SECURITY: Iran FM Araghchi Dials Down Expectations Ahead Of Geneva Talks

Jun-20 08:18

Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi has tempered expectations of a breakthrough at diplomatic talks with European counterparts in Geneva today, saying Iran is “not prepared for talks with anyone while Israeli attacks continue,” per Iranian state television. 

  • Araghchi said, "after our resistance against Israel, I think countries will distance themselves from this 'aggression.' There is no room for negotiations with the US until the Israeli aggression stops."
  • UK Foreign Minister David Lammy said after a White House meeting with US Secretary of State Marco Rubio and President Donald Trump’s Middle East Envoy, Steve Witkoff, yesterday: “A window now exists within the next two weeks to achieve a diplomatic solution,” referring Trump's delay on joining Israeli strikes.
  • Laurence Norman at WSJ notes the talks could offer “an off ramp" but Washington “may ignore what happens here,” or “Iran may stick to all its old positions and red lines.”
  • The involvement of European signatories to the 2015 JCPoA offers a new angle, as Europe was sidelined from five rounds of talks this year. The Europeans have authority over so-called 'snapback' sanctions on Iran, described by Iran Wire as “one of the most powerful diplomatic tools ever planned in international relations,” which provides leverage over Tehran.
  • Reuters notes that Trump's two-week pause, “may not be a firm deadline," as Trump has "commonly used 'two weeks' as a time frame for making decisions and allowed other economic and diplomatic deadlines to slide.”
  • The International Crisis Group writes in valuable analysis: "The diplomatic path is very narrow – but until the US decides whether to go to war itself, it is not entirely closed."

Historical bullets

BUNDS: /SWAPS: German ASWs Little Changed, Looking Through Bond Bear Steepening

May-21 08:08

German ASWs vs. 3-month Euribor are unchanged to +0.3bp, looking through this morning’s bear steepening on the outright bond curve and operating off multi-week lows registered earlier in May.

  • Commerzbank note that yesterday’s Dutch government ruling re: the pension fund transition will “bring less demand for core duration, a hedging focus on shorter maturities and more appetite for credit. Most factors argue for ultralong forward disinversion trades and using recoveries during the transition to scale into long-end Bund swap spread shorts”.

BONDS: BTP/Bund spread is eyeing the initial support

May-21 07:43
  • The BTP/Bund spread, while showing a small touch wider, it continues to make an attempt through that Psychological 100.00bps level.
  • As noted a Week ago, immediate downside target is at ~97.7bps (September 2021 low).
  • And a further Tightening interest through would Open to 90.4bps (February 2021 low).

SWAPS: Citi Cautious On Idea Of Further EUR Steepening In Immediate Term

May-21 07:41

Citi identify several risks to existing steepener positioning on the EUR swaps curve (with a particular focus on 30s50s):

  • “While originally around half of the total €1600bn assets (at end-2024) were targeted to transition each on 1 January 2026 and 1 January 2027, the DNB’s Q4 survey showed a shift later. Recently PME has shifted its transition from 1 January 2026 to 1 January 2027 and PostNL to April 2026, due to administrative difficulties. This could delay/stagger these unwinds”.
  • “Any delay in transition could also be an incentive for funds with policy funding ratio under 120%. They could wait for a recovery in funding ratios from fiscal pressure on global long-end swaps to then add interest rate hedges at cheap levels”.
  • Overall, they “suspect that any further 30s50s steepening due to this transition might only happen later in the year when more clarity emerges, for instance, from the next DNB survey, potentially published in July”.
  • However, they stress that “the asymmetric long-end exposure to front-end swings has become more compelling over the last six months - which we believe supports 30s50s steepeners from a broader macro standpoint”.