STIR: Around 50bp Of BoE Cuts Priced Through Year-End

May-13 06:48

Modest dovish moves in GBP STIRs after the open.

  • The quantity side of the labour market report broadly met expectations, although our macro team highlights that the downside surprise in the private regular AWE metrics was notable, undershooting the BoE’s forecast by 0.21ppt.
  • A move away from overnight lows in Bunds also helps prevent an extension of the recent hawkish moves at this stage.
  • BoE-dated OIS showing 3bp of cuts for June, 21bp through August, 29bp through September, 44bp through November and 49bp through December. Contracts through year-end are 0.5-2.5bp more dovish vs. closing levels.
  • December meeting implied rate pricing is ~30bp off the dovish extreme seen in late April.
  • SONIA futures little changed to +1.5.
  • Comments from BoE Governor Bailey and hawkish dissenter Pill are due today.
  • We will be watching to see if Pill repeats a line from the Agents’ briefing, which noted that if there are external shocks the pace of cuts could be adjusted. However, the setting and topic of the event may mean that Pill doesn’t touch on monetary policy/no headlines are seen (the speech will be at the London School of Economics conference in honour of Sushil Wadhwani).
  • U.S. CPI data and broader tariff headlines are eyed on the macro front.

BoE Meeting

SONIA BoE-Dated OIS (%)

Difference vs. Current Effective SONIA Rate (bp)

Jun-25

4.184

-2.6

Aug-25

4.000

-21.0

Sep-25

3.921

-28.9

Nov-25

3.774

-43.7

Dec-25

3.721

-49.0

Feb-26

3.646

-56.4

Mar-26

3.634

-57.7

Historical bullets

MACRO OUTLOOK: The US Macro Week Ahead: Powell And Retail Sales

Apr-11 21:13

Looking ahead to next week:

  • Two of the Fed's most senior leaders speak on the economic outlook in the coming week: Gov Waller on Monday and Chair Powell on Wednesday. This will be the first commentary by both since the April 9 Trump administration announced a reciprocal tariff "pause" with a large hike in the Chinese levy, and associated bond / swap market turmoil.
  • It's doubtful Powell will shift his approach on monetary policy versus his April 4 appearance when he said "it feels like we don't need to be in a hurry" to cut rates, but there will be attention paid to whether his tone reflects those of other Fed officials who have sounded increasingly cautious about the upside risks to inflation and downside risks to growth. Additionally, any discussion of how the Fed views volatility in Treasury markets by Waller or Powell will be closely eyed.
  • March retail sales (Wednesday) is the week’s key data release: it’s expected to show a large sequential acceleration (1.4% M/M consensus vs 0.2% in Feb), with growth in the key Control Group reading remaining strong at 0.7% (1.0% prior). Should these expectations be met, it will add to the tension between solid incoming data and weaker sentiment indicators – and ultimately will be assessed for whether it represents tariff front-running more than continued strength in consumer demand.
  • Meanwhile, the NY Fed’s consumer expectations survey will be watched for any corroboration of the soaring inflation concerns evident in recent UMichigan reports.
DateETImpactEvent
14 Apr1100**NY Fed Survey of Consumer Expectations
14 Apr1130*US Treasury Auction Result for 26 Week Bill
14 Apr1130*US Treasury Auction Result for 13 Week Bill
14 Apr1300 Fed Governor Christopher Waller
14 Apr1800 Philly Fed's Pat Harker
14 Apr1940 Atlanta Fed's Raphael Bostic
15 Apr0830**Import/Export Price Index
15 Apr0830**Empire State Manufacturing Survey
15 Apr0855**Redbook Retail Sales Index
15 Apr1130**US Treasury Auction Result for 52 Week Bill
15 Apr1910 Fed Governor Lisa Cook
16 Apr0700**MBA Weekly Applications Index
16 Apr0830***Retail Sales
16 Apr0915***Industrial Production
16 Apr1000*Business Inventories
16 Apr1000**NAHB Home Builder Index
16 Apr1030**DOE Weekly Crude Oil Stocks
16 Apr1200 Cleveland Fed's Beth Hammack
16 Apr1300**US Treasury Auction Result for 20 Year Bond
16 Apr1330 Fed Chair Jerome Powell
16 Apr1600**TICS
16 Apr1900 Dallas Fed's Lorie Logan, KC Fed's Jeff Schmid
17 Apr0830***Jobless Claims
17 Apr0830**WASDE Weekly Import/Export
17 Apr0830***Housing Starts
17 Apr0830**Philadelphia Fed Manufacturing Index
17 Apr1030**Natural Gas Stocks
17 Apr1145 Fed Governor Michael Barr
17 Apr1300**US Treasury Auction Result for TIPS 5 Year Note
18 Apr1100 San Francisco Fed's Mary Daly
18 Apr1300**Baker Hughes Rig Count Overview - Weekly
18 Apr1300**Baker Hughes Rig Count Overview - Weekly

MACRO OUTLOOK: MNI US Macro Weekly: Here Comes The Hard Part

Apr-11 21:11

We've just released our weekly US Macro publication - click here for PDF

  • Tariff-driven volatility in policy, macro and markets continued this week, punctuated by President Trump’s surprise announcement of a 90-day pause on the reciprocal tariffs he announced on April 2, imposing a flat rate of 10% on most partners while simultaneously hiking tariffs on China to 145%.
  • The data in the week was something of a sideshow in comparison, but if anything it showed that prior to the tariff escalation, the economy was on track for something resembling a “soft landing”.
  • March's main CPI aggregates all surprised lower, with a notable below-expected supercore the lowest since Mar 2021, and producer prices likewise coming in soft.
  • And while Q1 GDP is still tracking to be weak (negative, per Atlanta Fed GDPNow), “hard” data continue to defy recessionary fears, including the latest weekly jobless claims.
  • But as March turns into April, these data points are becoming stale as we could see a sharp shift in both the hard and the soft data. The UMichigan April survey of consumers was stark in this regard, showing the weakest sentiment and highest inflation expectations in 4 decades.
  • Fed officials suggested that upside risks to inflation and downside risks to growth had increased versus their pre-tariff announcement assessments, arguing for a patient approach on rate cuts.
  • The market reaction to recent events and data has been notable: for the week, the S&P 500 rebounded sharply, long-end Treasury yields soared (10Y Tsys by the most in any week since 2001), and the dollar fell sharply. The implication is that foreign investors are beginning to shun US assets given tariff-related uncertainty, adding further complexity to the macro outlook.
  • Looking ahead to next week, March retail sales (Wednesday) is the key data release: it’s expected to show a large seque

US TSYS: Fed Holds Right Stance, Modestly Restrictive: NY Fed Williams

Apr-11 19:16
  • Treasuries look to finish weaker Friday, off late morning lows after the bell, curves bear flattening after posting steeper levels on the open.
  • Tsy Jun'25 10Y futures currently trade 109-24 (-27) -- after breaching a couple levels of support to mark a session low ofg 109-08, curves flatter/off early highs: 2s10s currently -2.061 at 53.192 (65.521 high), 5s30s -8.343 at 71.171 (86.760 high). 10Y yield at 4.4797% +.0548 vs. 4.5864% high.
  • Treasury futures moving off lows after lower than expected PPI (prior up-revised slightly): PPI readthrough for core PCE looked fairly neutral on net vs expectations - core PCE will likely come in slightly higher than core CPI as expected but there won't be a huge margin (0.06% M/M core CPI vs ~0.11% core PCE consensus pre-PPI, either way a pullback from 0.365% M/M core PCE in Feb)
  • Treasury futures holding near lows after lower than expected UofM sentiment & higher than anticipated inflation expectations. To put April's UMich consumer sentiment and inflation expectations into long-term perspective: we're back to the early 80s for 5-10Y inflation expectations (6.7%), but overall consumer sentiment is even worse now than it was then (around record lows at 47.2 in April).
  • Cross asset: Stocks hold moderate gains (SPX eminis 100.0 at 5401.0), Gold climbed to a new high of 3244.39, Bbg US$ index lower at 1234.71 (-11.55).