US TSYS: Cash Open

May-29 00:07

TYM5 is trading 109-31, down 0-08 from its close.

  • The US 2-year yield opens around 4.027%, up 0.04 from its close.
  • The US 10-year yield opens around 4.503%, up 0.03 from its close
  • The overnight session featured a very solid 5Y Note auction, which saw a 0.4bp trade-through and a record-high takedown for 5s by indirect bidders (and one of the lowest-ever primary dealer takeups), helping yields consolidate into the close.
  • (Reuters) - A U.S. federal court on Wednesday blocked President Donald Trump's "Liberation Day" tariffs from going into effect, ruling that the president overstepped his authority by imposing across-the-board taxes on imports from nations that sell more to the United States than they buy."
  • The 10-year looks likely to see supply on any dips in yield in the short-term, should yields hold above 4.35/40% the target looks to be the 4.75/80% area. 
  • Data/Events: US GDP, Initial Jobless Claims, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee, Dallas Fed President Lorie Logan, Richmond Fed President Tom Barkin and San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly speak at separate events.

Historical bullets

AUSSIE BONDS: Flat, RBA Kent Speech Later, Q1 CPI Tomorrow

Apr-29 00:02

ACGBs (YM +1.0 & XM +0.5) are little changed after US tsys finished near session bests Monday, 2-5bps richer. 

  • Underlying bid as Dallas Fed's Texas Manufacturing Survey for April -- the weakest since the start of the Covid pandemic in 2020, as tariff uncertainty weighed heavily on manufacturers in the district, while price pressures remained elevated.
  • Cash ACGBs are little changed with the AU-US 10-year yield differential at -4bps.
  • Swap rates are little changed as well.
  • The bills strip is +2 across contracts beyond the 1st (flat).
  • RBA Assistant Governor Kent will speak later today, 12:05pm local time (0305BST). His speech per the RBA website is as follows: "Keynote speech by Christopher Kent, Assistant Governor (Financial Markets) - Australia's External Position and the Evolution of the FX Markets - at Bloomberg, Sydney." Monetary policy is therefore unlikely to be covered. Note the next central bank meeting for the RBA is on 19-20 of May.
  • RBA-dated OIS pricing is 1-3bps softer across meetings today. A 50bp rate cut in May is given a 13% probability, with a cumulative 119bps of easing priced by year-end.
  • Today, the local data calendar will be empty ahead of tomorrow’s Q1 CPI.
  • The AOFM plans to sell A$1200mn of the 2.75% 21 June 2035 bond on Friday.

NEW ZEALAND: Nascent Signs Labour Market Recovering

Apr-28 23:59

Filled jobs rose 0.2% m/m in March but are still down 1.5% y/y after being flat and down 1.6% y/y in February. However, the 3-month annualised rate at 0.4% turned positive for the first time since April 2024, signalling that Q1 employment may be flat to slightly higher on the quarter when labour market data is released on May 7. 

NZ employment q/q%

Source: MNI - Market News/Statistics NZ/LSEG
  • Labour demand remains weak but is showing some tentative signs that it has begun to gradually recover. 3-month momentum is improving for filled jobs and also SEEK job ads which rose 8.7% annualised in March. While vacancies are still down 15.4% y/y, they are off the low of -34.8% in June.
  • SEEK applicants/job index shows that labour supply remains robust. It rose in the 3 months to February and was up 31.3% y/y with 3-month momentum annualised at almost 19%.
  • The increase in March filled jobs was broad based across sectors with primary rising 0.4% m/m, goods-producing +0.1% and services +0.2%. Construction has taken the brunt of labour shedding over the last year down 6.1% y/y followed by admin & support services -5.7% and manufacturing -2.2%, while health care is up 1.7% y/y.
  • Young people have seen the largest losses with filled jobs of 15-19 year olds down 10% y/y, while for 35-39 years they’re up 2.2% y/y.

NZ filled jobs vs SEEK job ads

Source: MNI - Market news/SEEK/Statistics NZ

US: Trump To Ease Auto Tariff Burden - Per WSJ

Apr-28 23:42

Headlines have crossed from the WSJ that US President Trump will soften tariffs on the automotive sector. The WSJ notes that: "President Trump is expected to soften the impact of his automotive tariffs, preventing duties on foreign-made cars from stacking on top of other tariffs he has imposed and easing some levies on foreign parts used to manufacture cars in the U.S., according to people familiar with the matter." (see this link).  

  • Reuters added that these actions are expected to take place tomorrow, per comments from the Whitehouse(which should be Tuesday US time).
  • At this stage the market reaction hasn't been large in the US equity futures space, which still sit modestly down in the red (but up from session lows).
  • We did see late last week hints that tariff reprieve could be coming for the autos sector.