Schnabel's speech argues that declining convenience yields (which can be proxied by widening asset swap spreads) will put upward pressure on the Eurozone r* going forward, with market participants valuing the "liquidity and safety services of government bonds less than they did in the past". This can also be seen in the repo market, where "steady and measurable rise in overnight rates and a convergence across collateral classes" have been observed.
She highlights three familiar factors contributing to the rise in bond free float in the Eurozone and the US:
Note: Convenience yield is defined as the "yield that investors are willing to forgo in equilibrium" for "money-like convenience services that safe and liquid assets, such as government bonds, provide to market participants".
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The Aussie 10-yr futures contract continues to trade below the Dec 11 high of 95.851, and has traded through the Dec low. A stronger bearish theme would expose 95.275, the Nov 14 low and a key support. Clearance of this level would strengthen a bearish theme. For bulls, a confirmed reversal and a breach of 95.851, the Dec 11 high, would instead reinstate a bull cycle and refocus attention on resistance at 96.207, a Fibonacci retracement point.
We've just published our preview of the January FOMC meeting:
Note to readers: MNI’s separate preview of sell-side analyst summaries to follow on Monday Jan 27
PLEASE FIND THE FULL REPORT HERE: