AUSSIE BONDS: AOFM Weekly Issuance Slate

May-13 02:04

The AOFM has released its weekly issuance slate:

  • On Wednesday 18 May it plans to sell A$800mn of the 1.75% 21 November 2032 Bond.
  • On Thursday 19 May it plans to sell A$1.0bn of the 12 August 2022 Note & A$500mn of the 26 August 2022 note.
  • On Friday 20 May it plans to sell A$700mn of the 4.75% 21 April 2027 Bond.

Historical bullets

CNH: Offshore Yuan Treads Water, Trade Data Eyed

Apr-13 01:54

Spot USD/CNH trades at CNH6.3768, virtually unchanged after a brief uptick. A break above yesterday's high of CNH6.3900 would allow bulls to take aim at Mar 28 high of CNH6.3983. On the downside, initial focus falls on CNH6.3588-81, which limited losses on Apr 6--8. A move through these levels would open up Mar 31 low of CNH6.3452.

  • Caixin reported, citing a document from the State Council, that China is starting pilot programs in eight cities including Shanghai and Guangzhou to test looser quarantine requirements.
  • The PBOC set the yuan reference rate at CNY6.3752, just 5 pips above the average sell-side estimate.
  • China's monthly trade data will hit the wires today (there is no fixed time of the release), with new home prices coming up on Friday.

AUSSIE BONDS: Back From Best Levels

Apr-13 01:17

The previously flagged weakness in U.S. Tsys has managed to drag the Aussie bond space away from early Sydney levels, with bull steepening still in place, albeit with less aggressive outright richening. That leaves YM +6.0 & XM +2.5, with Aussie 10s ~5bp wider vs. their U.S. counterpart, as the 10-Year yield differential moves back above +30bp, given the U.S. CPI-driven nature of Tuesday’s post-Sydney gyrations. EFPs are a touch wider, with the 3-/10-Year box seeing some modest steepening. Bills are flat to 9 ticks higher through the reds, bull flattening, albeit back from best levels as bonds pullback.

  • The latest Westpac consumer confidence reading slid to levels not observed since late ’20, building on the heavy slide seen in Feb, with the survey noting that “at that time concerns around interest rates and inflation were starting to weigh on confidence. These were compounded by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, an associated spike in petrol prices, and severe weather events.” A look deeper into the details revealed a split between the outlook of those that are more/less indebted, with Westpac flagging that “confidence amongst respondents with a mortgage fell by 9.2% in April amid concerns that the Reserve Bank will be raising the cash rate earlier than previously expected and at a faster pace. Responses to a separate question on mortgage rate expectations show that 70% of consumers expect rates to rise in the next 12 months, up from 67% last month. However, there has been a notable lift in the proportion of consumers expecting rates to increase by more than 1ppt, from 30% in March to 36% in April. Notably, the prospect of interest rate rises may have buoyed sentiment across some sub-groups that stand to benefit. Confidence posted significant gains amongst those aged over 65 (+7%) and amongst freehold homeowners (+5.5%). These are segments without large mortgage debts that are also more likely to depend on interest incomes.”
  • Focus remains squarely on cross-market spill over, with the latest RBNZ decision due in ~45 mins time.

BOJ: BoJ Makes Rinban Purchase Offers

Apr-13 01:11

BoJ offers to buy a total Y1.025tn of JGBs from the market:

  • Y475bn worth of JGBs with 1-3 Years until maturity
  • Y500bn worth of JGBs with 5-10 Years until maturity
  • Y50bn worth of JGBs with 25+-Years until maturity