Rates Volatility: Navigating the Goldilocks Environment for Risk Appetite and Eurozone Inflation Expectations - 06.06.2023

Eurozone consumer inflation expectations will be the main data point to look out for today. Markets have become numb to central banks’ hawkish comments. Low rates volatility looks set to continue, benefitting risk appetite in other markets.
The Saudi oil production cut and calm market conditions paving the way to another flurry of debt issuance are the two most salient bearish risks for core government bonds this week. That said, the Fed went into its pre-meeting quiet period with the probability of a 25bp hike on 14 June well below 50%, and we think there is little the European Central Bank (ECB) can say to really cause a hawkish rethink of its rates trajectory. We take as evidence the lack of market reaction to various officials – including Christine Lagarde and Joachim Nagel – stating that inflation remains too high. The main reasons, we think, are that markets are already pricing two 25bp ECB hikes by the end of the summer and that central banks have been explicit that economic data will determine the path for monetary policy.
We see this as a recipe for rates to remain within their range. Core bonds erased their early sell-off in the US session yesterday thanks to signs of a cooling service sector displayed in the ISM services reading. Is this enough to change the prevailing narrative? It isn’t, but Treasuries went into the release very close to the top of their recent range in yields which we suspect made short-term investors all the more enthusiastic about buying the morning dip. The same cannot be said of Bund yields, which started the week close to the bottom of their range, making them less appealing to range traders.
This state of play, high dollar and low euro rates, happens to contradict our expectation of narrowing rates differentials and we expect this dynamic to reverse. In the short term because the lack of market direction should limit further US Treasury sell-off and further Bund rallies, and later because tangible signs of a decline in core inflation occurring in the US are so far lacking in Europe. This should allow a fall in USD rates later this year, even as their EUR peers remain elevated for a while longer.
The implication for markets outside of rates is positive. After a year of being tormented by the relentless rise in borrowing costs in 2022, few investors are sorry to see yields lacking in direction. Realised and implied volatility remain high compared to their 2021 levels, but well below their late 2022 peak. Until rates make a decisive break lower on a dovish pivot by central banks, current levels of volatility can be thought of as the new normal. This stabilisation has been enough to boost risk appetite in other markets. Whether lower rates volatility is the cause or another symptom of lower macro uncertainty, it has come with valuations in some risk assets that belie recession calls.
Sovereign spreads, much like some measures of swaption implied volatility, are approaching their lowest levels in a year
This is visible in many corners of financial markets. Eurozone sovereign spreads, much like some measures of swaption implied volatility, are approaching their lowest levels in a year. Similarly, although the factors may also include money market dynamics, swap spreads are shedding their risk premium acquired during the latest bout of US regional banking stress. At the front-end of the curve, the credit premium received by investors is painting an upbeat picture. We will stop short of extrapolating this to other markets, but a continuation of the current rates volatility status quo seems to suit most markets.
The release most likely to move euro markets today is the ECB’s consumer expectations survey and more specifically the questions on their inflation outlook. Eurozone retail sales are expected to edge modestly up after their slump in March. There will also be construction PMIs to look out for from Germany and the UK.
Bond supply takes the form of a 30Y gilt sale from the UK, to which Germany and Austria will add respectively 10Y/23Y linker and 10Y/13Y bond auctions. The EU has also mandated banks for the sale of 7Y and 19Y debt via syndication.
Klass Knot, Mario Centeno, and Boris Vujcic are on the list of ECB speakers for today.
Weak factory orders in Germany released this morning add to the sense of anemic growth. We think this is more likely to result in an even more inverted yield curve in the near term rather than significantly lower rates overall as the ECB is laser-focused on its inflation fight.