BONDS: 10-year Gilt/Bund Narrows Following UK Jobs Data, Curves Bull Flatten

Feb-17 10:20

The 10-year Gilt/Bund spread has narrowed 2bps to 162.5bps, with UK paper outperforming German counterparts following this morning’s UK labour market data. Although wage pressures were broadly in line with consensus, the quantities side of the labour market continues to soften. 

  • 10-year Gilt yields are now down 4bps today at 4.359%, having pierced trendline support drawn from the November 2022 lows. Next support is the Jan 14 low at 4.336%
  • Bund yields are down 2.2bps to 2.73%, taking cues from overnight moves in USTs and JGBs rather than any regional driver. The February German ZEW survey saw a weaker than expected expectations component (58.3 vs 65.2 cons, 59.6 prior), but this wasn’t a market mover.
  • Both the UK and German curves have bull flattened on the session.
  • In futures, Gilts are +38 ticks at 92.30. Initial resistance is the Jan 19 high at 92.51. Bund futures are +19 ticks at 129.39, with key resistance noted at the Nov 26 high of 129.55.
  • 10-year EGB spreads to Bunds are within 0.5bps of yesterday’s closing levels. No material underperformance in RAGBs on reports that Austria is set to activate its National Escape Clause for defence spending.
  • The UK is holding two tenders today, while Germany and Finland are holding conventional auctions in the EGB space.  Croatia is holding a syndication for a new 10-year benchmark.

Historical bullets

US LABOR MARKET: Macro Since Last FOMC: No Sign Of Alarm In Jobless Claims [3/3]

Jan-16 21:25
  • Away from the top tier BLS labor releases, weekly jobless claims have been of note in recent weeks as initial claims have consistently pushed lower.
  • There are concerns over residual seasonality here, which could start to see increases heading into February, but levels are nevertheless particularly low with a four-week average at its lowest since Jan 2024.
  • Continuing claims have also held their pulling back from cycle highs seen throughout June-October, suggesting that re-hiring conditions may have cooled when looking at a long-term trend but that conditions have at least improved compared to the summer and fall.
  • These claims data clearly point to a labor market in an unusual low fire, low hire state, which appears to give some on the FOMC more concern than others. 
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US LABOR MARKET: Macro Since Last FOMC: U/E Rate Lower, Hits Median Fcast [2/3]

Jan-16 21:20
  • Looking to the household survey for a better sense of labor market balance, the unemployment rate stood at 4.38% in December to placate fears of further deterioration.
  • It more than unwound a push higher to 4.54% in November (revised from 4.56% first reported before annual seasonal adjustment revisions) having been 4.44% in September (unrevised) in the latest update prior to the December FOMC meeting.
  • NY Fed Williams had estimated after the delayed release of the November report that it might have been overstated by 0.1pp and Fed Chair Powell had specifically warned of its potential technical distortions ahead of time.
  • We’re left with an average unemployment rate of 4.47% in Q4 (using an interpolated value for Oct with no household survey conducted) to match the 4.5% the median FOMC participant forecast in the Dec SEP.
  • In doing so, it importantly ruled out a further increase to 4.6-4.7% that seven members had pencilled for what’s an increasingly divided committee. Nevertheless, there has been a clear uptrend in the second half of the year having averaged 4.15% in 1H25.
  • Data quality concerns are still elevated though, particularly with the household survey response rate barely increasing from November’s record low.
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US LABOR MARKET: Macro Since Last FOMC: Payrolls Slowly Rise After Oct Hit [1/3]

Jan-16 21:15

We take an early look at what economic data the FOMC has received since the Dec 9-10 meeting, starting with the labor data where it's had a huge amount to assess along with various distortions to consider. 

  • Having received three months of data within two BLS nonfarm payrolls reports, the FOMC is left with two latest months of subdued but at least resilient nonfarm payrolls growth of 50k/56k in Dec/Nov. That’s right around estimates of the recent breakeven pace such as the St Louis Fed’s range of 30-80k.
  • It does however follow a hugely weak -173k in October, on DOGE-driven federal government deferred resignations showing up with a -174k hit but with the private sector exhibiting weakness as well in October with just a 1k increase.
  • For a better sense of underlying jobs growth, private payrolls increased an average 29k over three months to December but strip out the ever-large contribution from the cyclically insensitive health & social assistance sector and private payrolls would have averaged -19k, with only one of the past eight months seeing net job creation.
  • We suspect colder than usual weather had a modestly adverse impact on the December data, with the 37k private sector jobs growth potentially understated specifically on that front, but it’s unlikely a big needle mover and an impact that is likely dominated by regular revisions as more data comes in.
  • Whilst broadly expected, recall that annual benchmark revisions, due with the January report to be released in February, are also set to show significant downtrend revisions to payrolls, such that payrolls growth is perhaps overstated by about 60k per month. 
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