Rate cut expectations have all but disappeared from the dollar curve for 2023. Similarly, the euro curve doesn’t price a first cut before the first or even second quarter of next year. In our view, this counts as a communication success for central banks, and it reduces the mis-pricing (in their view) that they can push back against.
The conclusion from this is that barring yet another central bank communication change, say Powell wanting more explicitly the curve to price two more hikes this year rather than one, any re-pricing higher in rates will be to be driven by the data.
Similarly from the ECB, we do not get the feeling that the debate over a potential September hike is settled. Data to be released by the end of the summer, and another update to the Bank's forecast will be key, data-dependence in short.
Of course one might simply disagree that current market rates accurately reflect the data. One such example is the very inverted state of the US yield curve when one compares 10Y Treasury yields, below 4%, to policy rates, above 5%. Inversion can persist if the market’s conviction is high that rates will be cut aggressively in the future. In the case of the Fed, but it is also true of the ECB, upbeat central bank economic forecasts explain their hawkish tone, while dimmer predictions from investors justify lower longer-dated yields.
All this shouldn't prevent another sell off on long-dated bonds, for instance to 4% for 10Y Treasuries if the economic outlook improves, but it should all but ensure that another rise in yields will bring a more inverted curve until rates cuts are much closer in time.
Economic data today consists mainly of the European construction output and US housing data, in the form of housing starts and building permits. The US session will also see the release of the Philadelphia non-manufacturing index.
There will be front-end bond supply from Europe, namely a 2Y auction from Germany, and a new 5Y launch from the UK.
In this relatively thin economic and supply calendar, central bank comments will be in focus. They include, among other, VP Luis De Guindos from the ECB and John Williams of the Fed. We argue above that with the recent flurry of central bank meetings, it is unlikely that market rates are too far away from where bankers would like to see them.