Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Chief Investment Strategist
The first round of elections in France has come to an end, and Marine Le Pen’s far-right party dominated with about 34% of the vote, although an absolutely majority was not seen. The left-wing coalition is set to get about 29% while Macron-centrist alliance is just clawing over 20% of the votes.
Markets were relieved that the victory for Le Pen’s far-right party was not as decisive, and some of the risk premium attached to Eurozone assets over the last few weeks was erased. EuroStoxx futures jumped higher and EURUSD rose back to 1.0750, while bond futures indicated that French-German spread could tighten.
However, political risks are not completely out of the radar. President Emmanuel Macron called for a "broad" alliance against the far-right in the second round, which will see run-off votes where there was no outright winner in the first round. Intense horse-trading will take the focus over the next week, and any signs of progress on Macron’s coalition could bolster the relief rally in Eurozone assets. Still, volatility is likely with electoral calculus likely to remain complicated and any recovery will likely be fragile this week before the second round of elections takes place on July 7.
While political uncertainty poses risks, it can also offer strategic entry points for long-term investors. To read more, go to our previous article on France Election Turmoil: European Equities Amidst the Upheaval.
The official US labour market figure on employment is published on Friday with estimates looking for a monthly change in June of 190k compared to 272k in May which was a significant upside surprise.
Monthly NFP data has remained prone to substantial downward revisions, and elsewhere, data is showing cracks are beginning to form in the US labor market. JOLTS job openings due on Tuesday will shed further light on that narrative and jobless claims on Friday are also key.
Even with headline NFP job gains at 190k, that would be a slowdown from the last 3-month average of ~250k. Fed will also be focusing on the wage growth, which needs to slow to make disinflation trends more sustainable, and the unemployment rate which is up at 4%. Any dovish surprise will prompt markets to bring up the odds of a September Fed rate cut, proving to be potentially positive for risk assets (or equities) and negative for the US dollar.
The July 4 UK elections is tilting in favor of a likely Labour majority, after a 14-year Conservative rule characterized by Brexit and the cost-of-living crisis. With limited fiscal space, Labour is expected to focus on supply-side reforms and cautious fiscal policies, likely promoting long-term economic growth and stability. Markets remain complacent with policy stability remaining the base case. UK assets have also attracted some safe-haven flows amid the election risks elsewhere in the US and Europe. This may raise the risk of a ‘buy the rumour, sell the fact’ reaction in GBP, especially if the Labour beat is less resounding than expected. To read more, go to our previous article on UK elections.
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