EGB FUNDING UPDATE: German DFA Q4 issuance plan due tomorrow morning
Sep-17 14:36
Q4 issuance plans are due for release tomorrow at 9:00BST / 10:00CET.
This will incorporate the addition of 7-year Bund auctions but with December a quiet month for German auctions, it is likely the increase in overall bond issuance will be less than Q3’s E15bln.
All in all, we think that this would see bond issuance increase by E12-13bln (versus E15bln in Q3).
We have less conviction regarding Bubill issuance – seeing two way risks to the E4bln that was added to Q3’s schedule.
We think that there is scope to increase the two Schatz taps by E1.0bln each to E5.0bln and E4.5bln respectively (potentially to E5.0bln for both).
10-year Bund auctions can be increased to E5.0bln each, too, which would add E3.5bln to issuance.
The DFA may be hesitant to add to Bobl issuance given that it will be adding 7-year Bund auctions to the scheduled. We expect two 7-year Bund auctions but of a smaller E3bln size (relative to the E4bln size seen in Q3).
We also think there is scope to add a second 15-year Bund auction to the quarter (at present there is only one). This may be preferable to increasing the size of the scheduled 15/30-year auctions.
US TSY FUTURES: September'25-December'25 Roll Update
Aug-18 14:34
The latest Tsy quarterly futures roll volumes from September'25 to December'25 below. Percentage complete is running 5% or lower across the curve ahead the "First Notice" date on August 29. Current roll details:
TUU5/TUZ5 appr 41,800 from -8.75 to -7.75, -8.0 last; 2%
FVU5/FVZ5 appr 64,500 from -4.75 to -4.25, -4.5 last; 4%
TYU5/TYZ5 appr 129,000 from -0.25 to +0.25, +0.0 last; 5%
UXYU5/UXYZ5 appr 13,300 from 0.25 to 1.25, 1 last; 1%
USU5/USZ5 appr 3,600 from 12.75 to 13.5, 13 last; 2%
WNU5/WNZ5 appr 1,000 from 8.0 to 8.5, 8.25 last; 1%
Reminder, Sep futures won't expire until next month: 10s, 30s and Ultras on September 22, 2s and 5s on September 30. Meanwhile, Sep'25 Tsy options will expire this Friday, August 22.
US DATA: Homebuilder Sentiment Still Historically Weak, Boding Ill For Activity
Aug-18 14:32
August's NAHB/Wells Fargo Housing Market report showed little improvement in the homebuilding sector, with present sales weakening modestly and selling prospects steady/moderately better.
The headline index fell 1 point to 32 - reverting back to June's level which is around post-2022 lows, and dashing consensus expectations for a slight improvement to 34. Likewise, present sales reverted 1 point to June levels (35).
Future sales remained at 43 for a second month, though in a bright spot, there was the biggest improvement in prospective buyer traffic since November 2024, up 2 points to 22 (but still below May's level).
The standout move under the surface is a sharp drop in activity in the Northeast (the other 3 US regions were steady/slightly higher), dropping 9 points to a 31-month low 39.
Per the report, weak demand conditions continue to have an impact on prices and incentives: "37% of builders reported cutting prices in August down from 38% in July. This share has remained at 37% or 38% for the past three months. Meanwhile, the average price reduction was 5% in August, the same as it’s been every month since last November. The use of sales incentives was 66% in August, up from 62% in July and the highest percentage in the post-Covid period."
Overall, conditions for homebuilders remain historically weak amid extreme unaffordability for buyers (albeit potentially relieved somewhat by a moderation in mortgage rates in recent weeks). Weak NAHB sentiment signals continued weakness in residential sector activity, with single home starts likely to remain under downside pressure.
"The Treasury is considering a new tax on the sale of homes worth more than £500,000 as a step towards a radical overhaul of stamp duty and council tax, the Guardian has been told".
"As Rachel Reeves prepares the ground for tax rises in this autumn’s budget, senior ministers have tasked officials to study how a new “proportional” property tax could be implemented and model its impact before reporting back to ministers, who have been briefed on the proposals".
"Officials are initially examining a potential national property tax, which would replace stamp duty on owner-occupied homes, sources said. They are also studying whether, after the national tax, a local property tax could then replace council tax in the medium term in an effort to repair battered local authority finances".
"No final decisions have been made. A national tax could be implemented during this parliament, while it is understood an overhaul of council tax would take longer, at least requiring Labour to win a second term in office."