Rates Spark: Crucial Levels Ahead

 | Feb 16, 2023 17:43

h2 Data steepens the curves from the back end

Rates were pressured higher on the back of the much-better-than-expected retail sales data. A potential weather-related bounce in the data for January had been flagged though, and there is a decent risk that we will see some reversal again next month. For now, as noted in the chart below, money markets are seeing the SOFR rate above 5% through the end of this year for the first time. The notion of higher rates being maintained for longer is gaining traction.

More notably this time round, it's the back end of the curve leading rates higher which also helped the Treasury curve pull back from its record inversion. The 10Y UST yield is now back above 3.8% and thus not far below the local high it had ended 2022 on. That itself is still a decent stretch from the October high at over 4.30%, giving yields some room for further upside.

Of course, the size of the surprise in the data helps to explain the larger market reaction, but we think it speaks more to overall positioning in rates going into the past week(s) and also the stretched valuations in terms of the curve, which we have also highlighted over the past days. Note, for instance, that equity markets ended the day higher, dismissing the hawkish implications that the resilience shown in the data may have for the Fed.

Hawkish repricing pushes Fed and ECB expectations to new highs