EGBS: Familiar Themes In Sell-Side Views After Initial '26 Trade

Jan-12 09:08

Sell-side notes that we have seen generally maintain a bias for higher long end yields in Germany over the medium-term, alongside the potential for ongoing, albeit more limited, instances of peripheral outperformance vs. semi-core/core. Elsewhere, most don’t expect meaningful fresh widening for OATs.

  • Goldman Sachs: They think improving growth will outweigh structural challenges for Bunds and expect 10s to end the year at 3.25%. They think sovereign credit longs represent opportunity for returns in the current macro environment. For OATs, they argue that the likely passing of a formal budget in France in H126 should catalyse a further reduction in idiosyncratic risk premium. They caution that H226 may see spreads wider as markets look to the end of NGEU support and 2027 elections in Italy and France.
  • J.P.Morgan: They write “Greek bonds have outperformed sharply vs. Spain and have moved from trading too wide to too tight”. As a result, they recommend closing overweight GGBs 10s vs. SPGBs, further aided by their expectations for the launch of a new 10-Year benchmark GGB in the coming weeks. They await better levels to scale into fresh overweight exposure in both GGBs & SPGBs.
  • Natixis: Hold a marginal long near-term bias for duration after Bund yields moved back towards ’25 highs and investors showed demand ahead of those levels, albeit retaining a medium-term view for a gradual rise in Bund yields. They argue that the EUR short end should price the risk of rate cuts in ’26, while holding a curve steepening view driven by the ongoing rebuild of German term premium. They also suggest that hedge funds appear to have less interest in short OATs. They believe that related pressure is contained and expect the idiosyncratic risk in OATs to decline further once the markets have clarity on the 2026 budget. They continue to expect limited tightening in peripheral spreads, supported by sustained investor demand and gradually improving fundamentals, maintaining a long SPGB 04/34 vs. RAGB 05/34 recommendation.
  • Societe Generale: They continue to expect Italian outperformance within EGBs this year and favour being long Italy vs. Germany. They think longs in the 5-/10-/30-Year BTP fly looks appealing. They also like 5-/15-Year BTP flatteners vs. Bund with a focus on supply dynamics (having previously recommended a similar 10-/30-Year box). Elsewhere, they recommend Bund or EUR swap 5-/10-Year+ curve steepeners as “ECB rate hikes expectations are being postponed”, with a focus on geopolitical risks and rebuilding term premia.

Historical bullets

JGB TECHS: (H6) Just Off Cycle Lows

Dec-12 23:45
  • RES 3: 140.08 - High Jun 13  
  • RES 2: 139.05 - High Aug 4 
  • RES 1: 137.30 - High Sep 8 and key short-term resistance
  • PRICE: 133.44 @ 15:44 GMT Dec 12
  • SUP 1: 133.25 - Low Dec 10
  • SUP 2: 132.78 - 2.0% Lower Bollinger Band
  • SUP 3: 132.17 - 1.0% 10-dma envelope  

Prices traded to new pullback and cycle lows earlier this week, weighed by building expectations of a December BoJ rate hike and a breach of support in futures prices. This affirms the firm downtrend that’s dominated prices since mid-September, and prices will need to challenge resistance before signaling any broader reversal.

FED: Reserves Fell To "Ample" At Just Under $3T (2/2)

Dec-12 21:10

The FOMC's decision this week to immediately initiate reserve management purchases (RMPs) suggests some concern by policymakers over recent funding market issues and potential further volatility at year-end, while also having an eye on building reserve capacity ahead of the major tax date in April.

  • The December FOMC statement noted "reserve balances have declined to ample levels" vs abundant previously, and RMPs will be conducted "to maintain an ample supply of reserves on an ongoing basis."
  • As of the meeting, reserves stood at just under $3T ($2.97T), perhaps on the high side of most estimates of where the "ample" range had been. Gov Waller estimated in July that "ample" could be closer to $2.7T.
  • The $40B / month pace of RMPs is front-loaded and will taper off, with the reserve rebuild set to average about $20-25B/month. (Powell said Wednesday: "We have to keep reserves, call it, constant as a -- as it relates to the banking system or to the whole economy. And that alone calls for us to increase about $20-25 billion per month...It's also happening in the context of a temporary few month front loading to get reserves high enough to get through the -- you know, the tax period in mid-April."
  • The NY Fed's guidance: "The Desk anticipates that the pace of RMPs will remain elevated for a few months to offset expected large increases in non-reserve liabilities in April. After that, the pace of total purchases will likely be significantly reduced in line with expected seasonal patterns in Federal Reserve liabilities. Purchase amounts will be adjusted as appropriate based on the outlook for reserve supply and market conditions."
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FED: Trump Tells WSJ: Leaning To Warsh Or Hassett As Fed Chair

Dec-12 21:06

President Trump has told the Wall Street Journal in an interview Friday that he was leaning toward either Kevin Warsh or Kevin Hassett as his pick for the next Fed Chair.

  • Warsh's probability of becoming Fed chair is spiking (40%, up 25pp on Kalshi in the last few minutes) on prediction markets with the interview suggesting the ex-Fed governor is neck-and-neck with previously presumptive favorite Hassett (57%).
  • "In an interview with The Wall Street Journal in the Oval Office on Friday, the president said Warsh was at the top of his list. "Yes, I think he is. I think you have Kevin and Kevin. They're both -- I think the two Kevins are great," he said. "I think there are a couple of other people that are great.""
  • Additionally Trump tells the WSJ that the next Fed Chair should consult with him on where to set interest rates, and that he pressed Warsh this week on "whether he could trust him to support interest-rate cuts if he were chosen to lead the central bank, according to people familiar with the meeting. Trump, in the Journal interview, confirmed that reporting. "He thinks you have to lower interest rates," Trump said of Warsh. "And so does everybody else that I've talked to." "
  • "Asked where he wants interest rates to be a year from now, Trump said, "1% and maybe lower than that." "
  • This is not entirely new rhetoric from Trump on rates and the associated litmus test of a low rate preference for the next Fed Chair - as such there's not much market reaction to the news, but the reporting suggests that current Fed officials Waller and Bowman may be out of the running.
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