Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
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: French Prelim CPI (Aug), EZ Flash CPI (Aug), Italian Flash CPI (Aug), US PCE (Jul), US University of Michigan Final (Aug)
Earnings: Frontline, JinkoSolar, MiniSo
Equities: S&P 500 and Nasdaq remained mostly unchanged, while the Dow Jones hit a new record high, rising over 200 points. Investors were evaluating recent economic reports and Nvidia's results. Although Nvidia's quarterly profit and revenue guidance were better than expected, they didn't meet the high expectations, causing its shares to drop by 6%. Meanwhile, the US GDP growth for Q2 was revised up to 3% from 2.8%, and personal spending, a key economic driver, increased by 2.9%, higher than the earlier estimate of 2.3%. Additionally, initial jobless claims fell by 2,000 to 231,000 from the previous week. Corporate earnings also affected the market, with Salesforce, Best Buy, and Affirm shares performing well on strong results, while Dollar General fell by 30% after lowering its full-year outlook due to weaker sales.
Fixed income: Treasuries fell due to unexpected upward revisions in US 2Q GDP components. Treasury futures hit their lowest levels of the day, with losses persisting after a weak 7-year note auction. Treasury yields rose by 3 to 3.5 basis points, with the US 10-year yields closing around 3.87%, underperforming German bunds. The 7-year note auction tailed the WI by 0.9 basis points, with primary dealer awards at 13.7% and direct awards at 11.2%, the lowest since March 2020. In August, the US money-market fund industry attracted $127 billion, the largest monthly inflow of the year, as investors sought high yields ahead of expected Federal Reserve rate cuts. Total assets reached a record $6.26 trillion. US bonds are set for their best performance in three years as traders anticipate Federal Reserve rate cuts. Treasuries have returned 1.7% this month through August 28, marking a fourth consecutive monthly gain and a year-to-date rise of 3%, according to the Bloomberg US Treasury Total Return Index.
Commodities: Oil prices held steady after Thursday's surge, driven by positive US economic data and worsening supply disruptions in Libya. West Texas Intermediate traded below $76 a barrel after a 1.9% gain, while Brent crude closed near $80. Despite this, oil is on track for a second consecutive monthly loss due to weak demand in China and potential OPEC+ supply restoration. Gold remained near a record high at around $2,520 an ounce as traders awaited a US inflation report that could influence Federal Reserve rate cuts. Lower borrowing costs typically benefit gold. Aluminum continued its decline from a two-month high due to concerns about China’s demand recovery. Since Tuesday's close, aluminum has fallen by about 3%, trimming its strong monthly gain. The spot three-month spread on the London Metal Exchange was $27 a ton.
FX: The strength in US data overnight, coming from GDP and jobless claims, fueled gains in the US dollar as expectations about a 50 basis points rate cut in September were questioned. Still, market pricing has not changed a lot and August jobs data is awaited. Swiss franc weakened the most among the major currencies, although the Japanese yen pared some of its weakness. The euro was on the backfoot, falling back below 1.11 against the US dollar and testing 0.84 against the British pound as weaker German inflation data supported the case for an ECB rate cut in September. Commodity currencies, meanwhile, erased their earlier strength as equities came under pressure.
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