Quarterly Outlook
Fixed Income Outlook: Bonds Hit Reset. A New Equilibrium Emerges
Althea Spinozzi
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Head of Fixed Income Strategy
Summary: Long-term yields are poised to rise further amid hawkish central banks, quantitative tightening, and the BOJ looking to exit the yield curve control. We expect 10-year Bund yields to test March highs at 2.76% in the upcoming weeks despite Germany being in a recession. At the same time, the German yield curve is likely to bull-steepen as investors position in the front end amid expectations of the hiking cycle to end. Within this context, short-term sovereigns offer a win-win solution. An investor buying 2-year Schatz today at 3.15% would still be in the green if rates were to rise by another 300bps throughout the next year, offering a decade-high yield and flexibility amid an uncertain environment.
With the ECB due to downgrade growth projections for this year and the next and increasing inflation forecasts for 2024, the case of stagflation becomes clearer. The big question is whether the ECB will continue to hike despite a recession in Germany and the Netherlands. Since the most prominent hawks come from these countries, a hawkish pause at this week's ECB rate decision makes political sense. Indeed, the ECB can enforce other tightening measures, such as ending reinvestments under the PEPP, without spooking markets.
The closer we get to the end of the hiking cycle, the more investors will position for the yield curve to bull-steepen. Therefore, in case of a pause, despite Lagarde maintaining a hawkish tone, yields will likely drop across maturities, particularly in the front end of the yield curve.
Yet, we do not expect the rally to last for long because selling pressure in the long part of the yield curve remains:
Hence, we expect Bund yields to continue to rise to test resistance at 2.76%.