EM ASIA CREDIT: Cathay Pacific: Strong September numbers

Oct-23 00:21

(CATHAY, NR)

"*CATHAY PACIFIC SEPT. PASSENGER LOAD FACTOR 82.3%" - BBG
"*CATHAY PACIFIC SEPT. PASSENGER TRAFFIC +21%" - BBG

Cathay Pacific’s September passenger numbers rose 21% year-on-year, with Available Seat Kilometres up 20%, supporting an 82% load factor (+0.9ppt). Overall, this is a solid outcome given September is typically a seasonally softer month. Neutral for spreads.

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Historical bullets

AUSSIE BONDS: AUCTION PREVIEW: ACGB Jun-54 Supply Due

Sep-23 00:19

The Australian Office of Financial Management (AOFM) will today sell A$300mn of the 4.75% 21 June 2054 Treasury Bond. The line was last sold on 22 August 2025 for A$300mn. The sale drew an average yield of 5.0560%, at a high yield of 5.0600% and was covered 3.000x. There were 48 bidders, 20 of which were successful and 14 were allocated in full. The amount allotted at the highest yield as a percentage of the bid at that yield was 73.7%.

This week's ACGB supply is at the top of the recent weekly issuance range of $1500-2200mn, with A$1000mn of the 3.00% 21 November 2033 bond on Wednesday and A$900mn of the 2.75% 21 November 2029 bond on Friday. 

  • During the first half of 2025-26, the AOFM plans to: issue a new October 2036 Treasury Bond (by syndication and subject to market conditions); conduct 2 Treasury Bond tenders most weeks; hold 1-2 Treasury Indexed Bond tenders each month.
  • Issuance of Treasury Bonds (including Green Treasury Bonds) in 2025-26 is expected to be around $150 billion. Issuance of Treasury Indexed Bonds in 2025-26 is expected to be between $2 billion and $3 billion. 
  • Results are due at 0200 BST / 1100 AEST.

AUSTRALIA DATA: September PMIs Off Recent Highs, But Q3 Average Higher

Sep-22 23:47

Australian preliminary PMIs for September fell from their August levels. The manufacturing print came in at 51.6, from 53.0, while services were at 52.0 from 55.8 in August (see the chart below). This saw the composite PMI come in at 52.1 from 55.5. 

  • Despite the pullback in the Sep PMIs, the average readings for Q3 were still above those seen in both Q2 and Q1 of this year. For manufacturing, the Q3 average was just under 52.0 (Q2 average was 51.1), while for service the Q3 average was 54, against a 51.1 Q2 average.
  • In terms of the detail, for manufacturing output fell to 52.9 from 53.8, while new orders were also down for the month. On the services side, employment eased down to 53.3 form 53.7 prior (per BBG).
  • These comes come ahead of next week's RBA decision. The RBA Governor appeared before parliament yesterday, noting that data outcomes since the last policy meeting in August had been either as expected or slightly firmer.
  • Note tomorrow we get August monthly CPI. 

Fig 1: Australian PMIs Off Q3 Highs (Manufacturing Orange, Services White) 

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Source: Bloomberg Finance L.P./MNI 

AUSSIE BONDS: Modestly Cheaper With US Tsys

Sep-22 23:20

ACGBs (YM -2.0 & XM -1.5) are modestly weaker after US tsys finished 2-3bps cheaper.

  • MNI FED: Cleveland's Hammack: Policy Very Mildly Restrictive, Concerns On More Cuts. Cleveland Fed President Hammack (hawk, 2026 FOMC voter) sounds extremely cautious about making further cuts: "I am laser focused on inflation. And that's why to me, I think that we should be very cautious in removing monetary policy restriction, because I think it's important that we stay restrictive to bring inflation back down to target.
  • There will be no cash US tsy trading in Asia-Pac today with Japan out.
  • S&P Global Sept. Flash PMIs have printed: Mfg PMI 51.6 vs 53 Prior; Composite 52.1 vs 55.5 Prior; and Services 52.0 vs 55.8 Prior".
  • Cash ACGBs are 3bps cheaper with the AU-US 10-year yield differential +13bps.
  • The bills strip is -2 to -3 across contracts.
  • RBA-dated OIS pricing is giving a 25bp rate cut in September a 4% probability, with a cumulative 25bps of easing priced by year-end (based on an effective cash rate of 3.60%).
  • This week, the AOFM plans to sell A$300mn of the 4.75% 21 June 2054 bond today, A$1000mn of the 3.00% 21 November 2033 bond on Wednesday and A$900mn of the 2.75% 21 November 2029 bond on Friday.