AUSSIE BONDS: Slightly Stronger, Subdued Session, RBA Policy Decision Tomorrow

Jul-07 05:08

ACGBs (YM +1.0 & XM +0.5) are slightly stronger ahead of tomorrow’s RBA Policy Decision.

  • The RBA is widely expected to cut by 25bps. This is the sell-side consensus, albeit with a small number of economists expecting rates to be left on hold.
  • May monthly CPI data should give the RBA confidence to cut. Headline inflation was close to the bottom end of the RBA's 2-3% target band, whilst the trimmed mean eased to 2.4%y/y. Services inflation is still running at a stronger pace, but we continue to move off recent highs for this sub-sector of inflation.
  • RBA-dated OIS pricing is slightly softer across meetings. A 25bp rate cut this week is given a 94% probability, with a cumulative 79bps of easing priced by year-end. Notably, today's moves leave meetings pricing 15-32bps softer than levels before the May RBA Meeting.
  • Cash US tsys are 1-3bps richer in today's Asia-Pac session after resuming trading following the long weekend.
  • Cash ACGBs are 1bp richer with the AU-US 10-year yield differential at -15bps.
  • The bills strip is little changed.
  • This week, the AOFM plans to sell A$1200mn of the 4.25% 21 December 2035 bond on Wednesday and A$1000mn of the 2.75% 21 November 2029 bond on Friday.

Historical bullets

JGB TECHS: (M5) Rallies Off Lows

Jun-06 22:45
  • RES 3: 147.74 - High Jan 15 and bull trigger (cont)
  • RES 2: 146.53 - High Aug 6 
  • RES 1: 141.48/142.95 - High May 2 / High Apr 7
  • PRICE: 139.19 @ 15:53 GMT Jun 06
  • SUP 1: 138.54 - Low May 22
  • SUP 2: 136.57 - 1.382 proj of the Jan 28 - Feb 20 - Feb 26 bear leg   
  • SUP 3: 134.89 - 2.000 proj of the Jan 28 - Feb 20 - Feb 26 bear leg

JGBs have rallied off recent lows, however a bearish theme remains intact following the reversal that started Apr 7. A continuation lower would signal scope for an extension towards 136.57, a Fibonacci projection. On the upside, a reversal higher would instead refocus attention on 142.95, the Apr 7 high. The first important resistance to watch is 141.48, the May 2 high. A break of this level would be viewed as an early bullish signal. 

US TSYS/SUPPLY: MNI UST Issuance Deep Dive: June 2025

Jun-06 21:24

We've just published our UST Issuance Deep Dive - Download Full Report Here

  • May’s refunding round saw guidance as well as coupon sizes for the current quarter unchanged.
  • The August round (Jul 28-30) could prove more compelling, reflecting both pressure at the long end of the Treasury curve as well as a shifting fiscal outlook amid tariff revenues contrasted with impending tax cuts (not to mention the likelihood of approaching the debt limit at around that time if it’s not lifted).
  • Future Coupon Upsizing: We’ve seen some expectations that Treasury could lean against some of those trends in the August refunding, with potential signals if not immediate action on adjusting buybacks or even reducing issuance duration in order to reduce pressure on the long end. MNI’s current expectation is that coupon sizes will only be increased in early 2026. We will update in our next Deep Dive at end-June, with our full refunding preview coming in late July.
  • Upcoming issuance: June is set to see $315B in nominal Treasury coupon sales, in addition to $23B in 10Y TIPS and $28B FRN for a total of $366B. Sales for the month start in the coming week, on Tuesday June 10 with $58B of 3Y Note, Wednesday June 11 with $39B of 10Y Note, and Thursday June 12 with $22B of 30Y Bond.
  • May Auction Results: Against a backdrop of continued steepening pressure for global sovereign curves, May’s coupon auctions saw strong sales at the short-end/belly contrasted with tails at the long-end. 

US FISCAL: Extraordinary Treasury Measures Tick Up As Cash Depletes

Jun-06 20:20

Treasury had $84B in "extraordinary measures" available to keep the government financed as of June 4 per a release Friday. That is up from $68B a week earlier though Treasury has exhausted three-quarters of the total initially available ($362B) when the debt limit impasse began in January.

  • Combined with a pullback in Treasury cash ($376B), the total resources available to avert an "x-date" in the summer are down to a total $460B, the lowest since April 10 before the annual tax take accelerated.
  • There will be another uptick in Treasury cash late next week/early the following week around the mid-June tax date, but this is likely to be the last major uplift before the summer at which point x-date speculation will pick up if Congress hasn't passed a debt limit increase by then.
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