Rates Spark: The Range Is Your Friend

 | Feb 08, 2023 14:04

Through the recent gyrations, markets seem to lack the conviction needed to push new lows in rates. The resulting range-trading environment brings lower rates of volatility and better risk appetite. We think rates differentials should narrow when rates finally converge lower.h2 Not enough conviction to call time on inflation, and still divergent policies/h2

The China reopening hype seems to have faded, judging by commodity prices running out of steam already. This is at least one less source of inflation for markets to fear, but it is fair to say that coordinated central bank tightening, as was the case in 2022, doesn't rank very high on the market's list of worries.

Instead, we may well be witnessing a market where better-than-expected growth is causing investors to shun long-dated bonds when yields fall too fast. This theory is only valid up to a point. Recent hard German data, for instance, industrial production, shows an economy unlikely to reach escape velocity any time soon. And yet, European bonds have pulled back just as hard as their U.S. counterparts.

Better-than-expected growth is causing investors to shun long-dated bonds when yields fall too fast

The net result is a curve in no hurry to print new lows in yields due to better opportunities in other markets and with not enough information to push rate cuts expectations lower. Similarly, revisiting the 2022 highs seems out of the question, even accounting for the fact that yield curves, especially in the U.S., are deeply inverted.

Combine this with still divergent policies with the Fed near the end of its hiking cycle, and the European Central Bank unsure where its own cycle will end, and we have a powerful force pulling yields away from the extremes of the recent range.

h2 Lower inflation expectations and the resulting decline in volatility are boosting risk appetite/h2