Rates Spark: No News is Good News for Rates

 | Mar 28, 2023 21:45

No banking contagion news allows rates to jump back, but we doubt more than one Fed hike can be priced by the curve. This means the 2Y hovering around a 4% yield. Euro rates have more upside on a hawkish European Central Bank, but monetary tightening is working its way through the systemh2 2Y Treasuries stuck around 4% until data catches up to the economic gloom/h2

Sanity seems to prevail, at least so far this week, with no new contagion fears weighing on sentiment. Realized volatility in rates remains elevated, with double-digit moves in basis point terms on the 2Y-10Y segment of main developed market curves on Monday. This is also reflected in still high implied swaption volatility, celebrating lower banking worries but dreading a return of inflation angst. Our base case is indeed for further improvement in sentiment as no new news hits the system and as contagion fears ebb. However, this is not to say we’re expecting a return to the pre-Silicon Valley Bank (SVB) state of play.

The negative impact on credit, a good chunk of which is provided by regional banks, is increasingly certain

This is clearest in the US, where the negative impact on credit, a good chunk of which regional banks provide, is increasingly certain. Commercial real estate has emerged as a key area of concern as it accounts for a disproportionate amount of lending in this sector. All this is to say that our already cautious outlook on the US economy has been reinforced by recent events. We’re looking for one last hike in this cycle and expect the Fed will be in a position to cut rates by year-end.

In this light, the drop in US market rates makes sense. Even after yesterday’s sell-off, 2Y Treasury yields ($42bn of which will be auctioned today) hover around 4%. This level has proved a magnet since the breakout of the SVB crisis, and a decisive break below would require the curve to price more than the three 25bp cuts we’re forecasting for this year and which the curve is currently pricing.

This is far from impossible, but this would require data to catch up to the economic gloom in markets or further bank contagion. The path of least resistance seems to be higher yields for now, but setting up for a more meaningful drop when rate cuts come into view.

h2 Implied volatility can remain elevated - on banking stress and on high inflation/h2