
ECB speakers include president Christine Lagarde and Fabio Centeno. Monetary policy will never be far from the market’s mind. Potentially more market moving, the UK's Debt Management Office will sell £2.5bn of 2061 bonds, one day after the BoE decided to accept only £20mn out of the £1.9bn offered by dealers. There should be no let up in inflationary signals today with eurozone PPI expected to jump another 4.9% month-on-month.Īustria kicks off this week’s euro government bond supply slate with auctions in the 10Y and 30Y sectors, followed by Germany selling inflation-linked bonds. Neither can the more than 20bp rally in 10Y Treasuries and Bund since Friday be attributed to safe-haven demand, given that stock indices ended the day up and credit indices tighter. But, for the moment, we fear the bond rally is running short of tangible evidence of a change in monetary policy. The next few days might deliver additional information on how fast economies are slowing down or – more realistically – how widespread financial stress is. The fact that it will now request the identity of underlying sellers also indicates that it wants the programme to remain targeted to pension funds. At the very least, this suggests that the central bank is wary of debt monetisation calls, or of the counterproductive effect of purchases in its fight against inflation. The result? 30Y gilts were the only developed market sector that ended the day with higher yields than on Friday. To us, this is a strong signal that it sees its intervention as a backstop against market volatility, rather than a quantitative target. Monday’s BoE long-end gilt buying operation only accepted anecdotal amount of offers Monday’s BoE long-end gilt buying operation only accepted anecdotal amount of offers amid the generalised bond rally. The RBA hiking only 25bp against a 50bp consensus overnight may well have reinforced these hopes.īoE caution shows that the inflation fight isn’t overĪ look at the UK can also be instructive, although the read-across to other central banks is admittedly more limited than for the Fed. Investors, however, may secretly be hoping for a slower pace of hikes going forward, or for Quantitative Tightening to be reconsidered. Despite signs that a housing recession is already there, it is unclear whether economic circumstances have changed enough to prompt a policy change. Recent hopes of a pivot have been disappointed, however. Recent hopes of a pivot have been disappointed There were signs last week that financial stress is starting to register in its consciousness, most notably with Lael Brainard’s speech on Friday, and with Thomas Barkin expressing concerns about the spillover of a stronger dollar yesterday. While most expected the dramatic jump in rates to translate into financial stress, the timing and location of the first crisis were difficult to predict with any degree of precision.Īll this begs the question: is this really a turning point in central banks’ tightening cycles, or at least have tightening expectations gone far enough? Any answer to that question has to start with the Fed. The need for emergency BoE intervention in the gilt market last week has brought the latter to the fore. The former is nothing new, and investors were wrong-footed by a surprisingly resilient US economy as recently as August, lending credence to the hawkish tone of the Fed, and by extension the Bank of England (BoE), and European Central Bank (ECB). The root cause of the recent re-pricing lower in rates can be traced back to two factors: the global economic slowdown and resurgent fears for financial stability. The sight of a bond rally when investors smell a whiff of a central bank pivot is something to behold. Markets on high alert for a central bank pivot
