BONDS: EGBs-GILTS CASH CLOSE: Mixed Curves Ahead Of PMIs

Sep-22 18:46

European yields were little changed Monday, with longer-end Gilts slightly outperforming their German counterparts.

  • Yields opened the session a little higher coming in from the weekend, carrying on from a bond-bearish tone late last week, but gradually descended to session lows by mid-day London time with few immediate macro/headline movers in evidence.
  • 10Y Gilt yields briefly hit a post-Sept 4 high (4.724%) but otherwise trade was largely within last week's ranges.
  • Comments from BOE's Pill and Bailey didn't prove impactful. MNI's Macro team noted however that all seven of the non-dissenting MPC members are due to make public appearances before the end of September.
  • On the day, the UK curve bull flattened, with Germany's twist steepening.
  • Periphery/semi-core EGB spreads widened slightly. BTP spreads were a little wider, despite Friday's one-notch rating upgrade to Italy from Fitch; France's were little changed following Friday's one-notch downgrade from Morningstar DBRS.
  • Tuesday's schedule includes flash September PMIs, and another appearance by BOE's Pill.

Closing Yields / 10-Yr EGB Spreads To Germany

  • Germany: The 2-Yr yield is down 0.5bps at 2.018%, 5-Yr is down 0.6bps at 2.32%, 10-Yr is unchanged at 2.748%, and 30-Yr is up 2bps at 3.357%.
  • UK: The 2-Yr yield is down 0.2bps at 3.98%, 5-Yr is down 0.2bps at 4.13%, 10-Yr is down 0.3bps at 4.712%, and 30-Yr is down 1.1bps at 5.548%.
  • Italian BTP spread up 1.2bps at 79.7bps / Spanish up 0.3bps at 55.1bps

Historical bullets

FED: NatWest Now Sees Cuts In 2025, Starting In September

Aug-22 20:09

As with Deutsche earlier, NatWest has changed its Fed call after the Powell Jackson Hole speech to reflect a 25bp September cut. Previously, the call was for no cuts in 2025. The new baseline outlook includes further 25bp cuts in December and March, bringing rates closer to neutral ("however, the changing composition of the committee becomes far less clear once Powell term expires in May").

  • "While the August jobs and CPI reports will be watched carefully, it is clear to us that Powell has already seen enough to decide renewed action to counter downside economic risks is likely warranted, and so we now look for a 25 basis point rate cut on September 17th.
  • "We expect officials will very much downplay the likelihood of a 50bp rate cut leading up to the jobs data, but we have to admit if the report is "weak enough" (e.g., the unemployment rate increases by 0.3pct to 4.5% (where officials had it at year end) anything can happen and wouldn't rule anything out. However, given the latest pivot and with financial markets pricing (86% of a 25bp rate cut) a lot has to happen (unemployment rate 3-handle and core CPI +0.5%) for the FOMC to undeliver and hold off from a rate cut in September. "

USDCAD TECHS: Bull Cycle Hindered

Aug-22 20:00
  • RES 4: 1.4111 High Apr 10  
  • RES 3: 1.4019 38.2% retracement of the Feb 3 - Jun 16 bear leg 
  • RES 2: 1.3968 High May 20
  • RES 1: 1.3925 High Aug 22
  • PRICE: 1.3840 @ 16:55 BST Aug 22
  • SUP 1: 1.3794 20-day EMA 
  • SUP 2: 1.3769/22 50-day EMA / Low Aug 22
  • SUP 3: 1.3576 Low Jul 23
  • SUP 4: 1.3557/40 Low Jul 3 / Low Jun 16 and the bear trigger 

Gains this week in USDCAD and the breach of resistance at 1.3879, the Aug 1 high, marked a positive development, however the slippage into the Friday close undermines this sentiment - for now. Moving average studies have crossed and are in a bull-mode position, reinforcing current conditions. An extension higher would signal scope for a climb towards 1.4019, a Fibonacci retracement. On the downside, support to watch lies at 1.3769, the 50-day EMA - a level not yet challenged by the correction lower. 

CANADA: Q2 Expected To See GDP Contraction, BOC's Estimate Looks Too Negative

Aug-22 19:56

The June retail sales release helps wrap up the last major data before Canadian Q2 GDP is released on Friday August 29. 

  • Current Bloomberg analyst consensus shows Q2 is expected to show a 0.7% Q/Q annualized contraction, versus +2.2% in Q1. The private sector consensus is more optimistic than the Bank of Canada's -1.5% estimate in its July Monetary Policy Report (which MNI thinks is too low) but the component-by-component breakdown is similar if of differing magnitudes.
  • Widely expected are: a softening in household consumption growth (+1.2% in Q1), with a pickup in government spending, continued weakness in fixed investment (-3.0% in Q1) though with residential outperforming business capital formation, and a reversal of Q2's positive contribution from net exports. In short, the data are expected to confirm that trade activity was brought forward to Q1 ahead of tariffs, with the effects reversing in Q2.
  • Going forward, the BOC envisages growth resuming in Q3 (+1.0% in its "current tariff" scenario). In the meantime, a weak Q2 reading could provide Governing Council with more conviction to resume easing rates in September, with the July meeting decision noting "If a weakening economy puts further downward pressure on inflation and the upward price pressures from the trade disruptions are contained, there may be a need for a reduction in the policy interest rate".
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Source: Bank of Canada July 2025 MPR