Bonds have rallied as growth worries linked to U.S. tariffs (ahead of “Liberation Day”) and a willingness to fade yesterday’s late month-/quarter-end pressure provides support.
- Slightly softer-than-flash Eurozone manufacturing PMI data also provided support.
- In line Eurozone CPI data had no tangible impact.
- Bunds have failed to challenge yesterday’s high, with 10-Year yields also off yesterday’s lows, leaving the post-debt brake shift range in the German long end intact.
- German yields 3-6bp lower, curve flatter. Just passed Schatz supply noted when it comes to curve moves intraday.
- ECB-dated OIS unwinds most of the move that followed yesterday’s hawkish ECB sources piece from BBG, 18.5bp of cuts priced for this month, 61bp of cuts showing through year-end.
- A bid in European equities (which is out of sync with the tariff worry in bonds) factors into EGB spreads vs. Bunds, which are little changed to ~2.5bp tighter on the day, BTPs outperform.
- Gilts rally in sympathy with demand for wider core global FI markets.
- Futures as high at 92.45, eying trendline resistance drawn off the Mar 4 high (92.49). A break there would increase the risks to the bearish short-term technical trend in the contract.
- Yields 5-6bp lower, curve a touch flatter.
- Comments from BoE’s Greene (who historically has hawkish leanings relative to the median MPC member) signal no change in her pre-existing preference for continued gradual rate cuts. 55bp of BoE cuts priced through year-end last.
- Macro cues eyed for the remainder of the session.