Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Chief Investment Officer
Summary: Yesterday saw a strong surge in risk appetite that took the major US indices higher. Some of the most beaten down stocks during the recent bear market were the biggest gainers, suggesting a short squeeze or a more hopeful stance on the course of the Covid19 pandemic, depending on the narrative. The Asian session was a bit more cautious. Elsewhere, gold is on the move and close to the cycle highs and today is an important day for the EU with a Eurogroup meeting on tap.
What is our trading focus?
What is going on?
UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson admitted to ICU – the UK prime minister’s conditions has worsened and he is receiving oxygen and has been admitted to the ICU in the event he needs access to a ventilator. Foreign secretary Dominic Raab will deputize for the Prime Minister for now.
Japan has announced a JPY 108 trillion stimulus package – nearly 20% of GDP, a move of stunning magnitude relative to what we have seen elsewhere as Japan pulls out all of the stops. The JPY seems unflustered by the implications for Japan’s total debt load from this package and the JPY was firm overnight.
What we are watching next?
Today’s Eurogroup meeting – this week could prove one of the most critical weeks in EU history after the disastrous summit meeting the week before last produced bitter disagreement on “coronabonds” (bonds issued on the EU level that all EMU members would be mutually liable for repaying) and southern EU countries refusing to sign the communique. A Eurogroup meeting of EU finance ministers today with press conference to follow at 20:00 CET is the next crucial meeting for establishing whether we continue to risk an existential political EU crisis on lack of a more forceful fiscal commitment across the EU, even if the ECB can technically keep conditions in sovereign bond markets across the EU orderly.
Risk-on status? – the US indices crossed very important levels yesterday, but the Asian session was a bit of a fizzle overnight after an enthusiastic start to the session. The status of this rally and whether it is merely a brief short squeeze very important for establishing the market’s state of play here.
Oil prices – oil remains a critical factor as low oil prices and reduced demand vastly reduce the dollar volume of global trade, meaning tighter USD funding conditions for global markets, and heighten the risk of corporate and even sovereign defaults, as well as straining the long term credibility of the USD pegs in major Middle East oil producers.
The unfolding shape of the Covid19 crisis and perhaps more importantly, the shape of the recovery. Is the market getting ahead of itself in celebrating the pending peak in Covid19 numbers in the major DM economies in aggregate? Denmark is one of the first EU countries to announce an “opening up” plan, with the first steps only aimed at opening schools for the youngest classes through fifth grade and no further major measures until at least May 10. This points to the very slow pace of normalization.
Calendar today (times GMT)
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