Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Chief Investment Officer
Summary: Markets are soft overnight after a choppy last-day-of-the-quarter session yesterday that failed to take out key resistance levels. The USD traded softer after the Fed announced yet another initiative yesterday, this time a repo facility with foreign central banks allowing them to swap treasuries for US dollars. We continue to watch the USD and risk sentiment as a new calendar quarter unfolds.
The broader US market never took out the key local resistance we have been eyeing – 2641 in the S&P 500 index, despite the purportedly enormous quarter-end flows. We watch for market direction now as a new quarter unfolds as well as whether the Fed has done enough with its latest facility to slay the “killer dollar”.
What is our trading focus?
What is going on?
The US Federal Reserve announce a new facility called FIMA that allows central banks and monetary authorities globally to repo their treasury holdings for short-term US dollar loans. The facility is clearly aimed at preventing a fire sale of treasuries globally (which the Fed would have to buy anyway) to raise dollars for other funding needs.
US March Consumer Confidence fell to 120 from 130 in February, a number that looks suspiciously high and slow to absorb the impact of the Covid19 crisis and widespread job losses, as this indicator usually correlates closely with job market prospects.
Covid-19 – US President Trump projected up to 240,000 deaths in the US from the Covid19 outbreak and said the next two weeks would be very tough.
The FT reports that the weaker EM economies around the world are in dire shape and 85 of them have appealed to the IMF and World Bank for help. Smaller oil producers and commodity exporters are especially hard hit. Zambia yesterday sought advice from advisers as it needs to restructure some $11 billion in foreign obligations.
What we are watching next?
Nasdaq 100 as a high beta index – as noted above, the Nasdaq gunned for new local highs yesterday and was turned back sharply by the market close, while the broader market has languished in relative terms – especially small caps.
EU existential crisis or not – the first round of floating the idea of coronabonds was firmly rejected by a number of countries, most vocally by the Netherlands’ leader Mark Rutte. But two of the parties in the government coalition in the Netherlands have come out strongly against his stance and in favour of the bonds to support southern Europe’s struggle. The EU needs to attack this crisis with full solidarity and some form of mutualization, whatever the approach, and the clock is ticking loudly.
US ADP Payrolls Change – this is a private survey that is released today, two days before the Friday Nonfarm Payrolls Change. Will be interesting to note the size of the drop ahead of tomorrow’s weekly initial jobless claims and the data Friday. Bloomberg expectations are at
Path to the other side of Covid-19 – this remains the medium term key.
Calendar today (times GMT)
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