EUROZONE: Timeline of key events (Times BST)

Mar-31 05:18
Event Time Country Event
31-Mar 0855 DE Unemployment
31-Mar 0900 EU ECB Lane Lecture at Paris School of Economics
31-Mar 1000 EU Unemployment
31-Mar 1000 IT HICP (p)
31-Mar 1100 EU ECB de Guindos at Discussion at University of Amsterdam
01-Apr 0815 ES IHS Markit Manufacturing PMI (f)
01-Apr 0845 IT IHS Markit Manufacturing PMI (f)
01-Apr 0850 FR IHS Markit Manufacturing PMI (f)
01-Apr 0855 DE IHS Markit Manufacturing PMI (f)
01-Apr 0900 EU IHS Markit Manufacturing PMI (f)
01-Apr 1000 EU HICP (p)
02-Apr 0930 EU ECB Schnabel at Ambrosetti Finance Workshop
04-Apr 0700 DE Trade Balance
04-Apr 1000 EU PPI

Historical bullets

AUSSIE BONDS: Virtually Unchanged Post-RBA

Mar-01 04:29

YM and XM virtually unchanged post-RBA, jostling around pre-decision levels, with caution re: Ukraine offsetting any potential uptick in worry re: headline inflation owing to energy price dynamics (the sort of price pressures that can’t be fixed by rate hikes). Still, it was a statement that didn’t contain much in the way of fresh meaningful information, with the Bank reaffirming its willingness to be patient, while it pointed to previous forecasts when it came to underlying inflation (granted, it wasn’t an SoMP-linked decision). YM -0.5 and XM -4.5 at typing.

RBA: Cautious On Ukraine, Notes Upside Price Pressure For Energy

Mar-01 04:07

The RBA tipped its hat to the risks posed by the Russia-Ukraine conflict, deeming the event to be “a major new source of uncertainty,” while noting that the situation has forced commodity prices even higher.

  • At home, the Bank pointed to the economic resilience of the Australian economy, flagging labour market developments as a key barometer on that front.
  • The RBA reaffirmed its view that wage growth is expected to remain gradual, although there are uncertainties as to how employee compensation will move given the historically low levels of unemployment. Note that RBA Governor Lowe added references to broader measures of labour costs to the statement. While these references are new to the statement, they are not new to RBA speak. February saw Lowe reference the need to monitor a wider suite of compensatory measures given the varying nature of compensation in tight labour markets on several occasions.
  • The Bank reaffirmed its central stance re: the inflation dynamic, with a further acceleration in price pressures expected this year, before a moderation is expected to come into play in ’23 (it still looks for underlying inflation of 2.75% during ’23, within the upper half of its 2-3% target band). The Bank has flagged a spike higher in petrol prices as a driving force for headline inflation moving forwards, no real surprise there.
  • The overarching message of the Bank’s guidance passage was left unchanged, ultimately reaffirming its willingness to remain patient “as it monitors how the various factors affecting inflation in Australia evolve.” The energy market dynamics and reference to wider labour cost measures both got further airtime here. All in, the Bank sounds a little more worried when it comes to upside inflation risks stemming from the energy markets, but ultimately, interest rate hikes do not fix global supply chain and energy market issues. The phrasing deployed around the risk posed by the Russia-Ukraine conflict provided a slight dovish feel early in the statement, and more than offset any impulse from what could be perceived to be a slightly wider round of concern when it comes to inflation (albeit with the drivers outside of the Bank’s control).

JGBS: 10-Year Supply Easily Digested

Mar-01 03:46

A smooth round of 10-Year JGB supply, with the low price modestly higher than wider expectations (which stood at 99.20 per the BBG dealer poll). The tail holds narrow, while the cover ratio held steady, just above the 6-auction average (which stood at 3.14x). A very modest uptick observed in futures and cash 10s post-auction.