CHINA: Bond Futures Sell off Resumes.

Mar-14 03:17
  • Following a two day respite – China’s bond futures resumed their sell off in morning trading receiving a boost from news of a press conference on boosting consumption will be held Monday. 
  • China’s 10YR bond future is lower by -0.24 at 107.41.
  • Following two days of rallying prices, the 10YR future had breached the 200-day EMA of 107.56 briefly, with today’s sell off taking it back through that level again.
  • China’s 2YR bond future is lower by -0.07 at 102.28.
  • The 2YR future has traded below all call technical levels since February end, with the 200-day EMA some distance away at 102.61.
  • Bonds are touch softer with the 10YR CGB at 1.84%, following last night's close of 1.83%.
  • The release of the New Yuan Loans data and Aggregate financing for February is set for release and will provide any insight into whether investor appetite is recovering, particularly in the housing market. 

Historical bullets

AUSTRIA: Price Data Signal Return To Band, Services Remain Sticky Though

Feb-12 03:12

The RBA decision is February 18 including updated staff forecasts and the AUD OIS market has around an 80% chance of a 25bp rate cut and as MNI discussed last week, the RBA rarely doesn’t ease if the market expects it to. In terms of the data, Q4 inflation was lower than the RBA’s November forecasts but they will be key as to whether it has gained more “confidence that inflation is moving sustainably towards target” and here the core services outcome may be a problem.

  • The RBA noted in the December minutes that “underlying inflation was still too high, underpinned by persistently high services price inflation”. Core services rose 1.1% q/q and 4.2% y/y in Q4 following 1.3% & 4.1%, signalling that they remain sticky as has been the case in other countries. December monthly services rose 3.7% y/y but down from 4.2%.
  • Thus the domestically-driven services will be an important input into the February RBA decision and may make the tone around any easing sound very cautious.
  • The S&P Global services PMI report for January is consistent with ongoing stickiness concerns. It noted that input costs increased sharply due to wages, AUD and higher supplier prices and as a result selling prices rose at their fastest in 6 months. 

Australia services CPI y/y%

Source: MNI - Market News/Refinitiv
  • January NAB business price/cost components were more neutral than the PMI but did signal a stalling in their moderation.
  • Melbourne Institute inflation expectations and gauge for January are consistent with inflation returning to target.
  • Our PCA CPI estimate, removes volatile components, eased 0.1pp to 2.7% in Q4, approaching the band mid-point.
  • The AUD TWI is up 0.3% m/m in February to be down 1.6% y/y and with Q4 import prices rising only 0.2% q/q and still down 1.9% y/y, the currency is unlikely to be a concern. It is worth noting though that a 17.7% y/y drop in imported petrol prices has kept imported inflation subdued.

Australia monthly trimmed mean inflation y/y%

Source: MNI - Market News/Refinitiv/ABS

STIR: RBA Dated OIS Pricing No Longer Uniformly Softer Than Pre-Q4 CPI Levels

Feb-12 02:27

RBA-dated OIS pricing is 1–5bps firmer across meetings today, led by late 2025 contracts. 

  • More notably, OIS pricing is now mixed compared to pre-Q4 CPI levels on 24 January, with the Aug-25 meeting firming by 10bps over the past week.
  • A 25bp rate cut in April remains fully priced (119%), while the probability of a February cut stands at 84% (based on an effective cash rate of 4.34%).
  • Historically, it would be highly unusual for the RBA to diverge from market expectations, especially given its lack of official or unofficial efforts to push back against pricing—something it has actively done in the past.

 

Figure 1: RBA-Dated OIS – Today Vs. Pre-Q4 CPI

 

image


Source: MNI – Market News / Bloomberg

ASIA STOCKS: Asian Equities Mostly Higher, HK Tech Outperforming

Feb-12 02:27
  • Japanese equities returned from a holiday with a mixed session. The Nikkei gained 0.4% supported by a weaker yen aiding exporters, while the Topix is down 0.10%. Toyota declined 1.8%, dragging on broader sentiment. Investors are shifting from AI-heavy semiconductor stocks toward electronic components and machinery.
  • China/Hong Kong are higher today with the HSI up 1.65% as Alibaba surged 5.8% on reports of an Apple partnership for AI in China, the HS Tech Index is +2%. Optimism around DeepSeek’s AI innovation also bolstered sentiment, with UBS strategists saying the rally may be “less than halfway” done. However, MSCI cut 20 Chinese stocks from its indices, extending a trend of lower global exposure, this seems to have weighed on mainland equities with the CSI 300 up just 0.15%.
  • South Korean equities are trading 0.20% higher today however both major tech stocks (Samsung, -0.50% & SK Hynix, -0.20%) struggle. Taiwan's TAIEX is 0.40% higher.
  • Australian equities opened lower, however have since erased losses as CBA reported first-half earnings in line with analyst estimates, but warned of economic headwinds as growth slows. Despite initial weakness, shares rebounded as much as 1.4% to a record high. The ASX 200 is trading 0.30% higher, New Zealand equities are unchanged.
  • Indian equities have struggled recently with the Nifty 50 down about 3% over hte past week as continued selling from foreign investors hurts sentiment. The rupee rallied sharply, its biggest gain in two years, on suspected central bank intervention, reversing recent record lows.