STIR: Short Setting Seen In Most SOFR Futures On Monday

Mar-25 10:31

OI data points to net short setting in most SOFR futures on Monday, as contracts ticked lower.

  • Pockets of net long cover were seen through the blues, but the short setting dominated in net pack terms.

 

24-Mar-25

21-Mar-25

Daily OI Change

 

Daily OI Change In Packs

SFRH5

1,172,603

1,170,751

+1,852

Whites

+18,404

SFRM5

1,264,746

1,270,574

-5,828

Reds

+16,006

SFRU5

960,188

954,364

+5,824

Greens

+3,843

SFRZ5

1,080,454

1,063,898

+16,556

Blues

+3,816

SFRH6

644,917

655,494

-10,577

 

 

SFRM6

660,055

665,787

-5,732

 

 

SFRU6

622,531

619,840

+2,691

 

 

SFRZ6

826,778

797,154

+29,624

 

 

SFRH7

502,285

509,106

-6,821

 

 

SFRM7

490,757

486,591

+4,166

 

 

SFRU7

320,578

319,608

+970

 

 

SFRZ7

410,330

404,802

+5,528

 

 

SFRH8

222,833

224,380

-1,547

 

 

SFRM8

190,887

188,525

+2,362

 

 

SFRU8

131,654

130,560

+1,094

 

 

SFRZ8

138,568

136,661

+1,907

 

 

Historical bullets

STIR: July Fed Cut Priced Back In

Feb-21 21:14

The next Fed rate cut is again fully priced for the July meeting, following a 6bp futures-implied move today on the back of soft Services PMI data exacerbated in the afternoon by a risk-off move in equities.

  • This comes following a run of mixed-at-best data (retail sales, housing starts, various consumer and business surveys) in the last week and is the first time a July cut has been priced since Feb 7 (just prior to January payrolls data) - previously it was priced for September.
  • There's now almost two rate cuts priced through the end of the year (47bp through the December FOMC, an increase of 9bp on the day), the most seen since Feb 5.
  • For the week, implied 2025 rate cuts have ranged between 35 and 48bp (the latter seen in the last hour of trade)
  • See our US Macro Weekly for more on what to watch next week, with PCE and GDP the data highlights.
MeetingCurrent FF Implieds (%), LHCumulative Change From Current Rate (bp)Incremental Chg (bp)Prior Session (Feb 20)Chg Since Then (bp)End of Last Week (Feb 14)
Mar 19 20254.32-1.5-1.54.32-0.94.32
May 07 20254.25-8.4-6.94.28-3.14.28
Jun 18 20254.14-19.4-11.04.18-4.24.18
Jul 30 20254.07-26.2-6.84.13-6.04.13
Sep 17 20253.97-35.7-9.54.04-6.54.04
Oct 29 20253.92-41.2-5.54.00-8.03.99
Dec 10 20253.86-47.3-6.13.95-8.83.93

US TSYS: Late Risk-Off Support Lends to Weak Data Support

Feb-21 20:29
  • Treasuries look to finish near session highs Friday, second half support spurred by risk-off sentiment as wires recirculated report of a new Covid strain out of China with "pandemic potential" (SCMP).
  • Tsy Mar'25 10Y futures climbed to 109-24 high (+18.5), still shy of initial technical resistance at 110-00 (High Feb 7 and the bull trigger); 10Y yield fell to 4.4042% low; curves mixed: 2s10s -1.123 at 22.205, 5s30s +.956 at 40.929. Heavy volumes (TYH over 3.3M tied to quarterly roll action, June takes lead next Friday).
  • Early Treasury support triggered by weaker than expected data: flash S&P PMIs w/ composite at 50.4 (cons 53.2) after 52.7 in Jan, services (49.7 vs cons 53.0, after 52.9); and existing home sales were softer than expected in January at 4.08m (cons 4.13m) after an upward revised 4.29m (initial 4.24m). UofM data showed a worrying rise in long-term inflation expectations alongside a deterioration in consumer sentiment.
  • US stocks fell hard, DJIA back to January 21 levels while SPX Eminis and Nasdaq withdrew to last Thursday lows. Trading desks also cited today's call weighted option expiration that has historically leaned toward bearish price action in the week after.
  • Late weekend focus on German elections take focus over the weekend, before New Zealand retail sales and German IFO data cross. There is a public holiday in Japan Monday.

LOOK AHEAD: The Week Ahead: 2nd Q4 GDP and January PCE Reports

Feb-21 20:05
  • The upcoming US economic calendar is backloaded, with the second release for Q4 national accounts on Thursday before the January PCE report on Friday. Real GDP growth is seen confirming what was at the time a softer than expected 2.3% annualized in Q4, whilst there will also be a first estimate for real GDI growth after 2.1% in Q3.
  • Much of the relative GDP weakness in Q4 after two quarters averaging 3.0% came from a large drag from inventories. It should continue to show signs of robust domestic demand after personal consumption increased 4.2% annualized in the advance release.
  • However, January’s monthly report is likely to show consumption got off to a much weaker start of 2025. Recall that retail sales were far weaker than expected in January as they slid -0.9% M/M (cons -0.2) along with an even larger miss for the control group at -0.8% M/M (cons 0.3) to more than unwind the previously strong 0.8% M/M increase in December. Early days for the Bloomberg consensus currently see real personal spending growth of -0.1% M/M in Jan after 0.4% in Dec.
  • As for inflation, Governor Waller cited estimates for core PCE inflation of around 0.25% M/M and it likely rounding to 2.6% Y/Y with some help from modest upward revisions.
  • Base effects will have helped it drop from the 2.8% Y/Y averaged in Q4 whilst recent run rates should look a little more favorable (2.1% and 2.4% annualized over three and six months assuming no revisions). Note that revisions will go back to Q4, reflecting the new seasonal adjustment factors for both CPI and PPI, but longer dated revisions will have to wait for the comprehensive national account revisions due in September.