RATINGS: Moody’s On France & S&P On UK Due After Hours

Apr-10 08:46

Potential sovereign rating reviews of note scheduled for after hours on Friday include:

  • Moody’s on France (current rating: Aa3; Outlook Negative)
  • S&P on the United Kingdom (current rating: AA; Outlook Stable)
  • Morningstar DBRS on Lithuania (current rating: A (high), Stable Trend) & Malta (current rating: A (high), Stable Trend)
  • Scope Ratings on Hungary (current rating: BBB; Outlook Stable) & Luxembourg (current rating: AAA; Outlook Stable)
  • Please use this link to access the indicative 2026 sovereign rating review schedules across the five most prominent rating agencies (Fitch, Moody's, S&P, Morningstar DBRS & Scope Ratings).
  • Note that the schedules are indicative only and ratings can be reviewed on an ad-hoc basis.
  • Rating agencies may also adjust their schedules during the year.

Historical bullets

GILTS: Bear Flattening, Futures Through First Support

Mar-11 08:37

Gilts sell off with oil bid through early London trade, while hawkish comments from an ECB Governing Council member provide spillover pressure from Bunds.

  • Futures trade as low as 90.51, breaching initial support located at the March 9 high/gap support (90.54). Bears look to the March 6 low (89.43) next.
  • Conversely, bulls need to break the 20-day EMA (91.68) to turn focus higher.
  • Yields 7-10bp higher, curve flattens. Pre-existing week-to-date yield highs remain untested across benchmarks.
  • Flattening driven by reduction in pricing of BoE rate cuts.
  • Short end last discounting 5bp of easing through July, with contracts as much as 14bp less dovish for late ’26 meetings.
  • BoE’s Breeden will speak in front of the House of Lords Financial Services Regulation Committee this morning, but will cover Stablecoins, so don’t expect much on monetary policy.
  • That will leave geopolitical matters and related oil volatility at the fore.

FRANCE DATA: Bank of France See Q1 GDP At 0.2-0.3% Q/Q, Now With Downside Risk

Mar-11 08:34

Released yesterday: "GDP could grow between 0.2% and 0.3% in the first quarter", from the Banque de France's monthly business survey for March (unchanged from Feb), though they now note downside risk due to the Middle East conflict. While the conflict is yet to show in hard economic data, we are seeing the first signs of concern over downside risks that could stem from the conflict.

  • "However, this technical forecast is subject to downside risk, given the uncertainties related to the conflict in the Middle East and its impact on supply chains and energy prices, which could weigh on activity at the end of the quarter."
  • The growth estimate is unchanged from the February survey, and is also in line with Bloomberg consensus at 0.2% Q/Q. This would also be unchanged from 0.2% Q/Q realised growth in Q4 2025. Further ahead, growth is seen staying in the 0.2-0.3% Q/Q range for the remainder of the year (Bloomberg consensus).
  • Data were collected between 25 Feb - 4 Mar 2026, covering around 8500 businesses: "about one-third of the responses were collected before [events in the Middle East] and two-thirds after. For February, according to the business leaders surveyed, economic activity continued to grow at a pace consistent with expectations."
  • "For March, businesses anticipated continued strong activity in industry and services, and more limited activity in construction. However, while uncertainty continued to decline in the initial responses prior to February 28, it rebounded sharply in subsequent responses, with businesses citing risks of rising energy prices and logistical disruptions."
  • We note that French hard output data has been more mixed recently: IP rebounded in Jan at 0.5% M/M (0.4% cons, -0.5% prior, revised up 0.2ppt), but entirely due to a strong rebound in transport equipment (all other manufacturing categories saw flat/negative growth M/M).
  • Elsewhere in the survey, it's noted that "price increases remain moderate ... Overall, 11% of industrial companies reported increasing their selling prices in February, while 5% reduced them. Price decreases were mainly seen in the automotive (-12%), pharmaceutical (-10%), and food processing (-10%) sectors. Price increases were more concentrated in pharmaceuticals (+28%), computer, electronic, and optical products (+17%), and electrical equipment (+15%)."

FOREX: FX Exchange Traded Roll update

Mar-11 08:26

FX CME Roll pace update:

  • EUR: 42%.
  • GBP: 56%.
  • JPY: 48%.
  • CHF: 48%.
  • CAD: 40%.
  • AUD: 55%.
  • NZD: 62%.
  • SEK: 44%.
  • NOK: 58%.