing pessimism about future demand, as crude producers provided mixed signals regarding potential supply increases. Both benchmarks initially dropped by $1 before rebounding to gain $1 from Tuesday’s closing prices, following reports that OPEC+ was considering delaying a potential output increase due to anticipated rises in Libyan production. However, they eventually succumbed to selling pressure in the afternoon. Notably, Brent crude futures have plummeted by as much as 11%, or approximately $9, in just over a week. Meanwhile, gold prices edged up by 0.11% to $2,495, and silver increased by 0.81% to $28.27 on a relatively quiet day, as markets await key jobs data.
FX: With risk aversion remaining in play, it was another positive day for Japanese yen. The currency rose 1.2% against the US dollar, and 1% against the Kiwi dollar and Australian dollar each. Gains of another 1.9% also came against the Mexican peso. We wrote about the yen in the FX note yesterday and discussed how it might stand to benefit both from haven flows and risks of carry unwind ahead of the key US jobs data on Friday. Safe-haven Swiss franc was also higher which activity currencies like Australian dollar and kiwi dollar, and the British pound, lagged in the G10 FX leaderboard as markets are starting to worry about risks of a hard landing. Despite a softer US dollar, the euro has not moved above 1.10 and the Canadian dollar hold above 1.35 as the Bank of Canada cut rates for a third time.
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