AUSSIE BONDS: Cheaper With YM1 Testing Support

Nov-10 04:19

ACGBs (YM -5.0 & XM -5.0) are weaker with US tsys after headlines that key US Senate Democrats will advance a GOP bill to end the government shutdown. Risk appetite is firmer.

  • Cash ACGBs are 3-4bps cheaper with the AU-US 10-year yield differential at +26bps.
  • The bills strip has bear-steepened, with pricing -2 to -5.
  • The main takeaway from RBA Deputy Governor Hauser's Q&A today was that the economy could already be close to trend growth, and therefore, supply constraints make further rate cuts difficult.
  • RBA-dated OIS pricing is showing a 25bp rate cut in December at an 8% probability, with a cumulative 16bps of easing priced by mid-2026.
  • Tomorrow, the local calendar will see Westpac Consumer and NAB Business Confidence data.
  • However, the highlight of this week's AUS calendar will be Thursday's October jobs data. The unemployment rate rose 0.2pp to 4.5% in September.
  • Last month's weak employment data triggered a solid ACGB rally, but those gains were more than fully reversed after the much hotter-than-expected Q3 CPI report. YM1 is currently testing horizontal support at 96.28 (see chart).
  • This week, the AOFM plans to sell A$1200mn of the 4.25% 21 December 2035bond on Wednesday and A$800mn of the 1.75% 21 November 2032 bond on Friday.
     
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Bloomberg Finance LP

Historical bullets

US: Trump Oval Office Announcement Underway Shortly

Oct-10 20:58

US President Donald Trump is shortly due to deliver an announcement in the White House Oval Office. LIVESTREAM The announcement is expected to relate to drug pricing and could follow a similar template to a recent pledge from Pfizer

  • The announcement will be Trump's first press remarks since a market-moving Truth Social statement earlier today in which Trump suggested calling off a meeting with Chinese President Xi Jinping and raising tariffs on China in response to new export controls from Beijing on rare earths. See earlier bullets here and here

RATINGS: Moody's Completes Periodic Review Of Belgium, No Rating Action

Oct-10 20:42

No ratings actions for Belgium from Moody's, which is quoted in a press release on Bloomberg: "Moody's Ratings (Moody's) has completed a periodic review of the ratings of Belgium and other ratings that are associated with this issuer. The review was conducted through a rating committee held on 2 October 2025 in which we reassessed the appropriateness of the ratings in the context of the relevant principal methodology(ies), and recent developments. This publication does not announce a credit rating action and is not an indication of whether or not a credit rating action is likely in the near future."

  • There had been some speculation there could be a ratings action - MNI wrote Thursday: "* Moody's on Belgium (Current rating Aa3, Outlook Negative): We expect Moody's to maintain their current stance in the absence of 2026 budget details."

 

MACRO ANALYSIS: US Macro Week Ahead: No CPI, But Plenty Of Pre-Blackout FedSpeak

Oct-10 20:35

Below is the week’s data schedule, with MNI’s annotation of whether or not data will be postponed. 

  • As we went to press, the Fed announced that next week's Industrial Production data will be postponed (was due to be published next Friday Oct 17) as the data “incorporate a range of data from other government agencies, the publication of which has been delayed as a result of the federal government shutdown.”
  • We won’t be getting September CPI as scheduled on Oct 15, but at least the BLS announced it will publish the data on Oct 24.
  • As such next week we’ll be looking at some under-covered data points, including the Redbook weekly and Chicago Fed’s CARTS retail sales data (in lieu of the Census Bureau retail sales report), with a little more focus than usual on regional Fed manufacturing indices (NY, Philadelphia).
  • Once again, the dearth of tier-one data leaves Fed commentary in focus ahead of the pre-FOMC blackout period: highlights for us are Philadelphia Fed President Paulson making her first comments on monetary policy on Monday since being appointed in the summer, while as always Chair Powell bears watching on Tuesday (we also hear from Bowman, Waller, Collins, Miran, Schmid, and Musalem).
  • Additionally we get the latest Beige Book which was already key given the FOMC was already increasingly focused on anecdotal information as it attempts to navigate murky economic waters.
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