HomeContributorsFundamental Analysis10y Yield’s Technical Picture Risks Deteriorating Dramatically

10y Yield’s Technical Picture Risks Deteriorating Dramatically

Markets

Core bonds went through the roof yesterday. The US yield curve bull steepened with changes varying between -15.1 bps (5y) to -4.3 bps (30y). The 10y yield’s technical picture risks deteriorating dramatically if the drop below the lower bound of the sideways 2.70/3.50% trading range gets confirmed in coming days. German Bunds outperformed, losing a stunning 18.5-19.6 bps in the 2y/5y segment and 8.9y further out. That happened even as inflation in the country surprised to the upside (8.5% vs a decline to  8.1% expected). But markets were/are in a different state of mind since the Fed meeting. The focus was on a potential slowdown of the Fed tightening cycle, and this also affected expectations for the ECB even as it only just started normalizing. A bigger-than-expected drop in EC economic confidence to the lowest since early 2021 and especially in US GDP (-0.9%) only strengthened that market thinking. Needless to say rate moves yesterday were exclusively driven by the real yield component. This brought comfort to stock markets. Equities in Europe and the US added up to 1.2% despite facing a (or for the US: being in a technical) recession. US GDP numbers restored the balance in EUR/USD. The pair rebounded from intraday lows around 1.011 to close around 1.02. Revealing how this was dollar weakness and not euro strength was EUR/CHF, which closed at a new record low. The yen outperformed. USD/JPY dropped below 135 for the first time since end June. EUR/JPY loses no less than 2.5 big figures (136.9). Sterling did well, once again, both against USD and the euro. EUR/GBP extended a trip south of 0.84.

Currency markets trade a pattern similar to yesterday in Asian dealings this morning. The dollar, euro are weak, CHF and especially JPY gain the most. Equities rise except in Japan (yen strength) and China (Politburo gives a downbeat eco assessment). Futures point to a green open in Europe and the US thanks to solid big tech earnings. Core bonds extend a rally. Today’s economic calendar is focused on Europe with inflation for July and Q2 GDP numbers due. Risks are tilted to the upside for the former, we have a neutral bias on the latter. Also keep an eye at the US employment cost index. Powell referred to it as being an important indicator on Wednesday. Any downward surprise in the current environment could be considered as an enough reason for central banks to be less aggressive. That said, yields have declined materially already and are on the verge being out of touch with the actual central bank intentions, regardless of the growth slowdown, so we look out for/hope to see a bottom forming going into the weekend. We remain structurally cautious on EUR/USD. The dollar is rapidly losing interest rate support but in a context of recession fears, its safe haven status may soon resurface.

News Headlines

Economic data published in Japan this morning painted a mixed picture. Industrial output rebounded sharply in June by a much stronger than expected 8.9% M/M. Easing Covid restrictions in Shanghai reduced supply disruptions for several industries, including the automobile industry, electronics and communication equipment. June retail sales unexpectedly dropped 1.4% M/M causing Y/Y growth to slow to 1.5% from 3.7% Y/Y in May. Higher prices probably slowed consumer spending. In this respect, the July Tokyo CPI rose slightly faster than expected. Headline CPI came in at 2.5% Y/Y from 2.3% Y/Y in June. The core measure (ex fresh food and energy) accelerated from 1.0%Y/Y to 1.2%. The unemployment rate stabilized at 2.6%. The yen strengthens further this morning to USD/JPY 133.4, but this is mainly due to recessionary fears in the US and a sharp decline in US yields rather than the Japanese data.

According to sources spoken by Reuters, OPEC and its allies when meeting next week will consider keeping oil output unchanged in September. Some sources suggested that a modest increase also could be discussed. By August, OPEC+ will have reversed the production cuts that were installed since 2020 due to the pandemic. The debate on a stable OPEC production comes as President Biden at his latest visit to Saudi Arabia called on country to step up production to address high oil prices and their impact on global/US inflation. After a brief drop below $100 p/b earlier this month, Brent oil currently again trades near $ 108 p/b even as markets are pondering growing risks to global growth.

KBC Bank
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This non-exhaustive information is based on short-term forecasts for expected developments on the financial markets. KBC Bank cannot guarantee that these forecasts will materialize and cannot be held liable in any way for direct or consequential loss arising from any use of this document or its content. The document is not intended as personalized investment advice and does not constitute a recommendation to buy, sell or hold investments described herein. Although information has been obtained from and is based upon sources KBC believes to be reliable, KBC does not guarantee the accuracy of this information, which may be incomplete or condensed. All opinions and estimates constitute a KBC judgment as of the data of the report and are subject to change without notice.

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